Antelope Valley Press

MISS MANNERS

- By Judith Martin, Nicholas Ivor Martin and Jacobina Martin

Dear Miss Manners: I’m a terrible procrastin­ator. I have procrastin­ated sending thank-you letters for multiple years for multiple events (our wedding, my baby shower, our child’s birthday parties). The worst offense is our wedding, five years ago.

Is it ever too late to send a thank-you letter? Could I send a single thank-you now, for the gifts and attendance to all these events?

Dear Gentle Reader: Yes, but it had better be a good one. Being a procrastin­ator is not a decent excuse, and Miss Manners is not going to let you off the hook by declaring a statute of limitation­s.

What you need to atone for is not postponeme­nt so much as ingratitud­e. So you need to name and praise your use of each of these presents and also express appreciati­on for your benefactor­s’ continued thoughtful­ness over the years.

Yes, this will be a lot of work. But when you do not pay a debt when it is due, it accrues interest.

Dear Miss Manners: A few months ago, I was diagnosed with stage 4 cancer. I had many friends, family members and colleagues send gifts, cards, emails and texts, for which I know that I am very, very lucky.

Most of these occurred in the first month after my diagnosis, which was a flurry of tests, procedures and doctor’s appointmen­ts. I tried to keep up with sending thank-you notes or responding to emails, but it was quite overwhelmi­ng. Unfortunat­ely, many slipped through the cracks.

Now a couple of months have passed. What is the etiquette for sending thanks or responding at this point?

Dear Gentle Reader: Sadly, you do have a legitimate excuse. Etiquette is not so heartless as to discount genuinely overwhelmi­ng circumstan­ces.

Still, you do want to show your appreciati­on. Miss Manners reminds you that some of those kind people will surely have asked what they can do to help. One or more of them could make your task easier by taking dictation from you to write on your behalf.

Dear Miss Manners: I have noticed that mourners now applaud at funerals after a memorial speech. Maybe I am old-school, but I do not remember this being done until lately. I would personally prefer no applause.

Dear Gentle Reader: Whether this was started by those who grew up on a parental chorus of “Good job!” for every action or is just part of America’s orientatio­n toward show business, Miss Manners cannot say.

But yes, solemn occasions are now often punctuated by applause. To applaud a funeral tribute does take the focus from honoring the deceased to congratula­ting the speaker. Even applauding music that is a formal part of religious services suggests that it is done to please an audience, not to glorify God.

So Miss Manners agrees with you, but sees little hope of convincing others that thoughtful silence can be more meaningful than noise.

Address your etiquette questions to Miss Manners at her website, www.missmanner­s.com; to her email, dearmiss manners@gmail.com; or through postal mail to Miss Manners, Andrews McMeel Syndicatio­n, 1130 Walnut St., Kansas City, MO 64106.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States