Houston Chronicle Sunday

Past kindness creates expectatio­n of future cake

- Visit Miss Manners at missmanner­s.com, where you can send her your questions. Andrews McMeel Syndicatio­n

Dear Miss Manners: Iaman attorney at a small firm. When the staff member who used to buy birthday cakes retired, I picked up a cake for a birthday that was going to be observed right after she left.

I then bought the next birthday cake, which was for my favorite member of the firm. And then I bought a cake for the leastliked person in the office, fearing that his feelings would be hurt because no one else was going to rise to the occasion.

Now, there is an expectatio­n that I will supply all birthday cakes. This expectatio­n is harmful because I am the first and only woman attorney at the firm, and one of the youngest, as well. It’s also an expensive habit; the time taken getting the cakes equates to hundreds of dollars in billable hours, which I make up for by working later. Do you have any suggestion­s on how to stop this cycle? I know that I’ve been part of the problem, but unfortunat­ely my time machine is on the fritz.

Gentle Reader: Are there any junior staff members or receptioni­sts at your firm? If so, Miss Manners suggests you solicit their assistance. Or build a rotating schedule among the attorneys.

Or best of all, suggest to your firm that you abandon the practice altogether.

Cake in the office is not enough of a treat (and is often the object of dread by those watching sugar, gluten and other ingredient­s) to warrant all of this expense and angst.

Surely a card would suffice instead. But please promise just to leave it in the break room for people to sign — rather than use billable hours going from office to office collecting signatures.

Dear Miss Manners: I dislike it when people fuss over me, but I have relatives who cannot seem to help themselves. Any attempt at a conversati­on always circles back to questions about whether I am too hot, too cold, whether I might like a brownie, or ...

Attempts to change the conversati­on may work momentaril­y, but somehow always devolve back into fussing over me. I know they intend to be kind and hospitable, but it makes me feel a bit snappish after a while.

What is the politest way to say, “Can we please talk about anything other than whether I am too hot, too cold, might like a brownie ...?”

Gentle Reader: If you do not want it, may Miss Manners please have the brownie?

Because it does sound as if your relatives are merely being hospitable, if perhaps (overly) concerned for your health and well-being. Or they are avoiding your chosen topics of conversati­on and trying to change them (in which case, the brownie thing suddenly makes more sense).

In any event, if you do not like it, you may simply say, “Thank you for your concern, but I assure you that my temperatur­e and constituti­on are absolutely fine. Now, let’s talk about your tiff with Aunt Eloise.”

 ?? JUDITH MARTIN MISS MANNERS ??
JUDITH MARTIN MISS MANNERS

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