Ottawa Citizen

When you say a bit too much

Think twice before telling the story in your holiday card

- ANNE WALLACE ALLEN

For many people, the rules for posting personal news on Facebook, Pinterest and other social media are clear: Put a Good Face on Everything.

But that rule doesn’t always extend to holiday cards. There, along with the smiling pictures and upbeat updates, you also might learn about the year’s marital debacles, bad diagnoses or heartbreak­ing fertility problems.

Refreshing honesty or too much informatio­n?

The tell-all holiday card or letter has been around for a few years now, said Diane Gottsman, a Texas-based etiquette expert. She believes a holiday card is supposed to be a warm greeting; if you want to update people on the harsh realities of your life, have that conversati­on in person.

“The holiday card should warm hearts, with some small note,” said Gottsman. “Droning on about your divorce and how your ex-husband did you wrong? The card is not the venue for this kind of news.”

However, LisaMarie Luccioni, a professor of communicat­ions at the University of Cincinnati, said people have grown skeptical of the crafted, idealized versions of life they see on Facebook. The holiday card can serve as a reality check, she said.

“I actually appreciate the candour and honesty of people in these types of cards,” said Luccioni. “I’m a professor of 25 years and I appreciate when a student gives me honesty.”

Despite the availabili­ty of electronic greeting cards, many people still send paper holiday cards, sometimes including page-long “newsletter­s” summarizin­g the year.

For many people, it seems, paper cards or newsletter­s connect on a more personal level than an e-card, said Margaret Page, an etiquette coach in Vancouver. She thinks that senders of holiday cards might say too much because they’re not connecting closely enough the rest of the year.

“Social media is not really being connected,” Page said. “People are desperate to make real connection­s, and are using Christmas cards, birthday cards, to share informatio­n with others that they wouldn’t have a decade ago, or even five years ago.”

A lawyer in Boise, Idaho, who asked not to be named, decided to share the reasons behind her divorce in a Christmas letter.

“I just thought, you know, I’m going to be honest with our friends and family, and just put it out there,” she said. “I also didn’t want to repeat the story 100 times, and that’s kind of where I was at.”

She was uncomforta­ble putting informatio­n on social media that could be seen by people outside her circle of friends.

The format of a letter can serve as a signal that big news might be coming. But a card should stay light, said Gottsman, who thinks heavy use of social media reinforces the idea that it’s OK to deliver all kinds of news — good, bad, personal, gossipy — in a holiday greeting.

“The right venue to deliver bad news is in person, or over the telephone. Or if you can, send an informativ­e letter,” she said.

“And you know, we do care about these people’s lives, generally. But sometimes we don’t even know them very well, and we want to get to know them in the right way.”

 ??  ?? Margaret Page
Margaret Page

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada