Los Angeles Times

Is Mom a plus or minus?

- Send questions to Amy Dickinson by email to askamy@amydickins­on.com.

Dear Amy: I moved in with my boyfriend recently. His mother, “Betty,” comes to the house every day while we are at work and lets the dogs out and helps in the yard.

We have not asked her for this help. She does it as a kindness, but it has gotten a bit out of hand. She decorates to her liking (we change it back). The pool will be skimmed, and the skimmings will be left in a pile. The dogs will track mud around the house, which I will have to scrub off the floor. The kitchen cabinets get rearranged and we’re unable to find things.

These are minor inconvenie­nces, but I would like to do these tasks on my own schedule.

How do I gracefully decline an act of kindness/favor that I did not ask for? I do not want this put on me, and I’m not sure I should be apologetic, but I don’t want to upset anyone. Wondering

Dear Wondering: Let’s review: Every day, someone comes to your house and deals with your dogs. She also skims the pool and does little chores. You don’t have to arrange for these visits, pay a fee or deal with complicati­ons of the dogs adjusting to new people.

Given that dog walkers (in cities) can cost upward of $500/month, Betty’s services are basically gold-plated. It might be worth it to put up with what you call “minor inconvenie­nces,” and when you come home each night and see the pool skimmings in a pile (for instance), say, “Yay! Betty was here!”

You should consider carefully the value of this service before complainin­g.

All the same, it is definitely a breach to have someone redecorate your house. Assuming that Betty is creating busy-work while she’s with the dogs, I hope you can say to her, “Betty, can I bring up one issue? It drives me a little crazy when we come home and the cabinets and furniture are rearranged. I know it might look like a mess to you, but things here are the way we want them.”

If you want to decline this daily effort, say: “Thank you so much for your kindness, but we can’t accept it any longer. We’re truly appreciati­ve, but now we need to make a change.”

Dear Amy: Why do people send wedding and shower invitation­s, and then tell you what gifts to give?

In my day, people had manners.

Some of these brides and grooms have parents who are just as bad. These people find your address, somehow, but you’ve never met them, and they don’t get in touch with you otherwise. My solution: Ignore these invitation­s. There is no excuse for bad manners. Disgusted

Dear Disgusted: You’re right. There is no excuse for bad manners. So — let’s do you.

You’re a bit unclear about the circumstan­ces surroundin­g this deluge of invitation­s from near-strangers, but ignoring an invitation is not a solution — it is rude and inconsider­ate. You need not feel pressured to give a gift if you are not attending, and so you can safely ignore registries or suggestion­s.

Surely, back in the day (when people had manners), they knew to always politely RSVP to an invitation, regardless of the invitation’s source.

Rise above and respond appropriat­ely, or you may find yourself being excluded from things on purpose, including events you actually want to attend.

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