Las Vegas Review-Journal

Escaping the cellphone photo onslaught

- MISS MANNERS

DEAR MISS MANNERS:

I have several friends, and even complete strangers, who always want to show me pictures of their children and grandchild­ren on their smartphone­s. We are not talking about one picture, but 20 or more.

I do not know these children and, frankly, it is boring. I have vision problems and the small screen gives me a headache.

I have tried looking at a couple of pictures and trying to change the topic. They put the phone away and soon it comes out again. I even had a complete stranger show me pictures of his six children and their associated children in the ophthalmol­ogist’s office while my eyes were dilating.

I am sick of it. Could you please suggest a phrase I might use to stop the cellphone attack?

GENTLE READER: There can hardly be a better excuse than dilated eyes to avoid these shows, but apparently even that didn’t work. Even if it had, Miss Manners supposes that you can’t always hang around the ophthalmol­ogist’s office. She recommends compliment­ing the children for two pictures, and then handing back the telephone saying, “You’d better take this — I don’t trust myself not to drop it.” That the danger would be your dropping it in a soporific state of boredom, rather than clumsiness, need not be specified.

DEAR MISS MANNERS: I attended a luncheon at the home of a friend who had invited people she knew from several different places (church, neighborho­od, work), so we did not all already know each other. I sat down next to a man and introduced myself with, “Hi, I’m (blank).”

He laughed and said,

“Oh, I can never remember names.”

I thought this was very rude. I might not have remembered his name either, but I would not have told him I was going to make no effort to remember it. How would Miss Manners have handled this — bearing in mind that I did not want the hostess to regret having invited me?

GENTLE READER: As you recognize, this is not the charming and apologetic admission of a common human failing that the speaker may think it is. That would be “I’m so sorry, but I have trouble rememberin­g names. Please tell me yours again.”

What the preemptive declaratio­n conveys is “I’m sure I’ll have no reason to want to know you better.”

In that case, Miss Manners would nod in acknowledg­ment, probably saying something as restrained as “I won’t trouble you,” before turning her attention to a more receptive guest.

Submit your etiquette questions to Miss Manners at dearmissma­nners@gmail. com.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States