life

Trivial Requests Not Rude

Miss Manners by by Judith Martin, Nicholas Ivor Martin and Jacobina Martin
by Judith Martin, Nicholas Ivor Martin and Jacobina Martin
Miss Manners | March 17th, 2009

DEAR MISS MANNERS: I had some of my friends from high school, three girls and a boy, come over to my house for the evening to hang out and have fun. Once the pizza arrived, I put it down on the table and went to take my pre-meal insulin.

My mom realized that there were not enough chairs at the table before I had a chance to get them, so she asked my male friend to help her get one from the closet.

He later said to me, via a text message, so as to not let my mother hear, "Your mom called me over to bring a chair. How impolite is that?"

Although I understand that he was the guest, he was the only male, other than my father, who was upstairs, and myself, who was busy taking insulin, that would be able to assist. Who is in the wrong in this situation?

GENTLE READER: The male guest, for criticizing your mother, and any of the female guests who observed the need for more chairs and did not jump up to help.

Miss Manners first thought that the complaint would be about your mother's singling out a male for the job, which would have been petty enough. But apparently your friend thinks that any guest should be excused from simple courtesy.

It is true that nowadays, it is appallingly commonplace for guests to be ordered to work, bringing food and cleaning up. But for an older hostess to request trivial assistance, in the absence of the host, from a high school student should have been considering flattering.

DEAR MISS MANNERS: What is the etiquette of yawning?

GENTLE READER: It is very simple: Don't.

That is not helpful, is it? Only people on airplanes with clogged ears and desperate hosts yawn on purpose.

Other involuntary actions, which Miss Manners does not care to name, are considered merely gross on the part of the, ah, performer. But yawning is considered an insulting sign of boredom. Therefore one should not only cover it with the palm, but attempt to turn it into a cough or a grotesque smile. Others are supposed to pretend not to notice, but if the yawner is caught, the polite thing to say is, "I'm afraid I was up late last night. Please do go on with what you were saying. I find it fascinating."

DEAR MISS MANNERS: Unfortunately, I am currently unattached and would not want to attend a wedding with a lady I was not serious with. It's just too romantic an occasion. Is it OK to attend a wedding without a date?

GENTLE READER: Are you suggesting enjoying the wedding for its own sake and then mixing with the other guests?

Radical as that may seem, it is the correct attitude to take -- and one, Miss Manners notes, which was often its own reward. Before everyone complained about never being able to meet anyone eligible, weddings were considered a major venue for doing so. And being free to become acquainted with a bridesmaid or the bridegroom's cousin has more romantic potential than sitting next to a casual date who is bound to be thinking whether or not she would like to be standing at an altar with you.

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life

Miss Manners and the Calling Card Mystery

Miss Manners by by Judith Martin, Nicholas Ivor Martin and Jacobina Martin
by Judith Martin, Nicholas Ivor Martin and Jacobina Martin
Miss Manners | March 15th, 2009

DEAR MISS MANNERS: A calling card fell out of my copy of a 1905 edition of Edith Wharton's "The House of Mirth" when I cut one of the many uncut pages (the better to read). The card measures roughly 2 by 3 inches and has the name "Miss Wallace" in the center, "125 East Twenty-Fourth Street" on the bottom right corner, and "Fridays" on the bottom left corner.

I was able to determine that the address on the card is now St. Francis Residence, a shelter for the homeless mentally ill described as a "reconverted 100-room SRO hotel." The current structure was built around 1910. It might have been an apartment building or an office building in 1910. In 1905, it is possible that the address belonged to a private residence.

Does the word Fridays indicate that Miss Wallace was prepared to accept visitors on that day? Or does it indicate that Miss Wallace was a professional of some kind whose services were available on Fridays? I have not been able to find any information on the early 20th-century conventions for listing days at home on calling cards, but I am confident that you are well versed in such matters.

GENTLE READER: Indeed.

What fun you have had with this. Miss Manners hopes that Miss Wallace's great-grand-niece will come forth and tell family stories about the Friday that Mrs. Wharton dropped by and the hostess praised her book, not realizing that the author noticed the uncut pages. Or at least about the Friday that Miss Wallace's friends cautioned her not to read it because it was dreadfully harsh on polite society.

Had Miss Wallace been offering commercial services (and Miss Manners would certainly not speculate what those might be), reading "The House of Mirth" would have been humiliating. Its heroine, failing to make an advantageous match, is pathetically reduced to becoming an enabler to social climbers and then (although Miss Manners considers this more respectable) a milliner, failing at both.

However, this is unquestionably a social card, indicating that although Miss Wallace may not have made an advantageous marriage, she was not out trimming hats, but at leisure to receive any of her friends who cared to stop by on Fridays.

Her card is exactly correct. Its omissions enable Miss Manners to make a few modest contributions to your detective work:

Miss Wallace does not include her given name because she is the eldest or only daughter of her family; any younger sisters would have had to state theirs. Her address is given without city or state because she does not expect train-setters (as opposed to jetsetters) from such social outposts as Boston to show up without elaborate introductions. Those who are expected know the rules and will not surprise her while her hair is still in curl papers, so she does not need to put "Fridays after four," as some did.

Miss Manners can even guess at the conversation. No such gathering at the time would have been complete without deploring the tendency of people -- not only the newly rich, but "people one actually knew," as they would have said -- to abandon their townhouses and move uptown, some of them even choosing to live in -- gasp! -- apartments. Mrs. Wharton, if she were there, would then have made her departure. For uptown, and then back to France.

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life

A Little Understanding Goes a Long Way

Miss Manners by by Judith Martin, Nicholas Ivor Martin and Jacobina Martin
by Judith Martin, Nicholas Ivor Martin and Jacobina Martin
Miss Manners | March 12th, 2009

DEAR MISS MANNERS: I am a 25-year-old living with my (usually wonderful) boyfriend of five years. He has recently lost a job, and in the few days following this job loss, he has been a little more needy than normal. When I am home from my job, he is usually following me around the house and asking for my company, which he says comforts him and makes him feel better.

I wish to politely remind him that while I am full of empathy for his grief and depression over losing a job (and thus losing a sense of meaning and a feeling of providing for me), I am not exactly a security blanket who is there to calm him at every moment, but I am in fact a partner who is dealing with issues of my own at work and does not need the added frustration of feeling that I am in charge of his every emotional need right now -- that I am a girlfriend, not a mother.

How can I politely inform him of my feelings without seeming uncaring?

GENTLE READER: You run a harsh household.

A few days of being at loose ends after being fired does not strike Miss Manners as unreasonable. Five wonderful years and you feel that less than a week of helping him deal with a major crisis would turn you into his mother?

However, you know what you can bear, and the gentleman should know that about you. Tell him as nicely as you can that you really do care, even though you are unable to spend extra time with him. It hasn't convinced Miss Manners, but perhaps you will have better luck with him.

DEAR MISS MANNERS: I am hosting a large party at my home. What do I do about hand towels in the powder room that my guests will be using? Because the nature of my uncertainty may be unclear to anyone at all experienced in these matters, let me be specific.

How many hand towels should there be? Are multiple guests to use the same towel? Are used towels at some point to be discarded into a hamper -- by the guest or host? Need the host concern himself with the order or hygiene of the hand towel(s) during the course of the party?

One would like to think that having attended many parties in one's life, one would have learned the answer to these questions from observation. One would like to think many things, and, unfortunately, I have no parties scheduled between now and mine.

GENTLE READER: One would like to think that guests washed their hands and dried them on the towels provided. However, Miss Manners has noticed a major disconnection between the obligations of providing enough little towels for the number of guests (and a small basket or other reciprocal in which used ones are discarded) and the number of bathroom-visiting guests who actually use them.

This is because, for reasons Miss Manners will never understand, the guest towel has become an untouchable totem. Personally, she cannot bring herself to endorse this to the extent of more practical hosts, who provide paper towels or a communal one of terry cloth. She suggests doing the right thing by putting out guest towels and hoping for the best.

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