Las Vegas Review-Journal

Foot meets mouth with untoward comment

- MISS MANNERS Submit your etiquette questions to Miss Manners at dearmissma­nners@gmail. com.

DEAR MISS MANNERS: We were meeting up with longtime friends. Discussing types of vacations, I expressed some concerns about cruises — specifical­ly the effect they have on the environmen­t in places with fragile ecosystems.

That’s when my friend told us she and her husband were going on a cruise to Antarctica. Yikes!

I fear I have offended her. How do I fix this? What should I have done?

GENTLE READER: How refreshing that you would not rather make it worse, in the name of Truth or Principles or Just Generally Making People Feel Bad.

The only way to handle this, Miss Manners fears, is to move on — quickly and with an enthusiast­ic, “Oh, that sounds wonderful. You’re going to have so much fun!”

DEAR MISS MANNERS: I have a condition that requires medical providers to visit my apartment at least twice per week. I also have badly functionin­g knees due to a life of significan­t clumsiness.

Currently, when I am expecting providers, I leave the door unlocked, having instructed them to knock, enter and call “yoohoo” so that I need not leap up and slowly limp to the door to open it for them. This saves my knees a considerab­le amount of grief, and means I don’t need to lurk near the door to be ready for their arrival.

Am I being rude? Also, since their arrival may coincide with my lunch, I frequently keep eating, especially when the visit is simply a delivery of supplies (as opposed to visits from the nurse, who does need my actual cooperatio­n). Is it wrong to continue to eat while we chat?

GENTLE READER: Rules of social etiquette apply to social situations — not the ones you are describing, which Miss Manners sees broadly as the provision of medical care.

DEAR MISS MANNERS: When you check out at a grocery store, bank, gas station, coffee shop, etc., the employee will often say, “What are your plans for today? Doing anything special?”

Since I don’t know them and they aren’t my friends, I’m at a loss as to how to reply.

I usually respond with

“not much.” A friend of mine is so fed up, she replies, “I’m getting a divorce,” which really shuts them up.

GENTLE READER: While agreeing that such questions are intrusive, Miss Manners reminds everyone that one offense does not justify another.

What we can call your friend’s Educationa­l Response pushes the boundaries, being acceptable only if delivered in a way that is clearly a jest.

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