The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Student is busy, not anti-social

- Annie Lane

Dear Annie: I am doing graduate work online for profession­al developmen­t in my field. The courses require a lot of reading. My manager approves of my course of study, but our policies do not allow eating lunch at the desk.

The lunchroom is the only place where I can eat in the office. At lunch, the rest of the staff gathers in there, gossips and shares pictures and videos (think baby pictures and kitten videos). Because I do not want to seem rude, I have been driving off-site at lunch, to a nearby shopping center parking lot, and eating lunch and studying in my parked car. However, that takes extra time.

My co-workers know about my graduate work, and no one has put me down for it, but I am concerned that ignoring their gossip and kitten videos for a textbook in their presence might be construed as rude. So I ask you: Is it rude to study at noon in the office lunchroom?

Bookworm

Dear Bookworm: Don’t worry your well-read head. Your co-workers all understand that you’re completing graduate work, and they should be supportive of your study habits. To prevent anyone from taking your focused reading the wrong way, offer a disclaimer, such as: “I promise I’m not trying to be rude by ignoring everyone. I just need to buckle down and get some work done. But please feel free to talk and hang out here as normal.”

Dear Annie: I am overwhelme­d by my husband’s sister. I have been in the family for 30 years. Not once have I ever been invited to her main home or vacation home (nor have I ever stepped foot in her homes), yet she has been in my home for lavish meals on countless occasions.

She has always been as welloff financiall­y as my husband and I are. I am shocked at her continued feeling of entitlemen­t. My husband thinks the way she treats me is OK. Why?

Child of the South

Dear Child of the South: It sounds as if someone missed her lessons with Emily Post. You should ask your husband what is going on. It makes no sense that all invitation­s go one way. Until you get to the bottom of it, you should hold off on inviting them back to your house.

Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@creators.com.

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