Eating with plastic cutlery is always a challenge, but normal cutlery is 
easy to handle with some practice. Fortunately, Most restaurants do not 
offer plastic cutlery.

Before beginning to eat noodles, it helps if you chop them into smaller 
pieces with the knife. To do this, hold the knife in your right hand and the 
fork in your left. Then, hold down some noodles with the fork and chop with 
the knife. When you think you are done chopping them fine, move on to the 
next chunk of noodles in your plate until you finish chopping the whole 
portion. This procedure works very well for me both for noodles as well as 
for stakes, although with stakes it is essential to know when to stop.

If you are not comfortable using cutlery, begin by practicing at home.

Geetha
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Syed Imran" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, December 14, 2007 7:37 AM
Subject: [AI] Using spoons, forks, knives and other such cutleries


Hi

In fact, today's incident influenced me to write this on access India. It
was somewhat hillarious, somewhat embarrassing
After Christmas celebration in our college, I went to have lunch in our
college caffeteria. Usually I bring my lunch box to college, but today I
just forgot it at home. So, I and some of my friends went to caffeteria
along with our Economics ma'm. Sitting on a seat in front of a circular
granite table, I childishly said "noodles", when my friends asked me what I
wanted to have. I gave the money to my friend, and he brought me a plate of
noodles.
It contained two disposable plastic forks, and boy, I thought this time I am
caught! "No, not this time," I said to myself, "I somehow ought to give my
best shot, best impression! and its going to work, somehow its going to
work.". After thus assuring myself, I started on my own. I'm not going to
narrate what happened then, but I ended up lying them that the food was not
tasty and I then returned to classroom.
First of all, it was embarrassing to discuss any kind of issue like this on
the list, but I have overcome such embarrassment. As is the case, I would
like to know some of your tips of using cutleries, like spoons, forks,
knives etc properly, in front of sighted folks.
    Yes, one can always use their hands to have the food, but I think we too
are entitled to eat "attractively". If not attractively, at least to save
the time of washing our hands after the meal, we need to use such things.

With best regards
Syed Imran
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