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Grocery Store Grazer
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Please send your questions for publication to [email protected].
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Dear
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Prudence,
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I would appreciate your views about an experience I had recently. I
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was at the supermarket buying bulk candy (a confection called "Hokey Pokey").
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It's in a bin, you scoop it into a bag, write the bin number on the twist-tie,
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and pay for it by the pound at the checkout. As I was writing the bin number on
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the tie, I noticed a woman politely waiting for me to finish. I moved out of
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the way, then she--I know you see this coming--scooped up a handful of Hokey
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Pokey and popped it in her mouth. I didn't say or do anything, and now I wish I
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had.
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It's irritating
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enough that I and other shoppers have to cover the cost of in-store snacks for
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her and others. But I have recently become a parent and wonder how I should
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react to this type of situation if I were with an inquisitive child. Do you
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think I should have said something to the woman? Should I have told the
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manager? I'm interested in your opinion.
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--R. in St. Paul, Minn.
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Dear R.,
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This is one of those public issues where the act
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seems minor, but the collective price is significant. It is of course, as you
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perceived, an ethical lapse. As for the questions you raise, Prudie thinks you
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were correct not to say anything because that would have undoubtedly led to a
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brouhaha in the aisle--perhaps with some Hokey Pokey being lobbed. It would
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also have seemed petty to go to the manager and tattle--mostly because he would
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probably have been disinclined to approach her and say, "I was informed you've
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been eating the Hokey Pokey." Arrests at candy bins are probably rare.
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Had Prudie been there,
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in lieu of saying anything, she might have made eye contact with the woman and
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then raised an eyebrow, the message being "My dear, what behavior!" If your
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child was old enough to witness the candy bin caper and wondered why the woman
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was eating from the bin, you would have been perfectly within the bounds of
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propriety to say, "You are quite right. What the lady is doing is dishonest,
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but we are not in charge of other people." If the transgressor were to hear
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this, you'd be in the clear because you would not have been talking to her ...
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and she would be just as embarrassed as if you had been. In sum, what you
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witnessed was petty thievery, not someone poisoning the city water supply, and
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no person was being harmed. You did the correct thing by not trying to be a
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policeman. The key to the question: To intervene or not to intervene, is
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judgment. That's what it's all about.
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--Prudie, judiciously
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Dear
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Prudence,
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I have a situation.
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I have a good friend of the opposite sex who I've known for three years.
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Although he was initially attracted to me, the feeling wasn't mutual, so we
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became platonic friends. He even got married recently. The thing is, we've
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become closer--and now I'm attracted to him. We haven't had sex, but a frolic
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or two has occurred. Since I've never thought of myself as "the other woman"
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type, we are not hanging out again until this goes away. His friendship is
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important to me, and I take those duties seriously. Do you think we can go back
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to being really good friends sans frolic? Or does my wish to be a good friend
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require severing the relationship? Help!!!!
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--Where the Hell Did This Come From?
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Dear Where,
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It is quite likely that
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you are suffering from the Grass-Is-Greener Syndrome. And, oh, to know what a
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frolic is! The image it suggests to your steadfast adviser is of two children
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dancing in a meadow ... though Prudie knows this can't be what you mean. And
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when you say the friendship is on hold "until this goes away," what, exactly,
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is "this"? The wife? The marriage? The attraction? Perhaps what needs to go
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away is you; that is, put the kibosh on the get-togethers. The electricity is
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not going to diminish, because most men like to ... frolic. If you are sincere
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about being a friend, you will save him from himself by keeping your distance.
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Not entirely unmarried men are seldom worth the trouble.
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--Prudie, definitively
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Dear
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Prudence,
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Having read many cases in which you handled
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tricky situations very adeptly, I am hoping you can help me do the same with
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mine. I have known a good friend for several years now (we are both graduate
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students within a small department), and we've always gotten along very well.
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However, I have noticed that there is a great turnover in her circle of friends
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each year as people inevitably get dropped. To compensate, she always seems to
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turn to a new crowd (usually new arrivals in the department) about whom she is
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wild for a while, until the ardor cools. Several people have noticed that she
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pursues people to add to her collection of friends, and she takes great pride
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in bragging about all the people she knows. She is intelligent, attractive, and
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friendly, but it seems to me she turns on the extroversion to hide
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insecurity.
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Having been her
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friend for years and watched this happen again and again, I had thought I was
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immune. But alas, in the last months I seem to have been increasingly
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blacklisted. She still refers to me as a friend, but I feel I am treated quite
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coldly now. I hate to see this hurtful pattern continue. Prudie, work your
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magic!
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--Newest Odd Man Out
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Dear New,
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OK, abracadabra: Clap
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your hands together three times and say, "All right, I'm out of this game." The
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"friend" sounds like the kind of person we used to call "a user" in junior
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high, or "a narcissist" in grown-up psychological circles. At best, this
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soi-disant queen bee is fickle, so what is there about the friendship
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that is of value? Since it's easier to change one's own behavior than that of
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another, you might want to consider why this person is important to you. There
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is perhaps an element of your having felt like the chosen one--someone so
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marvelous that even a notoriously picky person could not discard you. This is
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not what friendship is about. Prudie is sympathetic, however, because
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narcissistic people are often attractive. The problem is that they're not worth
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it.
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--Prudie, magically
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Dear
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Prudie,
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My dilemma has to do
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with one-upmanship. A close relative, my father's oldest sister, has a terrible
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habit of having "the worst case the doctor ever saw," or "the worst (whatever)
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the mechanic ever dealt with." No matter what difficulties anyone else present
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has, hers are always worse. Our family get-togethers seem more like a meeting
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of pathologists, each trying to dredge up more horrific experiences. How can I
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keep this from happening at our upcoming family reunion? (I am hosting it.) I
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am aware that this woman is very emotionally needy, but it's all getting to be
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too much.
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--B.D.
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Dear B.,
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Where is your sense of
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humor? The battle of the calamities is really kind of funny--and if you're onto
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it, so must everyone else be. Actually, it sounds like a nice change from the
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more common, "My neurologist is the best in the country." Those who truck in
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superlatives are recognized by thinking people as loose talkers and are not
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taken very seriously. Prudie doesn't see what the harm is, and perhaps some
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light joshing in Auntie's direction--since she seems to egg on everyone
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else--might advance your goal of diminishing the family game of "Can You Top
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This?"
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--Prudie,
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pragmatically
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