Las Vegas Review-Journal

Opening door for friend a must for man

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

DEAR MISS MANNERS: I am a man and I have a best friend who is a lady! For the past several years, we have done a lot of things together, including going shopping and going out to eat.

The first time I picked her up at her house, I was going to the door to get her and she had already come out of the house right after I pulled into the driveway.

I was being a gentleman by opening the passenger’s side door of my car for her, and then I closed it after she got in.

After I got in the driver’s side, she told me that I didn’t have to do that for her and I responded, “Yes, I did have to do that! It is simply the polite thing for a man to do for a woman when he is going to take her someplace, regardless of whose car it is, and this is how I was brought up at home!”

I still do that for her every time I drive, whether it is in my car or her car! Am I doing the right thing, even though she tells me from time to time that I don’t have to?

GENTLE READER: As you have noticed, there is no longer a universall­y accepted idea of gender-related manners. And there is no use yearning for the standardiz­ation of the past because that had a serious flaw.

When you were taught manners, gentlemen always had two sets of them at their command: business manners and social manners. Ladies were not supposed to work, so those who did were not considered ladies, entitled to the deference that was practiced socially.

Yet when women did move up in the workforce, they were treated socially: given superficia­l precedence while being expected to act as hostesses in such matters as serving coffee. And ladies who were unused to practicing business manners continued to observe such social restrictio­ns as not taking credit or mentioning money, both of which are serious profession­al detriments.

An obvious solution would be to practice that dual system of social and business manners. But obtuse gentlemen had trouble processing the idea, and fed-up ladies declared that they should just forget the whole social courtesy thing.

So your friend thought it had disappeare­d, and yet learned to find charm in it, as, frankly, does Miss Manners.

DEAR MISS MANNERS: Please tell me, during what months is it appropriat­e to wear boots?

GENTLE READER: Whenever your feet would otherwise get wet. Miss Manners is not a weather forecaster, but she suggests you consult one.

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