Cherished readers, today was a travel day so please excuse no original post….but here, enjoy Hyacinth Bucket as she is harassed by those wanting Chinese TakeAway.
Best Bucket Woman Wishes,
The Lady Hooper-Brackett
The Lady Hooper-Brackett: Etiquette. Manners. Advice.
Work with The Lady Hooper-Brackett: Proofreading-Consultation-Digital Marketing Services
Cherished readers, today was a travel day so please excuse no original post….but here, enjoy Hyacinth Bucket as she is harassed by those wanting Chinese TakeAway.
Best Bucket Woman Wishes,
The Lady Hooper-Brackett
Someone posed this question and it took me a day or so to come up with answer. But I think my opinion might have been helpful to these folks!
Dear Lady Hooper-Brackett,
All of the preparations for my wedding are going smoothly except for choosing where to go on our honeymoon. My fiance is an outdoorsman and wants to have an active honeymoon with fishing and hiking. I would rather go to museums and relax. I’m not saying this is actually causing us to fight, but my fiance has made the point that this is the only vacation he will get this year (he just started a new job and is limited on his days off). Help, please. Do you have any suggestions?
Harried Honeymooner
Dear Harried Honeymooner,
I empathize with your problem because, quite frankly, I went through the same thing with Lord Hooper-Brackett. You ask for help and suggestions…here they are:
I could exhaust myself making suggestions. My best advice: make this trip a reflection of you both as a couple. And try the fishing excursion. Even if you only sit on the boat and cheer him as he reels one in, your togetherness is all that matters.
Best Honeymoon Wishes,
The Lady Hooper-Brackett
I’ve found that I’ve been asked this question in one form or another several times. Here is one version that I think accurately reflects the worries that some folks have about entertaining.
Dear Lady Hooper-Brackett
My son is being married at his fiancee’s church, which happens to be in New York City. We live in Boston as do many of our friends and family who are invited to the wedding and reception. We will all be carpooling or taking the train to NYC (which you can imagine is costing the group of 48 both time and money) The bride and her family have decided to serve only “light refreshments” at the reception. And by light she means tea-time finger sandwiches, champagne, and small dainty desserts in addition to the wedding cake. Am I wrong to feel that they should serve something a little more substantial? Especially with the groom’s family numbering so many and traveling such a distance. I’ve offered to contribute and they politely refuse.
Starving Mother of The Groom
Dear Starving Mother of The Groom
First I will say what you want me to say: HOW AWFUL! They should be ashamed at serving such meager cuisine.
Now I will say this:
Traditionally, the bride’s family hosts the reception and provides the apres-nuptial bounty. In our modern times, there seems to be more cost-splitting going on, but this is the traditional role that the bride and her family play. Basically, what they are serving is perfectly acceptable. Even if they would choose to serve only the wedding cake and punch or champagne, that is entirely correct.
NOW, with that being said…as you have been rebuffed in your efforts to contribute to the food kitty, I advise this:
Since all of the starving Bostonians are traveling together anyway, after the wedding reception, find a restaurant in the city where you can play hostess, pay for the cornucopia of vittles, and eat as much as you like. Your relatives will have full tummies and can travel home in comfort.
Best Wedding Wishes
The Lady Hooper-Brackett
I was with friends, reminiscing about our high school days. Ahh, nothing like the memories of youth. (Though I acknowledge that I would not want to go back and re-do high school.) The group was unanimous that one of their favorite classes was Home Economics. One of the ladies in the group is a teacher and it seems that, according to her, Home-Ec is no longer taught. She said that it is not just in her district, but everywhere. She says that the material is no longer relevant.
This seems to be a travesty. I remember my co-ed Home-Ec class as being fun and informative. It taught valuable life skills and gave students, at the very least, a minimum knowledge about cooking, home care, family responsibilities etc…And lest you think that I am severely ancient, she graduated from high school when George H. W. Bush was president and Barbara Bush wore her lovely strand of pearls.
I know that times change, but I cannot help but feel saddened that current students will not know the fun of cooking something new, learning cooking techniques, and learning to sew a simple skirt or pillow. These skills boost one’s confidence that one can care for themselves and others. It seems that modern education forgets this.
Best Home-Ec Wishes,
The Lady Hooper-Brackett
Here is an anonymous email asking for advice on a subject that I am sure we all deal with in our lives.
Dear Lady Hooper-Brackett,
Recently I was in a restaurant and I noticed a man kept looking over at me. I didn’t recognize him and kept on with my conversation. Suddenly, I noticed he was approaching the table. He stood near my seat and said ,”I wanted to come over and say hello. Do you recognize me?” I didn’t. He then said , “Weren’t you in the class of 1996 at Stamford High School? Didn’t you go on the senior trip to the Jersey Shore?” It was then my heart dropped. This was the guy that I had a huge crush on in school, the man that I childishly pursued. His way of handling it 20 some odd years ago was to humiliate me and make fun of me publicly.
I was polite and made small talk for a few minutes. He seemed really happy to see me and as though he forgot all of the strangeness from school. Also, I felt bad for him because time wasn’t kind to him and he has lost his looks. But I wonder if I should have been less than polite to him?
Thank you.
Dearest Emailer, I am more concerned about the way this man approached you in public than with how you handled yourself, but perhaps I will touch upon that in another post. To answer your question about your own reaction, this is what I feel.
It will never be incorrect to be polite to someone in the circumstances that you detail. No doubt, in the two decades since you have left high school, you have grown as an individual and would never remake the mistakes of youth. You were right to give him the benefit of the doubt and be polite, after all he has no doubt moved on from the follies of his youth. He may not remember the situation from school the same way that you do. I feel that since he made an effort to come to speak to you, then he was happy he had seen you. I feel you handled things nicely in a surprise situation.
I do believe, however, that there is nothing wrong with taking secret delight in the fact that someone who was once rude to you “lost his looks” as you say. In fact, I believe you should be most pleased that you looked enough the same that someone who knew you so long ago would still recognize you. Keep doing what you’re doing!
Best Mannerly Wishes,
The Lady Hooper-Brackett