Teaching Early Manners to Twins: Nurturing Kindness in Your Dynamic Duo
Raising twins is a crash course in everything, including how quickly they pick up on the manners you model for them. Quick Takeaways Twins naturally observe and copy each other, which can fast-track manners and social skills Start modeling “please” and “thank you” from infancy, even before they can talk Twin-to-twin empathy is a unique opportunity you won’t have with singletons Consistency between you and your partner is key as your twins will absolutely notice the difference Expect setbacks; toddler twins testing limits is completely normal You Have a Secret Weapon: Each Other Here’s something I noticed pretty early with my twin girls that I never experienced with my singleton boys. When one of our twin girls used “please” and got what she wanted, the other watched. And then tried it herself. Twins are each other’s constant social mirror. That’s a huge advantage when it comes to teaching manners, because you’re not just teaching one child. In a lot of ways, you’re teaching two who then teach each other. Twins develop social referencing (looking to others for cues on how to behave) earlier and more frequently than singletons, largely because they have a built-in peer from day one. That means the modeling you do (and that they do for each other) is amplified in a twin household. Start Before They Can Even Talk One of the best pieces of advice I can give you is to start using “please” and “thank you” with your twins way earlier than feels necessary. I’m talking infancy. When I handed my girls their bottles, I’d say “Here you go, please enjoy!” and when they’d bat their little arms I’d say “Thank you for being such good eaters.” Silly? Maybe. Effective? Absolutely. The reason this works is that language development is built on repetition and exposure. According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, children begin understanding social language patterns long before they can produce words. By the time your twins start talking, “please” and “thank you” will already feel like a natural part of how the world works in your house. When to start expecting them to use it: Most toddlers can start signing or saying “please” around 18–24 months. With twins, I found that when one of my girls said it first, the other followed soon thereafter. Peer pressure, twin style. Make Manners Part of Your Daily Routine You don’t need special lessons or Pinterest-worthy activities to teach manners. You just need to weave them into the moments already happening a hundred times a day. At snack time, hold the crackers for a moment and ask, “What do we say?” At first, you’ll answer it yourself: “Please!” Then hand them over with a big smile. At pickup time after a mess, pause and say “Thank you for helping clean up, girls” even when the “help” made things worse. A few routines that worked really well in our house: Snack and mealtime prompts. Every hand-off of food became a “please” and “thank you” moment. Twins sitting together at a table makes it easy to do this with both at once. The morning greeting. We made “good morning” a thing. Two little voices saying it back to you at 6am is honestly one of the best parts of twin parenting. Sharing transitions. When one twin was done with a toy, we coached them to “offer it” rather than just dropping it. “Do you want to give that to your sister? Can you say here you go?” Small moments, big foundation. Twin-to-Twin Empathy: The Real Prize Here’s what genuinely surprised me about raising twin girls: the empathy that developed between them was something I didn’t expect to witness so early. When one of my daughters fell and scraped her knee, her sister (before she could even form a full sentence) walked over, crouched down, and patted her on the back. Nobody taught her that specific behavior. She had just watched us comfort her sister, and she replicated it. Empathy in twins develops through a combination of close observation, shared experience, and what researchers call “emotional contagion”. Essentially when one twin