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Drawing upon her rich
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experience of life, Prudence (Prudie to her friends) responds to questions
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about manners, personal relations, politics, and other subjects. Please send
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your questions for publication to [email protected]. Queries should not exceed 200 words in
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length. Please indicate how you wish your letter to be signed, preferably
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including your location.
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Dear
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Prudie,
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Just what does a gentleman
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do when suspected of having been unfaithful to his wife? Is the answer to lie,
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lie, lie in order to keep peace in the family, shelter the self-esteem of his
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wife, and protect the reputation of the lady in question? Or is it as the Bible
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and some of our laws say: Do not bear false witness?
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I think
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I know how Prudence would reply. I'm interested in learning how the next
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generation looks at a question like this.
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--Dick Taylor
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Dear
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Dick,
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You do not say suspected by
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whom . If the transgressor is called on the carpet by his wife, the
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Bible's admonition is the one to follow.
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While Prudie admires concern
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for the spouse's self-esteem, peace in the family, and the reputation of the
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illicit partner, she must point out that all are jeopardized by the
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"gentleman's" actions.
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Your use
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of the phrase "having been unfaithful" suggests the affair may be over. If this
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is the case, the gentleman might take his wife for a drive and ask, "Will you
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forgive me, or should I drive right to a jewelry store?"
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--Prudie,
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generationally
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Dear
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Prudence,
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It would be fair to say
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that like Alyssa, the central character in Chasing Amy , I have until now
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led an experimental life. I am 25 and have one criminal conviction for hacking,
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a bad credit history, and some failed personal and professional relationships.
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Recently, however, I have settled down and become decidedly less
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experimental.
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My
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problem is this: I am extremely bright and possess an advanced degree in
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philosophy. Now I wish to go to medical school, law school, or apply for a
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government job. What do I say at the interview about my previous experimental
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life? In Chasing Amy , Alyssa says, when confronted with her past sexual
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behavior, "We are not born with maps inside us," but somehow I think an
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interviewer will want a more comprehensive answer. Can you suggest a metaphor
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for rationalizing my past? I need to be my own spin doctor.
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--N.F. in New
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Zealand
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Dear
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N.,
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Whatever you do, don't use
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dialogue from Chasing Amy at any interviews.
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As for
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your sexual experimentation, Prudie feels certain that the subject will not
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come up. You might, however, have a problem with the conviction and the credit
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history. I wish I could come through for you in the metaphor department, but I
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am feeling metaphorically challenged today. Just try to act reformed.
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--Prudie, spinningly
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Dear
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Prudence,
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I live in Pennsylvania,
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and during the warmer months I have a habit of not wearing shoes. I feel more
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lively and energetic when I'm barefoot. The good points outweigh the bad (such
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as dirty soles), and that's why I do it. Checking on the Internet, I have found
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there to be no health laws in any state that force people to wear shoes in
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public.
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My
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question is this: Why do some people look at me as if I'm doing something
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indecent by simply not wearing shoes? Also, why do most major fast food chains
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post a sign saying, "No shirt, no shoes, no service, by order of health
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department"? Do you find a person who is shoeless in public to be dressed
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indecently?
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--Jamie T. in
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Philadelphia
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Dear
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J.T.,
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For the word "indecent" I
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would substitute "unappetizing." The idea of entering a place of food service
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without shoes (or a shirt) seems vaguely Appalachian to Prudie. (Hot dog stands
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and ice cream shacks at beaches excepted.)
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Since
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people come in all manner of shapes and degrees of cleanliness, a decorous
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person would support even a fraudulent health code advisory.
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--Prudie, properly
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Dear
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Prudence,
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Not long ago I learned
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from "Trish" (not her real name), a co-worker, that the pregnancy of another
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co-worker, "Tina" (also not her real name), had ended in a miscarriage. After
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delivering this bit of news, Trish assured me it was "OK with Tina" that we all
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be told the bad news. I found this odd, since none of us had even known Trish
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was expecting.
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Is
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gossip now the preferred method of office communication? If so, has gossip
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replaced the memo? Will my supervisor whisper my work assignments to my
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co-workers, who will then whisper them to me? Or is gossip only sanctioned when
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the topic is of a private, personal nature? I guess my question is: How do I
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distinguish "sanctioned" gossip from regular old slander?
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--Hanging on the
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Grapevine in Dickenson, N.D.
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Dear
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Hang,
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Slander
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is a false report meant to do harm and is legally actionable. "I think Sally
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had a face lift" is not such an example. And no, Prudie does not think gossip
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has replaced the memo, but it is somehow delivered faster.
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--Prudie, idly
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Dear
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Prudence,
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I need
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your advice on the following. I received gifts from my parents (delivered by my
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mom). There were three gifts in the bag but none for my wife. Friends have told
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me this was a slight to my wife. My problem is what to do about the gifts. I
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could return one or all of them and use the credit to buy a gift for my wife,
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or I could return the gifts to my mother, explaining that I take the presents
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being just for me as an act of hostility.
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--Confused in
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Baltimore
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Dear
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Con,
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Prudie is
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not sure your problem is what to do about the gifts, but perhaps what to do
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about your mother. Subtle she is not. The solution for you may be to do both
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the things you mentioned, with a slight modification. I would tell Mumsy that
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you take umbrage at her acting out, and I would return the gifts for credit,
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buying a treat for both you and your wife.
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--Prudie,
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subtextually
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