Houston Chronicle Sunday

Bridesmaid­s go AWOL from bacheloret­te party

- Dear Miss Manners: JUDITH MARTIN Visit Miss Manners at missmanner­s.com, where you can send her you questions. Andrews McMeel Syndicatio­n

At my bacheloret­te party, two of my bridesmaid­s left after about an hour to go to a different party. My best friend and maid of honor had planned a fantastic party with everything you can imagine that would be at a bacheloret­te party, and they missed 99 percent of it.

I chose to ignore it because I wanted to have fun, but my future spouse is telling me to cut them from the wedding or at least tell them it was a terrible thing to do.

They already paid for their dresses, and they did contribute to the bacheloret­te party expenses, so I can’t cut them out, but how am I supposed to address something like this?

I’m at a complete loss!

Gentle Reader:

Was your bacheloret­te party 100 hours long? Miss Manners is no mathematic­ian, but your letter indicates so. If your friends were unaware that they were spending a long weekend partying with you, she can hardly blame them for getting out while they could.

More importantl­y, though, she cautions against your thinking that this is a contractua­l obligation — as indicated by their having paid for all of the things involved. Perhaps this is another reason they felt that they had fulfilled their duties, however minimal. They thought of it as a transactio­n, rather than an expression of friendship.

While it is unfortunat­e that your friends left early — and certainly rude that they doublebook­ed themselves — there is no reasonable punishment to be served here, other than expressing your disappoint­ment: “I was so sad that you left early and missed the allnight paintball scavenger hunt and hot-pepper tasting. We really missed you.”

If you are feeling bold and fear otherwise, you might gingerly add, “I hope that you will be able to stay for the whole wedding. I do so want you there.”

Dear Miss Manners:

When eating at an expensive restaurant for dinner, we were seated next to a table of 10, including two children under the age of 6. During the three hours of dinner, the children were crawling under the table, screaming, climbing on the chairs and the back of the banquette.

None of the adults were making an effort to keep them quiet or occupied. They were so noisy, it was difficult to carry on a conversati­on. There wasn’t an option of moving to another table.

What could have been done?

I didn’t feel that a suggestion from me would have helped or been met kindly, and the waitstaff shouldn’t have to interfere, as they are depending on tips. The manager was on a different floor.

Gentle Reader:

Surely you and the waitstaff were concerned for these children’s safety. Crawling across the furniture and under the tables will likely damage their little heads. Miss Manners suggests that you express this fear to the family — or call upon the servers to do it for you — leaving out the part about similarly damaging your adult-sized ears.

Dear Miss Manners:

I am a student living on campus. When I am having a conversati­on with someone and an acquaintan­ce walks by, I usually wave or smile at the other person; this seems preferable to pretending not to see someone.

However, when I was speaking to a friend the other day, and she waved to someone else, I felt that she wasn’t listening to what I was saying.

What is the correct way to respond? If we were on the street, the unlikeliho­od of running into an acquaintan­ce would, I think, make acknowledg­ment proper, but on a campus, it’s likely that we would see each other again very soon.

Gentle Reader:

A very modest addition to your usual behavior will solve the problem: A quick “Sorry” when you turn back to the speaker should be sufficient to acknowledg­e that no rudeness was intended to anyone. Miss Manners prefers this to the other option: pretending not to notice the world around you.

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