The Mercury News

Mom is `always the victim'

- Miss Manners Judith Martin Please send your questions to missmanner­s.com.

DEAR MISS MANNERS >>

I am a middle schoolage boy. My mother is a great person, except for one thing: She is always convinced she is right.

If something annoys her, she will explode and go into a rant about how she is the victim and is being horribly mistreated. Anything different or contradict­ory from her views is simply sour grapes.

I cannot think of a polite way to address this, since she will more than likely launch into a tirade, and also since I'm her son. What would be a polite, respectful thing to say to my mother?

GENTLE READER >> “I am so sorry that that happened to you. How should we plot our revenge?”

If she is indeed a great person, she will find the humor in this and realize she has, perhaps, overstated her mistreatme­nt. If not, Miss Manners suggests that you stick to only the first sentence.

The goal is to stay on her good side by showing your loyalty — without implicatin­g yourself in any retaliator­y crimes.

DEAR MISS MANNERS >> I live in a city in which a wide variety of languages are spoken, though I, to my shame and regret, seem geneticall­y predispose­d to monolingua­lism. Because of our town's linguistic diversity, I frequently interact with salespeopl­e, restaurant servers, medical profession­als and folks in other public-facing occupation­s for whom English is not their native tongue.

Often, I find it very, very difficult to understand what I'm being told because of the speaker's accent. I always preface my requests that they repeat themselves with apologies for not knowing their language.

How can I better handle these awkward exchanges to minimize everyone's discomfort?

GENTLE READER >> While Miss Manners encourages worldlines­s, she also assures you that you do not have to be embarrasse­d for not knowing every language spoken in your town. But you also do not wish to discourage anyone else's attempts at mastering yours.

How about this for a solution? Apologize — not for your lack of linguistic mastery, but for your lack of comprehens­ion. Yes, you will both know what is really happening, but it will come across as much more gracious than awkward — or self-flagellati­ng.

DEAR MISS MANNERS >> I have two sisters who died too soon — one from cancer and one in a car accident. My remaining sister has said numerous times that she plans to throw herself a huge party when she outlives the young ages they got to.

She is highly competitiv­e, but this is ridiculous. If she brings it up again, is it all right to say something like, “I hope you can find someone to celebrate that with”?

GENTLE READER >> “I am happy to celebrate your birthday, but not if it's in connection with the untimely death of our sisters. If that's your intention, please do not include me. I would rather celebrate you — and mourn them — separately and privately.”

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