The News (New Glasgow)

Email mix-up cause cousin to send mistaken invitation

- Abigail Van Buren

DEAR ABBY: I recently received an online invitation to a New Year’s Eve party at the home of a dear cousin.

Having not heard from her in a while, I decided to call her to express our delight at having been invited and let her know we might be able to come. (They live 350 miles away, but we plan to be in their town earlier that week and could potentiall­y stay a few days longer and go to the party.)

Well, when I called, she told me that our having been included on the e-vite was a mistake! She said there must have been a mixup because my email address is similar to a friend of hers who is invited.

Although she then said we were welcome to come, we declined saying, “Thank you for your flexibilit­y given the awkward circumstan­ce. Forgive us, but I think we’ll stick to our original plan to come back north around Dec. 28.”

Could this have been handled better? It has put a strain

on an otherwise lovely relationsh­ip. — EMBARRASSE­D IN CALIFORNIA

DEAR EMBARRASSE­D: Your dear cousin was clearly caught flat-footed by your phone call, but she should not have blurted out that your invitation was a mistake, although she did try to clean it up by telling you you were welcome to come.

I don’t blame you for telling her you would stick to your original plan because I doubt you would have felt comfortabl­e had you chosen to attend. The way to handle this going forward would be to make a New Year’s resolution to forgive her for the breach of etiquette, not allow it to create a rift in your relationsh­ip and let it go.

DEAR ABBY: I work at a school. There’s this woman here I would like to know. She’s 21; I’m 24. I do maintenanc­e and janitorial work.

She’s a profession­al. I wrote her a note wishing her and her family well for the holidays. She texted me once, thanking me for the note and wishing me happy holidays, too.

I want more communicat­ion. I’m not sure if she’s nervous and doesn’t know what to say. She seems like an incredible person, and I’d hate to pass up the opportunit­y to know her better. What’s your take on this? — HER FUTURE FRIEND? IN SAN FRANCISCO

DEAR FRIEND: Because you both work at the same school there could be rules against fraterniza­tion or even sexual harassment that could put your job in jeopardy if you do what you have in mind, however innocent it may be.

That’s why I don’t recommend it. Appreciate the opportunit­y to work with pleasant, wonderful,

“incredible” people, but leave it at that.

DEAR ABBY: I am an estate planner who would like to say that folks who don’t believe in writing thank-you letters have no idea how much they may have lost by not sending those little notes of gratitude. I am talking about hundreds of thousands of dollars that have not gone to people who failed to pen a note and buy a stamp.

Many of my clients who are grandparen­ts tell me they are leaving nothing to the “children” who never thanked them. They say the ingrates deserve what they’ll be getting, which is nothing. — PATRICIA IN MASSACHUSE­TTS

DEAR PATRICIA: I’m printing your letter verbatim. A word to the wise, folks ... Happy holidays!

Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada