The Peterborough Examiner

Over a decade later, thank yous still wait

- AMY DICKINSON New Girl Email: askamy@tribune.com

Dear Amy: Eleven years ago, I married the most perfect person for me. We’ve been blissfully married ever since.

We had a very small wedding with just our closest family and friends in attendance, or at least that was the plan. We ended up with quite a few tangential people there.

Despite our invitation­s saying “No gifts, please, people still brought gifts, a lot of gifts.

When we got home after the reception we opened everything and I immediatel­y made a list so I could get my thank-you notes written. I’m fairly disorganiz­ed and tend to get scattered.

I got about a quarter of them written. Everything was in a box: the cards, envelopes, stamps, my list, everything! And then, oops, it got mistakenly tossed during a cleaning spree. Help me find peace, please. — SHAMED AND GRATEFUL Dear Shamed: You have two choices here: Continue to not get over it, while suspecting that some people think that you are a “crass ungrateful brat,” or ... write your notes!

If your wedding was as small as you say, I’m sure you can figure out who attended, through photos and enlisting the help of your husband, close friends, family and the magic of Facebook.

Celebrate your next wedding anniversar­y by making this right. You and your spouse should take full responsibi­lity for your inattentio­n, and then let each guest know — by mail — that you are grateful for their presence in your life and at your wedding and that you are still “blissfully married.” Say, “If you gave us a material gift that has not been acknowledg­ed, please let us know so that we may thank you properly for it.” Send along a wedding photo alongside a current photo.

If you’re feeling intimidate­d, consider watching an episode of called “The Right Thing,” in which Schmidt, a man in his 30s, is tasked with writing thank-you notes to his Bar Mitzvah guests ... 20 years later.

Dear Amy: A couple of weeks ago, my manager, “Shelly,” quit. She was a fantastic boss and in her free time she was helping me study to pass my certificat­ion exam. Even after she quit, she promised she would still study with me.

I guess her departure ruffled a lot of feathers upstairs. The higher-ups are incredibly angry with her, and have asked me to stop studying with her.

I can understand why they wouldn’t want a current employee studying with a former employee, especially one who (apparently) left on bad terms. Unfortunat­ely, my former boss now has my study guides, which I borrowed from a colleague.

How do I politely ask for my books back, while still letting her know that I appreciate what she did for me? I plan to give her a thank-you gift, but how can I tell her that I can no longer study with her and still keep our relationsh­ip civil?

Profession­ally, she is an amazing contact. I don’t want to burn that bridge. — WORRIED Dear Worried: Before you change plans because the higherups told you to, remember that your company can’t dictate who you spend personal time with. That being said, some of this material may be proprietar­y, and your bosses presumably have a legitimate business reason to ask you to limit your contact.

The borrowed study materials are the perfect reason to reach out and arrange to catch up and get them back. Say, “As you know, I borrowed them from Frank, and I will need to return them.” Let her know that you’ve made study arrangemen­ts that work better with your schedule, thank her sincerely and ask if she would mind if you kept in touch.

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