Las Vegas Review-Journal

OK to acknowledg­e departed loved ones

- JUDITH MARTIN MISS MANNERS Submit your etiquette questions to Miss Manners at dearmissma­nners@gmail. com.

DEAR MISS MANNERS:

On a grandchild’s birthday, would it be inappropri­ate for a grandparen­t to post a message that talks of their late spouse and how they “wanted you to know they are watching over you”?

I personally feel that a child’s birthday celebratio­n is not the time to grieve the loss of your husband. Your thoughts?

GENTLE READER:

That you are less than thrilled about Nana’s post on Jaden’s fifth birthday announceme­nt.

However, there is a difference between grieving and acknowledg­ing. If Nana was diverting attention from Jaden by posting a page-long eulogy in lieu of a birthday message, that would be one thing. But

Miss Manners sees nothing wrong with acknowledg­ing that Pop Pop might be thinking of him as a way of reminding him of his grandfathe­r.

DEAR MISS MANNERS:

I love to cook and bake, and am told I’m quite good at it. My husband, who means well but is oblivious to common sense, found out that a friend of his was getting rid of her stove.

That she might be getting rid of it because it’s a junker didn’t occur to him. I came home from work to find that he had surprised me by replacing my perfectly fine stove with the stove his friend had gotten rid of.

The oven has only two settings: too hot (things burn on the outside and are still underdone on the inside) and too cold (things don’t finish baking). None of the burners fits right and they all tilt, which means that it is impossible to cook evenly on the stovetop. After only a month, I’ve come to hate cooking.

Obviously, the solution is for me to buy a new stove, which I’m going to do, annoyed though I am at having to spend the money. How do I do so in such a way that I don’t convey to my husband that I hated his gift?

What do I say if he asks me why I bought a new stove so soon after he gave me one?

GENTLE READER: There is a difference between the surprise element that comes with a personal present and that of a major shared household item.

Miss Manners gives you her permission to replace the oven openly, telling your husband, “I can see why Mandy got a new stove. I am afraid that this one was on its last legs, and we’ll have to get a new one.” She further suggests that you take this opportunit­y to request that your husband confer with you when it comes to replacing crucial domestic appliances — if not, perhaps, charm bracelets and coffee mugs.

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