Despite appearances, some advice columnists offer good,
solid, sensible advice. In the interest of positive thinking, and before I
write a post about one of the columnists from New York Magazine, I will offer a
few words about Philip Galanes who writes the etiquette column at the New York
Times.
Galanes is consistently thoughtful… which is the most you
have a right to expect from a columnist. In yesterday’s column he answered four
letters. Take a look, and think to yourself whether you agree with his answers.
First letter:
I recently switched jobs and have been training
to use a complicated new computer system. The young woman helping me is
terrific: kind, innovative and bright. While training, I learned that she was a
teen mom and lifted herself from difficult circumstances. She is interviewing
very soon for a better position in the company. But I’ve noticed that her
grammar is occasionally poor, and I fear it may hold her back. Could I say
something to her? She’s never asked for my advice, but we’ve talked about our
desire for advancement.
First response, abbreviated:
Assuming
“interviewing very soon” means … well, very soon, I picture an interaction like
so: “Denise, you’re terrific, but your grammar stinks. Now, get into that
interview room and knock ’em
dead!” You have just enough time to destabilize her, but not enough to teach
her subject-verb agreement. Let’s try a different tack.
Write
to the human-resources department, or whomever your co-worker is interviewing
with, and praise her to the heavens. If she’s the Stephen Sondheim of computer
trainers, let the gods of advancement know. Be specific about her ingenuity and
underscore her drive to grow. (But leave out the “teen mom” business; she
probably told you that in friendly confidence.)
Sounds good to me… right on the money. By the way, some
people do fail to get jobs because of their bad grammar. One imagines the schools
do not teach grammar any more… so we know who to blame. If they did their first
lesson should be to explain that if you use the common locution “I seen” you
sound illiterate.
Second letter:
I am a gay guy who rarely uses hookup apps. So I
was pretty shocked when my sister’s boyfriend turned up at my place via Scruff.
Our faces are sort of hidden in our profiles. He begged me not to tell my
sister. I want to be straight with her, but I’d hate to “out” someone. What do
you think?
Second response:
One
word for you, Jay: sister! Of course you’re going to tell her. Sharing the same
womb trumps the shaded complexity of outing. And you are not going to date this
guy, either …
Of course means of course. Points to Galanes. If you
imagined for an instant that he should keep the secret, you get three
demerits.
Third letter:
I am an avid gardener and keep our small yard in
top shape. I find it soothing after my busy weeks as a high school teacher and
dad to two young girls. Our neighbor knocked on our door and asked me not to
use the leaf blower on Sundays. He said it is his only day to rest and doesn’t
want to hear my “noise pollution.” I was taken aback but told him I would think
about it. Outrageous, right?
Third response:
Before
we get to your loathsome leaf blower, let me pay you a sincere compliment: If
more people responded as you did (“Let me think about it”) when they felt
aggravated by the demands of others, civility would increase exponentially.
Just take a beat and respond later when you’re cooler headed. Well done,
Robert!
Again, a good piece of advice. Think before you abandon impulse
control. Spontaneity is overrated. I know nothing about the noise levels of leaf blowers, but I heartily
endorse the Galanes view: namely, that we will enhance societal civility if we
pause before saying something stupid. At a time when everyone thinks that there
is some special virtue in saying No, the truth remains that the civil response
is: Let me think about it.
Fourth letter:
My 30-year-old son is vegan. My wife (his
stepmother) tries to accommodate him at family meals. But he often complains to
me privately that her vegan dishes are bland. And my wife makes not-so-subtle
swipes at the table about the extra work. This week, my son emailed me to ask
if it would offend my wife if he brought some dishes to Thanksgiving. He added
that her vegan offerings were limited last year. My wife saw the email and
flipped her tofu. How should I handle this?
Fourth response:
Something
tells me — O.K., it’s the nasty two-way sniping — that food is not the culprit
here. Tell your son, privately, that he should be a more gracious guest. More
important, tell him that your wife reads your emails. (He has an expectation of
privacy when writing to you directly.) Next, inform your wife that
passive-aggressive zingers about slaving in the kitchen do not flatter any
host. Then arrange for your son to bring a few vegan options to supplement your
wife’s undoubtedly delicious meal.
Precisely. We will ignore the fact that a thirty-year old
male should not be respected for being a whiny vegan. And obviously, if the young whiner wants to
eat his own special “tempeh tacos” as Galanes calls them, he can do as he
pleases. Of course, his failure to partake of the feast on the same terms as
everyone else makes him look like an outsider. In some cases it makes him look like he is sitting in judgment over everyone else's carnivorous impulses. Be that as it may, he has no right to complain
about the food on offer.
Anyway, as I see it, that’s four-for-four for Galanes. Kudos
for a job well done.
4 comments:
Computer chick: Give advice only when asked. If someone actually cares what you think, they will ask. Mind your own business.
Gay guy: Given the reality that one has a higher probability of contracting an STD from a bisexual or gay male than from a straight male, your duty is not to your identity group but to your sister.
Garden freak: My guess is that none of your neighbors want to listen to your leaf blower on Sunday. Buy an electric blower or negotiate a better time for that task.
Vegan weirdo: Your food phobias are your problem. Quit virtue signaling and bring your own swill.
Galanes seems a practical guy, unadorned with the latest psychobabble "theory".
Of course, Carl Jung would say... :-D
Agree with all except #2. "Let me think about that" only kicks the can down the road, and #2 will soon have to decide whether or not to comply with his neighbor's request. @trigger warning: you have no idea whether #2's neighbors agree with the complainant.
#2 should make his decision based on his availability to do what his yard requires. Other considerations are how long and how often (seems to me leaf blowers are of limited use during a couple of days in the fall, and how much noise actually is generated. I wouldn't know since I always raked mine. Lot more time consuming, but good exercise). If he has no other time during the week, then Sunday it is, and neighbor will have to live with it. I suspect that neighbor would be complaining regardless of #2's leaf blowing schedule.
"@trigger warning: you have no idea whether #2's neighbors agree with the complainant."
Of course you are right. But I do know that many towns and cities have already banned the use of gasoline leaf blowers precisely because of tne objectionable noise (they are loud enough that the wise operator will wear ear protection). Many others have noise ordinances that apply to leaf blowers, etc., so thats always a more aggressive, possibly entertaining, option for the lover of quietude. I confess to owning 2 Echo backpack blowers (I have several large trees on a large lot).
But my takeaway from your comment is to remember to count my blessing that I live in a neighborhood with nice, respectful neighbors who will make an effort to get along in harmony without taking every request as an affront to their liberty.
Leaf blowers are quite noisy. Ask the neighbor when he attends church, so you can be sure he won't be able to complain about the noise.
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