East Bay Times

Yacht club or `Real Housewives'?

- DEAR MISS MANNERS >> missmanner­s.com

My husband's old boss and his wife invited us to join a local yacht club. Ever since we joined, the wife has been bubbling with snippy comments about my grooming and hairstyle, alluding to where I may have purchased my clothing, and making misguided class-oriented statements.

She seems to have brought me into the club as a target, like a clay pigeon. In their eyes, we were good enough to be nominated and sponsored, but now that we're in, I'm considered an “improvemen­t project” by these elders.

I have tried to generously assume the difference­s are generation­al (80s vs. 50s) or cultural (I'm not alcoholic, but the sponsors are markedly so).

She's made the club a lot less fun by biting my ankles. My husband insists the chiding will go away in time. I see no end to my sponsor's backhanded comments, though, and no longer find the scene so charming.

Is there a way to trim my sponsor's snippy commentary without reminding her that alcohol makes her a poor host?

GENTLE READER >> Let's also avoid telling her that alcoholism is a “cultural difference.”

The problem is actually not one of culture or generation — you have a problem of rank. The husband was your husband's boss, and they were your sponsors at the club. Both incline you to be not just deferentia­l, but grateful.

Miss Manners does not believe that the wife's rudeness cancels out past kindnesses, but you are now equals — as members and adults. You should not feel obliged to spend time with them if it is a burden.

DEAR MISS MANNERS >> My son is getting married next year to a lovely person with whom I have a good relationsh­ip. They are currently perusing venues, although they are unsure how many guests they will invite.

Would it be poor manners to send them a possible guest list for my son's side, with tiers of importance — such as aunts/uncles, then cousins, and so on — so they can see what they're in for if they move to the next tier?

My husband says they should just invite whom they feel closest to, but I see a problem with that.

My heart tells me it is their wedding and they can do what they want, but I'm not sure I can deal with the fallout of hurt feelings for the next 20 years if they decide to be choosy. GENTLE READER >> To whom did your husband offer his advice? If it was only meant for you — as a way of saying that the time for parental advice has passed — Miss Manners must disagree with him.

If it was meant for your son, then we instead disagree on what constitute­s good parental advice. Your son should be warned that you will not be the only one who has to listen to 20 years of hurt feelings if he distribute­s invitation­s capricious­ly.

As to ranking the relatives, this is best done verbally; if such a list were to be written down and inadverten­tly forwarded, 20 years would be a light sentence for the resulting storm.

 ?? Judith Martin ?? Miss Manners
Judith Martin Miss Manners

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