Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Should gift-giver send a new check?

- CAROLYN HAX Tell Me about it tellmewash­post.com

DEAR CAROLYN: Eight years ago, I sent my nephew a check as a gift for his graduation. I never received a thank-you note.

Recently, I have been contacted by nephew’s mom, explaining that the check was misplaced and recently turned up, thanking me for it and insisting I not replace the check.

However, I believe the true intention of nephew’s mom is for me to send another check. I believe I should not feel guilty if I do not send another, as I’ve already spent the energy, time and stamp to send the first check, and it was misplaced, not through any fault of mine. In addition, eight years have passed. Thoughts??

— Unsure in Wisconsin

DEAR UNSURE IN WISCONSIN:

My main thought is that I would not choose to live in so dark a place as the one you live in. The same facts you gave also fit this narrative: Your nephew’s mom found the check, realized you never received any acknowledg­ment for your gift and felt terrible about that. So she decided to let you know what happened — and took the extra measure of insisting you not replace the check, just to make sure you didn’t misinterpr­et this long-overdue appreciati­on for your gift as a shakedown.

It really isn’t that hard to frame things, and people, in the most forgiving way available to you with the facts on hand.

You will give people breaks they don’t deserve sometimes, sure, but I’d rather be wrong occasional­ly than preemptive­ly aggrieved and suspicious all the time. Wouldn’t you?

You ask whether you “should” feel “guilty” for not replacing the check, which you frame in terms of energy expenditur­e vs. joy of giving, and describe as lost “not through any fault of mine.” So, bad feeling, grousing, blame deflecting. You’ve got yourself under the negative cloud.

Yet this version is available: If you want to replace the check, then you can! And enjoy a second, belated round of the good feeling you (presumably?) got from sending a young relative a gift. And if you can’t or don’t want to replace the check, then be thankful his mother was gracious enough to anticipate that possibilit­y and insist you not do so, thus preempting any guilt.

DEAR CAROLYN: I know others are lonely, these days particular­ly, and I feel bad saying this, but I hate running into my neighbors. I already often feel waylaid getting into my car, but now it’s even worse because my new friendly puppy pulls to go say hello on walks.

I make a point to visit with elderly neighbors, but several other middle-aged folks are relentless­ly chatty. One just launches in with hardly a hello, then you’re left wanting to escape but not be rude.

My husband says I should just call out, “Sorry, gotta go,” and keep walking, but I have trouble doing this. Your thoughts would be so appreciate­d!

— Waylaid DEAR WAYLAID: I fear you won’t appreciate them, because I agree with your husband. “I have trouble doing this” does not mean you can’t do this. What it usually means is that it’s hard for you, so you don’t want to do it. Which is your prerogativ­e, but it does mean having unwanted conversati­on with people who are chatting relentless­ly. But we all have choices: Be willing to feel rude and claim your time with a kind, “Sorry, can’t!” or be willing to burn precious personal space at the altar of your guilt.

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