Miss Manners 1/16
DEAR MISS MANNERS: My friends and I, who are religion-free (otherwise known as atheist), are debating how to respond to people who tell us to “Have a blessed day” or use any other religious signoff. It’s especially frustrating and offensive in what should be religion-free places of business, such as the doctor’s office or a public agency.
While we don’t want to be rude, and we know some people may not even understand why it is offensive and genuinely think they are being nice, we also don’t want the obvious proselytizing and forced religious exchange to go unchecked.
It’s tempting to respond with “Under his eye” or to explain that it’s offensive, but that would mean revealing private information about our personal religious status. And when you reveal you aren’t religious to someone who is, you risk bad treatment.
Instead, we almost always end up gritting our teeth and replying “You, too” or “Have a nice day” and letting it go. But it wears on us and makes us feel unwelcome and discriminated against. And it’s becoming more and more prevalent.
Is there a polite way to respond that also gently says the other person that that phrase is inappropriate and unwelcome?
GENTLE READER: Although you and your friends are religion-free, language is not. Even “goodbye” derives from “God be with ye.” People who bless you when you sneeze would be puzzled to be accused of forcing religion.
As you are against bringing religion into public discourse, Miss Manners wonders why you are even tempted to open such discussions. Explaining your position is surely an opening for others to explain theirs. She suggests that you continue to tolerate conventional cliches and stop taking them personally.
DEAR MISS MANNERS: I recently searched for the address of an instructor from college, about 35 years ago, so I could thank her again for helping me learn and grow. I was shocked to learn that she had died in 2010 (she was 67).
I began drafting a condolence letter to her husband, whom I never knew, but a close friend has gently suggested that I ought not to send it. She suggested that I should deal privately with my grief; that my grief about this loss is perhaps amplified by some other, more recent losses in my life; that it might be gauche after so long; and that the widower, who was roughly my instructor’s contemporary, might be dealing with challenges from aging.
On the one hand, I would want to know my late parent or partner had touched someone’s life. On the other, my friend has made some valid points.
GENTLE READER: She didn’t.
Only people who have never lost someone dear to them could believe the bereaved don’t want to be remember. Why your friend doesn’t want you to comfort an elderly widower, Miss Manners cannot imagine.
Please send your questions to Miss Manners at her website www.missmanners.com.