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ASK
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PRUDENCE
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Prudence, drawing on her rich experience of life, will answer questions
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submitted by readers. She will respond to questions about manners, personal
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relations, politics, economics, and other subjects. Questions should be sent to
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[email protected].
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They should not exceed 200 words in length. Please indicate how you wish your
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letter to be signed, preferably including your location.
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Dear
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Prudence,
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I just
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had lunch at a local Internet cafe. I brought my own laptop and wireless modem,
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the better to read Slate in its full framed glory. I was (slowly)
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downloading full images while everyone else was using Lynx. I did order a
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cheese sandwich, and nobody gave me any dirty looks, but even so, I felt a
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little guilty about not spending any money for my online experience. Is it rude
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to bring your own digital device to an Internet cafe? What about bringing food
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but paying for a terminal?
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--Sincerely,Somewhere
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in Seattle
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P.S. To be specific,
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I'm at www.speakeasy.org, and I just finished my tasty sandwich.
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Dear
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Somewhere in Seattle,
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Prudence had never heard of
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an Internet cafe until she received your letter. Apparently such things do not
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exist east of the Rockies or north of 25 years of age. I have, however,
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consulted the Web site to which you refer, and now have a clue as to the
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subject of your query.
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As I understand it, the cafe
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provides computers and modems for the use of its patrons for a fee and also
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sells food. Your question is whether it is improper for you to bring your own
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laptop and wireless modem, thus bypassing the fee, and to buy only a cheese
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sandwich.
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The management of the cafe
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has established the rules for the use of their facility. Since they have let
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you in and have not kicked you out, it appears that you have not violated any
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of those rules. You are not being rude. But if there are many people like you,
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and especially if you are occupying space that might be occupied by a paying
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customer, the management will change the rules. They will establish a cover
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charge or require a minimum food purchase for the use of a table. The situation
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will be like that in a cabaret, where you cannot sit down at a table and watch
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the show without paying something.
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In the
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meantime, until the rules are changed, it would be wise of you to leave a tip
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or spend more on food. Otherwise you will not get a good table or will have
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crumbs brushed into your laptop, even though, strictly speaking, you are
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abiding by the rules.
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--Prudence, easterly
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Dear
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Prudence,
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This question is about the
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etiquette of having a love affair with a macroeconomist. He's 15 years older
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than me and a former colleague. I have an iron-clad rule about colleagues and
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sex (i.e., don't do it), but now that I've changed jobs he's made his personal
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interest in me pretty clear; and I like him a lot. In view of this quite
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relevant fact--and the global scarcity of men who, like him, are tall, funny,
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and smarter than me--the age thing doesn't bother me. BUT. The problem is: I
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don't know if he's still married to the mother of his two college-age kids, and
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I don't know how to ask. I know this sounds dumb. But our earlier professional
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friendliness did not extend to swapping details of our private lives, although
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he does mention the kids. Is this some kind of guy code for "wife"??
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So, can
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you suggest a polite way to raise this, preferably using some kind of Southeast
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Asia currency-crisis metaphor to get the point across? (He's up to his neck in
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all that stuff out there right now.)
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--Hesitating in
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Paris
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Dear
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Hesitating in Paris,
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Prudence is pleased that you
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are not put off by the fact that this man is a macroeconomist and 15 years
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older than you. There can be lots of life left in an old macroeconomist.
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Now, how to find out if he is
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married:
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You might say to him, "I
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understand that the IMF is committed to standing by Thailand to the end, no
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matter what happens. Do you think such a commitment is wise? How about such
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commitments between individuals, even between husbands and wives?"
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You might try: "I suppose you
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are hoping that Congress will do something about the marriage penalty in the
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income tax this year. Would it make much difference to you?"
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How about: "The OECD tax-free
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store is having a sale on Chanel No. 5. Should I buy some for your wife?"
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Of course,
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you could just ask him.
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--Prudence,
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delightedly
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Dear
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Prudence,
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Is it
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proper etiquette to e-mail thank-you notes? It seems OK to send invitations by
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e-mail (for dinners or parties), and I announced my engagement this way to many
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people (easier than calling them all on the phone). But whenever I e-mail a
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thank-you note (for dinner parties or gifts), I always end up sending a
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snail-mail note as well--out of guilt. I doubt that I will send thank-you notes
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for wedding gifts this way, but I am curious to know what others think,
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especially Emily Post.
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--Pamela L. in
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Seattle
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Dear
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Pamela,
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I don't know what Emily Post
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thinks. She doesn't have an e-mail address. I believe thank-you notes to
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persons you know and care about should be individually handwritten and sent by
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snail mail. That is a way to show the depth of your gratitude and affection.
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Even on occasions where use of a printed acknowledgment is appropriate, as in
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acknowledging the receipt of letters of condolence upon bereavement, the
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printed card should be signed by hand with a personal word added.
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If you
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want to send Bill Clinton a letter thanking him for the fine state of the U.S.
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economy, you can send that by e-mail. (For more information, see the White House Web site.)
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--Prudence,
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traditionally
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Dear
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Prudence,
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I sincerely hope you will
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not find cause to "go back to [your] needlepoint" anytime soon [see the Jan. 1,
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1998, "Dear Prudence"]. I realize that this feeling is quite selfish, as
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it ignores any potential need for needlepoint items you might have, but all I
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can offer is the assurance that it is an honest sentiment: Having been born a
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century too late, this admirer of yours is pleased to see that not everyone has
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adopted the social graces of Beavis and Butt-Head or, for that matter, of the
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average politician.
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May
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your needlepoint suffer from years and years of utter neglect!
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--Felix Kasza
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Dear Mr.
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Kasza,
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Thanks,
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I'll let the needlepoint rest for a while longer.
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--Prudence, gratefully
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Dear
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Prudence,
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Maybe
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you can help. My friend has loved the same person for over 20 years. While he
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has been and done so many things to end the relationship forever, she is so
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loving and forgiving. Now, the big one has happened. He took her car ... and
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has not been seen for four days now. He moved here from another state and his
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surroundings are new, but we as family have tried to bring him into the fold.
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Now he's gone. My friend's heart is broken and I can't help. I think he was
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using her all the time. What can I do? I'm VERY worried about my friend's
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mentation.
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--Help
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Dear
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Help,
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You ask what you can do. You
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can play only a secondary role. Only she can salvage her life. If she is
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determined to do that, you can help her; otherwise, you can't.
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She has to recognize that
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the man is gone--as gone as if a truck had hit him. Even if he returns, he is
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gone from her and can no longer be a part of her life. She also has to
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recognize that she has behaved very unwisely. As you say, she was "too" in
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love--she had invested too much of herself in an asset that has turned out to
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be a bad risk and eventually a major loss.
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Now she has to find new
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interests. Not knowing her, I cannot tell what they might be--reading, music,
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appreciation of nature, volunteer activity, church, or whatever is closest to
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her. She has to want these as a new life, not as stopgaps while she waits for
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him to return. These new interests will be more valuable to her if she can
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share them with someone. That is where you may come in. It would be better
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still if she could share those interests with someone she loves. That cannot be
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ordered up. But love is more likely to come if she is an interested and
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interesting person.
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I
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strongly recommend that she read a little book by Viktor E. Frankl, Man's
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Search for Meaning . It shows what the will to appreciate and restore life
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can do in the most adverse of circumstances.
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--Prudence,
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optimistically
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