Las Vegas Review-Journal

Our friends gave us bill after dinner

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

DEAR MISS MANNERS: About once a month, we go out to dinner with another couple and always have a good time. We tend to order roughly the same things — one drink each, no desserts unless it’s a special occasion — so we just split the bill.

We were surprised, but fine with it, when they suggested that we should eat at their house next time instead of going out. We’ve all been doing a lot of creative cooking during the pandemic, and I offered to host the following time.

We had a nice meal — but then they told us what our share of the cost would be! I’m in shock that our friends would be so stingy as to charge us for eating at their own home. We thought they were close friends!

GENTLE READER: Evidently, they are close. Or maybe just confused.

There is a huge difference between a restaurant and a home. Or rather, there should be. But the habit of eating in commercial establishm­ents has resulted in all but obliterati­ng the meaning of private hospitalit­y.

This shows up in many ways. Guests no longer feel obliged to make definite advance commitment­s — perhaps even less than they do for restaurant­s, which may charge no-shows.

And hosts who no longer feel the sole responsibi­lity for providing the meal may even assign some of the shopping and cooking to their guests.

Your friends have carried this to a crude extreme. To anyone who remembers the ancient tradition of hospitalit­y, this is sad.

Miss Manners might have been inclined to make this point by asking your friends whether the price they quoted included the service charge.

But if you are not terminally insulted by your friends’ having treated you as a customer rather than a guest, you could just set an example in your own house.

DEAR MISS MANNERS: My neighbor is hosting a brunch for a local mother who lost her daughter in early December. The daughter was tragically murdered, leaving two grown sons and a 3-year-old.

My husband and I are of the belief that it is too soon for this event.

GENTLE READER: It is not for outsiders to decide what constitute­s a proper period of mourning. If it were too early for the bereaved mother to be coaxed out to what may be a lowkey event, that lady could have begged off.

The way for you to come to terms with this is to acknowledg­e that you cannot know the survivor’s needs, so it is best to let her decide whether this is too soon.

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