Manners use, being handled look similar
DEAR MISS MANNERS: Why is it more polite to evade, deflect or dance around annoying or unwanted behavior?
I can’t stop doing something if I don’t know it is bothering someone, and I frequently wish people would just be clear on what they want, or don’t want, when dealing with me.
Does the average person really feel more comfortable being “handled” than simply being told they have an irritating habit?
GENTLE READER: How do you expect people to react when you say you dislike them? And just why would they then want to correct themselves, as you put it, in the hope of pleasing you?
Do you appreciate being graded by someone with no authority over you, and would you strive to please such a person?
Miss Manners finds the approach you favor particularly offensive because there are face-saving ways to make these points — pleading busyness to keep from fraternizing with someone you dislike, claiming not to do well with dogs to avoid them, and agreeing not to discuss politics if you cannot do so civilly.
These techniques are exactly what you contemptuously call “handling.”
DEAR MISS MANNERS: My husband and I are in a couples book group, which has been meeting virtually since the start of COVID-19. Because my sister lives in a remote area, I thought it would be nice to invite her to a one-time session for a particular book discussion, with the permission of the group.
Once the discussion began, she commented that two of the men seemed to be monopolizing the conversation. She was a guest, and the manner in which the comment was delivered stunned me.
Meanwhile, the group decided to spend another session discussing that same book because there was so much left unsaid. My sister is assuming she will be joining again.
I do not feel comfortable with her returning, since I feel she is unpredictable at this point. I am trying to find a way to express this to her in a way that maintains our relationship.
No one in the group said anything to me about her behavior, and for that I was grateful. But how can I tell her it’s best if she does not join again?
GENTLE READER: Some clubs have the rule that a member can only bring a particular guest once, unless that person is a candidate to become a member. If yours does not have such a rule, Miss Manners suggests your proposing one that you can then report to your sister.