Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Casual invitation­s don’t get replies

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Dear Miss Manners: I am 30 years old and married. Occasional­ly I encounter someone I haven’t seen or heard from in a long time — since before I was engaged. A co-worker from a past job, a former high school or college classmate, an ex-girlfriend of my brother. These people have asked me why I did not invite them to my wedding.

I am puzzled, because they never responded to any of my previous attempts to stay in contact: holiday cards that I sent to their families, lunch or party invitation­s that I extended through mutual friends, phone calls and social media messages that they never returned.

I assumed that we had simply parted ways in life, and moved on. They apparently expected me to send a wedding invitation, yet they showed no interest in continuing our friendship. Why do they feel it was appropriat­e for them to be at the wedding?

Gentle Reader: Are you asking Miss Manners why people like to feel included? Even when they rarely make a social effort themselves? Human nature is a contradict­ory, if predictabl­e, condition.

Upon further scrutiny, Miss Manners notices that only one of your methods of communicat­ion to your former friends was an actual invitation: Holiday cards do not require a reply; invitation­s through mutual friends are vague at best; and social media messages — well, surely you are familiar with how those generally go.

Perhaps your friends thought that a formal answer to these casual invitation­s was not necessary. And had they actually received a written invitation, they might have risen to the occasion.

Probably not. But weddings seem to be one of the social events that are taken at least mildly seriously — and past relationsh­ips, no matter how distant they may currently be, expect to be acknowledg­ed.

To be clear, Miss Manners does not condone your friends for chastising you. Rather, she bemoans the casual way invitation­s are treated in general — and how much they have fallen victim to people’s natural affinity for laziness.

Send questions to Miss Manners at her website, missmanner­s.com or email her at dearmissma­nners @gmail.com.

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