The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Acknowledg­ing an empty card

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

Dear Annie: My daughter graduated from high school a few weeks ago and had sent out announceme­nts to family and friends. She has been receiving congratula­tions cards and notes in the mail, and some have included monetary gifts. I’m concerned about how to address a card that arrived from family friends. The card arrived with nothing enclosed, and though that is not unusual, the envelope was open/unsealed (looked as though it was never sealed), and the card was inserted with the open portion facing up.

My quandary is whether I should mention something to the senders or not. What is the best way to handle this type of situation?

Grateful for Love From Family

and Friends

Dear Grateful: Your thoughts make perfect sense. If my check were taken or I didn’t seal my envelope, I would want my friend to tell me. Thank your longtime friends for the card, and explain to them the way the envelope arrived — that it looked as if someone tampered with it.

Dear Annie: How happy I was to see my name, Janie, in print in your column. The writer to you was frustrated when people misspelled or mispronoun­ced her given name, so she chose the nickname Janie. Then she couldn’t win, as people got that wrong, too, calling her Jane.

It so happens that I’m proud of my name. Some years ago, a second cousin whom I’d never met surprised me with a letter saying she had found my name and address in her mother’s address book and she wanted me to know we have the same name. Thus began a correspond­ence between us. When she and her husband did a lot of traveling last summer, they went out of their way to come to Shreveport, Louisiana, to meet me and spend the day with me. Our names brought us together, she being named for her grandmothe­r, who was my great-aunt.

A niece named after me visits often. When we’re out and about, we attract attention by calling each other Janie. I’m not always proud of myself, but I stay proud of my full name.

Janie Griffith

Dear Janie Griffith: It sounds as though you have a lot to be proud of, for your sibling to have named a daughter after you. Thank you for writing.

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