The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Nothing old-fashioned about showing appreciati­on

- Annie Lane Send your questions for Annie Lane to dearannie@creators.com. To find out more about Annie Lane and read features by other Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonist­s, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

Dear Annie: Recently, I attended a family wedding. For the gift, I knitted an afghan out of very expensive yarn, spending weeks of my time. About two weeks before the wedding, we received a card that stated, “Please bring gift cards or cash.”

I found this rude, but since I had already invested in the gift, I decided that it was what I would give. A couple of weeks after the event, I received a pretyped thank-you card that they had simply written in, “Thanks for the gift.” I was upset, but my husband thinks I am overreacti­ng. Am I? Maybe I am just old-school, but when I married, I sent personal messages to thank gift-givers. Please tell me if I expected too much. This was not a huge event so it wouldn’t have taken more than an evening for them to do.

Preferring Tradition

Dear Preferring Tradition: Your gift sounds beautiful and thoughtful, which are two attributes that I would not apply to the groom and bride. You are correct that sending out a card two weeks before the wedding asking for cash is, shall we say, tacky, at the very least. Some couples are now asking for money toward their honeymoon or a down payment on a home.

But those requests are usually stated along with the invitation well in advance. There is nothing old-fashioned about good manners and appreciati­on. Rest assured in knowing that you gave a beautiful present that, here’s hoping, they will learn to appreciate.

As far as if you were overreacti­ng, well, that is up to you. Know that you did the right thing by giving a lovely present. Their thank-you note was impersonal and thoughtles­s, but at least they sent one.

Dear Annie: Recently, I was talking to a woman who was wearing jeans, and she complained that her little girl “never wants to wear a dress.” I asked her if the child ever saw her wearing a dress. It was like a lightbulb went on in her head. Parents have to set the example. This also works with showing appreciati­on. It helps to show the child what it looks like from the viewpoint of the gift-giver.

I would tell my children: “This person went to a lot of trouble to get you this wonderful gift. It’s important that you tell them, in writing, how much you appreciate that.”

After a party, for instance, I would tell them that they didn’t have to write 20 thank-you notes; they could write two or three a day until they were done. Breaking it down to a few minutes a day until they were finished made all the difference.

Setting a Good Example

Dear Setting a Good Example: Children watch everything that their parents do, be it positive habits or negative ones.

Part of being a good parent is being aware of your strengths and shortcomin­gs and trying to work on the areas of your life you would like to improve — not so much for your sake but for your kids’ sake. More is caught than taught.

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