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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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Do you
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know anything about the Zone diet? I seem to recall there was some controversy
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surrounding it, but I can't remember what. My friend is seeing a nutritionist
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who has him following the basic premise of the Zone. I am curious as well as
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confused. Any info, Prudie, would be gratefully appreciated.
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--Andrea,New
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York
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Dear
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And,
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Prudie is not a fan of
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diets. She prefers low-fat foods and smaller portions. The trouble with diets
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is that they are demanding, boring, and most often do not offer lasting
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results. The trick is to retrain oneself in terms of how one eats and to reach
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a new set point in one's weight.
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For a fast start, Prudie
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does approve of diets, however trendy, and spas where the right foods are
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chosen for you. This is just to permit shedding a few initial pounds to provide
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motivation and hope, along with the feeling that one is able to achieve
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success.
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Prudie
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knows people who swear by the Zone, and others who swear at it. The real
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problem with any prescribed diet is lack of balance, and the fact that feeling
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deprived leads to chocolate cake. Perhaps a reliable approach is the one the
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late Jacqueline Onassis is said to have used. She ate whatever she felt
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like--and left half of it on the plate.
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--Prudie, trimly
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Dear
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Prudie,
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I have an irritation, not
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a problem, but I thought perhaps you could offer me a palliative.
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What is
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behind people telling you they are going to "the best doctor," sometimes
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"the best doctor in the world," in such and such a field? I know there are many
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fine physicians around, but this seems to me to be a form of bragging. How do
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these people decide that their doctor is the best? These pronouncements on
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subjective issues annoy me no end. I have yet to hear someone say they are
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going to a doctor who is kind of mediocre.
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--Thank you,Barbara in
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Phoenix
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Dear
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Bar,
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Prudie is in your camp,
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though she has made her peace with this manifestation of human nature. People
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just need to feel that their care is top of the line.
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Whenever
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Prudie hears such a declaration, she basically zones out, and the remark has
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the same weight as "I just had the best cheese Danish."
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--Prudie, medicinally
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Dear
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Prudie,
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I read your response to
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the writer who wondered how he should introduce his grandmother's beau. I have
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found a good term for women to use: "gentleman caller." It's very handy in the
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early stages of dating, because it's wonderfully vague--not to mention that it
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provides an opportunity to poke fun at oneself and modern dating
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rituals.
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If
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things move in a more serious direction, the gentleman can be upgraded to "my
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fella" in casual conversation, or for introductions, "my James" (or whatever
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the appropriate name is). This allows others to join in the fun by referring to
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the gentleman as "So-and-so's James." Of course, while this form of address
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does away with the confusion created by the term "my friend," I think you'd
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agree that one should put off using the possessive endearment until it is truly
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called for, or it will come across as treacly baby talk.
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--Wryly,Kate
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Wrath
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Dear
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Wry,
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"Gentleman caller" is not
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only wonderfully vague, but very Tennessee Williams. Of course, you knew
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that.
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Prudie
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heartily approves of your suggestions for the relationship upgrade
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nomenclature. She is sure you have been helpful to countless people over 30
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struggling with proper designation for the beloved and is grateful for the
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assist.
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--Prudie, nominally
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Dear
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Prudence,
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Why does the National
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Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League get to drop an initial from its
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acronym? Why do writers and editors call it "NARAL" instead of
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"NARRAL"?
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Would
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it be OK to follow this trend and refer to NOW as NO or OW? Could the ABA be
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just AA? Are government agencies allowed to drop letters? The DOJ would sound
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so much more hip as the "Deejay." And even Microsoft would project more power
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and mystery if it went by "M" rather than the prissy, feminine "MS."
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--X
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Dear X,
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It sounds
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as though you have time on your hands. You might want to consider volunteering
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at a homeless shelter.
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--Prudie, busily
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