The Mercury News

Yes, write those thank-you notes

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

DEAR MISS MANNERS »

My mother has an active social life, with multiple friendship­s that have lasted decades. I have been assured that I have met these ladies, but that I was “just a baby” at the time.

I have been blessed with two children in the last two years and these kind ladies give my mother presents for my children. My mom brings some present from them practicall­y every other week. Some presents become a beloved favorite toy while others miss the mark. My mom then urges me to write thank-you notes to her friends.

These are unsolicite­d gifts from strangers. I have two young children and

I do not have the time to sit down and write thankyou notes to people I don't know.

I feel that if my mom wants them to receive a thank-you note, she should be the one to write it. GENTLE READER » Has it become so commonplac­e to explicitly solicit presents that we have become resentful when people give them spontaneou­sly — and for the sheer pleasure of it?

Never mind; Miss Manners knows the answer all too well.

Yes, these inconsider­ate strangers are using your children as a conduit for expressing their affection for your mother. How rude.

If you really want the presents to stop, by all means, make your mother look bad and cease writing thank-you letters. But know that since the relative success rate of these presents is fairly high (although it should not matter), you also will be punishing your children.

The good news is that if you just hold out a couple more years, your children will be old enough to write the letters themselves. Then you can have the pleasure of nagging them.

DEAR MISS MANNERS » We received a last-minute virtual invitation to a wedding from a family from out of state with whom we used to be close. They had previously advertised the wedding on social media, including the date, and we wondered if we would be invited.

We weren't, which was totally fine because of our limited budget. Then, two weeks before the wedding date, we received an email inviting us to watch it virtually. We already had plans that night, but because we care for this family, we tried to bend things so we could watch it.

Unfortunat­ely, the video feed for the reception was all goofed up. We couldn't really see it and then we just got a replay reel at the end.

What would you say the suggested gift amount is in that situation? For a normal wedding, I think it's $200, but that is a bit out of our league and the whole thing was very hodgepodge. My husband wants to send $25, but I don't know if that's an insult.

GENTLE READER » It is if you send it in cash. But the monetary equivalent, in the form of an even minimally thought-out present, will be far less obvious in its intended message. Which is, of course, that a virtual wedding was not worth a higher price of admission.

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