DEAR MISS MANNERS: My daughter and her husband, who live in another state, are expecting their first child. We are so very excited for them, as they have been through extensive fertility treatments.
Plans were made to hold a shower, and invitations were printed. Then the severity of the virus outbreak became clear.
My question is whether we should still send the invites but include a note indicating the shower may or may not be held virtually (we are still trying to figure out logistics). Or do we just not send them at all, and cancel any shower plans? We want to be sensitive to this situation while balancing our excitement for the parents.
GENTLE READER: Then do not send them, and do not send an online version. You have been spared from committing the error of throwing a shower for your own daughter.
But aside from that stiff rule, which is so commonly disobeyed, Miss Manners cannot imagine that you think this is a good time to ask others to shop for your family. Surely you understand that they have their own pressing needs and concerns.
That does not mean that others may not be happy for you, if you tell them the good news. But can’t you just tell them, with a message or a call, without setting them up to do anything in return except to offer their congratulations?
If you have already done that, you will have another opportunity to share your excitement when the baby is born and birth announcements are made. Perhaps by then, people will be able to pay the new baby a visit. Some of them might even be able to pick up some knitted bootees to take along.