Episode 402 - Many Grads
In this episode of Awesome Etiquette
Welcome to Awesome Etiquette, where we explore modern etiquette through the lens of consideration, respect and honesty. On today’s show we take your questions on group graduation parties, giving older relatives car rides, speaking another language in a public space, and sharing one family member’s news with the rest of the family. For Awesome Etiquette Sustaining members our question is about paying to replace something you didn’t break. Plus your most excellent feedback, etiquette salute and a postscript on the history of etiquette books.
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Speaker 1: maybe it's just that you don't know how to use social courtesy that's old fashioned
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Speaker 2: act as host and hostess. They know that courtesy
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Speaker 1: means showing
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Speaker 2: respect, thinking of the other person, real friendliness. Hello and welcome to awesome etiquette where we explore modern etiquette through the lens of consideration, respect and honesty. On today's show, we take your questions on group graduation parties, giving older relatives car rides and who should sit where
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Speaker 2: speaking another language in a public space and sharing one family members news with the rest of the family for awesome etiquette sustaining
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Speaker 1: members. Our question of the week
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Speaker 2: is about paying to replace something
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Speaker 1: you didn't break
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Speaker 2: plus your most excellent feedback etiquette salute and a postscript on the history of etiquette books. All that's coming up,
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Speaker 2: awesome
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Speaker 1: etiquette comes to you from the studios of our home offices in Vermont and is proud to be produced by the Emily
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Speaker 2: Post Institute. I'm
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Speaker 1: lizzie Post and I'm dan post Senning,
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Speaker 1: hey,
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Speaker 2: how's
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Speaker 1: it going, lizzie Post? It's, it's
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Speaker 2: going, I feel like it's going a little
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Speaker 1: faster than my brain can keep up with
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Speaker 2: it this weekend
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Speaker 1: next. We have a lot going
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Speaker 2: on right now, both at the institute
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Speaker 1: and in our, in our personal lives. I know, I know getting ready for a big
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Speaker 2: Memorial Day
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Speaker 1: weekend.
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Speaker 1: I know
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Speaker 2: I'm headed off, we're actually both headed
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Speaker 1: to the same place but at
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Speaker 2: opposite
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Speaker 2: parts of the
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Speaker 1: week. I am headed down to Martha's vineyard
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Speaker 2: to help my other side of the family
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Speaker 1: opened up their property
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Speaker 2: down there or
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Speaker 1: our property down there. I'm really excited. This
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Speaker 2: is a job I've
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Speaker 1: Wanted since I was probably like 20 years old and I'm finally a trainee and so I'm stoked to be going down and being with the rest of the crew, which are a bunch of my
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Speaker 2: other cousins.
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Speaker 2: I love that image just so you
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Speaker 1: know you and a bunch of fully grown functioning adults all in trainee roles with your aunts and uncles and mothers and fathers all supervising.
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Speaker 2: It'll be awesome
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Speaker 1: just
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Speaker 2: so the audience can
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Speaker 1: get a picture. It's
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Speaker 2: this really
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Speaker 1: fabulous
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Speaker 1: farm property. So fields that lead out to dunes and then
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Speaker 2: the beach. I mean it's like
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Speaker 2: gorgeous as you could imagine tons of woods behind
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Speaker 1: you. So it's really private and
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Speaker 2: we will be on hands and knees
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Speaker 1: scrubbing these houses and making
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Speaker 2: sure that they have
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Speaker 1: enough, you know, detergent and
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Speaker 2: sheets and
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Speaker 1: towels and anything that's broken is gonna get fixed and there's going to be painting projects and
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Speaker 2: carpentry
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Speaker 1: projects and I'm sure lawn mowing project all that and we do. We have a wonderful couple who are caretakers of the property
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Speaker 2: who also
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Speaker 1: aid in all of this.
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Speaker 2: But there's a
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Speaker 1: number of houses on the property. So there is a lot to manage and it's, it's just really exciting.
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Speaker 1: two of like my closest
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Speaker 2: cousins, like the
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Speaker 1: cousins, I'm closest to,
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Speaker 1: I'm gonna be staying in one of
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Speaker 2: the houses with them.
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Speaker 1: One of them manages all of us and that's her first year doing it and the other one who's like another brother, he's like another dan in my life even though no one could ever really be like another dan in my life. I'm just so excited to go and like
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Speaker 1: get into the dirty
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Speaker 2: hard work of
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Speaker 1: like cleaning these houses and making them awesome and
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Speaker 1: and living the dream. I wanted
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Speaker 2: to live for
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Speaker 1: Like a good well yeah I'm almost 40. So good like 20 years now. Good trainee good.
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Speaker 1: And then you're gonna skedaddle out of there and we're probably on ferries that will
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Speaker 2: cross each other like
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Speaker 1: literally ships. Not in the night
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Speaker 2: but during the
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Speaker 1: day.
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Speaker 1: No I have the weekend with his family. There's a big gathering of all her cousin level family and it's all about their kids summer birthdays so we're calling it like the birthday gathering and artists included
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Speaker 2: within
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Speaker 1: that. But so
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Speaker 2: are the
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Speaker 1: twins. And so
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Speaker 2: is I think someone coming up from
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Speaker 1: boston. I
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Speaker 1: don't even
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Speaker 2: know everybody. That's gonna be a
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Speaker 1: lot of birthdays
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Speaker 2: to celebrate. And then
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Speaker 1: we'll move from there directly
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Speaker 2: down to Mv and we
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Speaker 1: will we'll just miss you And
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Speaker 2: that will be a bit of a bummer. But also we're very excited to be headed south and headed to the shore.
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Speaker 1: I don't know it'll
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Speaker 2: be it'll be really, really awesome.
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Speaker 1: But you started this call talking about a lot of work that we have going on and it's true we do but I want to talk about something that
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Speaker 2: is the
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Speaker 1: fruition of work that was done a while ago and we finally got to see the results
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Speaker 2: of it this last
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Speaker 1: week and it was so cool as opposed you were on the Rachel ray show,
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Speaker 1: I
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Speaker 2: was, I was on the
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Speaker 1: Rachel ray show and we
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Speaker 2: filmed this back at
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Speaker 1: like the end of september or october of last year and
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Speaker 2: it was that long
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Speaker 1: ago, I would have guessed
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Speaker 1: the middle of the winter, but we had a
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Speaker 2: couple of suggested
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Speaker 1: air dates for it that came and went and then it was going to air on monday, but then it, or Tuesday and then
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Speaker 1: I got the news that they were doing a rerun and instead it was going to air on thursday. So it did air on thursday dan, you were kind enough to find it online through Just a quick search and I get too nervous to actually watch them back so I filter
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Speaker 2: it through.
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Speaker 1: No,
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Speaker 2: no, I heard you play it in
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Speaker 1: the background during our phone call yesterday and that was enough.
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Speaker 1: Um but I'm really glad that you really liked it and that
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Speaker 2: they had done such a
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Speaker 1: fabulous job, you said with the b roll the
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Speaker 2: images of Emily and telling a little bit of her
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Speaker 1: history and stuff. So
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Speaker 2: I was really excited to hear
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Speaker 1: that. Well I want to take this opportunity to encourage any of
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Speaker 1: our audience who are listening right now. If you are at a computer or if you're thinking of this, when
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Speaker 2: you get to a computer, do
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Speaker 1: a little google search, google search, lizzie Post, Rachel ray
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Speaker 2: video, then
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Speaker 1: you should find it as a pretty recent high search result is about a four minute clip and
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Speaker 1: you keyed
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Speaker 2: on lizzie, the thing that
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Speaker 1: I was so excited to see and I didn't realize you had done the amount of work that you had done, getting them B roll footage of
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Speaker 1: you, for example, turning a page from an old photo
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Speaker 2: album and
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Speaker 1: taking, taking video footage of that. Then they splice it together. That B roll that you
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Speaker 2: talked about. But
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Speaker 1: they ended up presenting Emily
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Speaker 2: Post as a historical
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Speaker 1: figure and you and your work
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Speaker 2: at the Emily Post
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Speaker 1: Institute in a very well produced, very seamless little
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Speaker 1: opening segment that I thought
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Speaker 1: was as
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Speaker 1: professional and quick a
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Speaker 2: look at the history of Emily
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Speaker 1: Post and the current
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Speaker 2: state of the Emily Post Institute is
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Speaker 1: anything I've seen in a while.
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Speaker 2: I thought it was really
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Speaker 1: good and I
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Speaker 2: appreciate the time
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Speaker 1: that I know you spent putting that together because video
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Speaker 2: work product,
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Speaker 1: it takes work to make it look
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Speaker 2: easy and good
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Speaker 1: and it looked easy and good.
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Speaker 2: Oh good.
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Speaker 1: I'm really, really glad we'll definitely audience if you
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Speaker 2: if you get a chance to
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Speaker 1: to hit it up on google, go for it.
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Speaker 1: And
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Speaker 2: it was really good
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Speaker 1: Seeing this one come to fruition, but
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Speaker 2: that wasn't the only thing we had
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Speaker 1: going on this week. We
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Speaker 2: were testing a new
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Speaker 1: product and finally got it to
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Speaker 2: work. That was
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Speaker 1: incredible. I had my first meeting
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Speaker 2: with one of our train, the trainer graduates as I move into a position
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Speaker 1: of managing our train,
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Speaker 2: the trainer graduates and that
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Speaker 1: probably was the most fulfilling
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Speaker 2: Thing of the week. I, I came off that call on cloud nine just really
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Speaker 1: excited about that program and the
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Speaker 2: people who tend to take that
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Speaker 1: program, you do get to
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Speaker 2: deep dive etiquette
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Speaker 1: with them. They, it's really fun to reminisce about their trainings
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Speaker 1: and this
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Speaker 2: particular graduate has been with us for almost
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Speaker 1: 10 years. So it was really incredible to,
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Speaker 2: to chat with her.
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Speaker 1: And then we
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Speaker 2: also received back the next version
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Speaker 1: of the edits
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Speaker 2: along with the illustrations and they're almost finalized form. So it was like all this stuff going on left, right and center
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Speaker 2: and at the same time you and I, we're podcasting and we're, you know, catching up with each other and sending each other files and all the normal kind of like day to day stuff that goes on. It just felt like such a week.
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Speaker 1: I want to acknowledge all
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Speaker 2: that. And I also want to
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Speaker 1: point out that you buried the lead because I know
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Speaker 2: you were excited
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Speaker 1: to talk to our trainer
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Speaker 2: but you just
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Speaker 1: teased
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Speaker 2: the role that you're
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Speaker 1: stepping into
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Speaker 2: helping to manage our trainer community and
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Speaker 1: that's a decision
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Speaker 2: we've made here over the last month
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Speaker 1: and I am so
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Speaker 2: excited about it and I don't want to talk too much about it right now, but
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Speaker 2: I do just want
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Speaker 1: to put a little pin in that and say let's return
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Speaker 2: to it at
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Speaker 1: a future intro to the show
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Speaker 2: and talk more about it because I
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Speaker 1: am as excited about
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Speaker 2: that as you are and I am
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Speaker 2: just delighted that one of
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Speaker 1: your first calls with
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Speaker 2: with one of our trainers went so well
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Speaker 1: and sort of started
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Speaker 2: you off on that foot thinking
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Speaker 1: about this project,
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Speaker 2: Oh my gosh! You know what else happened this week?
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Speaker 1: Do tell,
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Speaker 2: I know, I know we're running long on our intro here,
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Speaker 2: but I also got to play golf for the first time this season,
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Speaker 1: down up here in Vermont and I, that also filled me up so
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Speaker 2: much, it was right after that trainer calls, so it's feeling really, really good.
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Speaker 2: But it was, it was amazing. I was paired up to play with one of my favorite girlfriends, her husband, who, I mean, I was the officiant at their wedding
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Speaker 1: joined us
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Speaker 2: and a guy that
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Speaker 1: I used to babysit for his
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Speaker 2: Kids also joined us. So it was like just so much fun, it was a really fun round and a shot of 47 which if you don't play golf
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Speaker 1: and you don't know my game is
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Speaker 2: really good? I've got to say the best thing about gaining
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Speaker 1: weight is that my golf game
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Speaker 2: is so much longer.
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Speaker 1: Um, but
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Speaker 2: It was 47
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Speaker 1: is not typical
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Speaker 2: for me. I have a hard
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Speaker 1: Time breaking 50 on a round of nine and a 47 was just, I was stoked.
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Speaker 2: So thank you for
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Speaker 1: indulging a little golf brag
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Speaker 2: excitement.
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Speaker 1: That's alright. You squeezed in a 47 lucky number for Pomona
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Speaker 2: college go say jen's
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Speaker 2: okay, Okay, there you go. But it was also, it was so nice to be out socializing
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Speaker 1: and to, to
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Speaker 2: be really getting back into the
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Speaker 1: groove of life here in Vermont. So I hope, I hope you all are having some similar experiences out there. Well speaking of grooves, we have another groove we need to get into here. Oh,
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Speaker 2: I think we should get into the question
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Speaker 1: groove. Let's
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Speaker 2: do it.
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Speaker 1: Awesome etiquette is here
00:10:24
Speaker 2: to answer your questions.
00:10:26
Speaker 1: You can email them
00:10:27
Speaker 2: to awesome etiquette
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00:10:30
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00:10:31
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00:10:35
Speaker 2: 546
00:10:36
Speaker 1: three. You can also reach us on social media on
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Speaker 2: twitter. We are at
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Speaker 2: instagram. We are at Emily Post
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00:10:44
Speaker 1: etiquette. Just
00:10:45
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Speaker 1: awesome etiquette with
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Speaker 2: your post so that we know you want your question on
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Speaker 1: the show.
00:11:01
Speaker 2: Our
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Speaker 1: first question is
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Speaker 2: titled grouping grads, Are you ready for it cuz
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Speaker 1: I'm ready.
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Speaker 2: Good afternoon lizzie and dan longtime
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Speaker 1: listener here. I'm
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Speaker 2: proof that you can
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Speaker 1: indeed teach an old dog
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Speaker 2: new etiquette tricks. I
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Speaker 1: love that. My
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Speaker 2: question is about
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Speaker 1: Families that have combined to honor more than one
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Speaker 2: graduate at their
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Speaker 1: open house.
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Speaker 2: An invitation
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Speaker 1: I received celebrates
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Speaker 2: two young
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Speaker 1: people who have been friends for many
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Speaker 2: years.
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Speaker 2: My dilemma
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Speaker 1: is that while I'm close to number
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Speaker 2: one, I'm not acquainted
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Speaker 1: With the # two or her parents,
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Speaker 1: the open
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Speaker 2: house is being held at
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Speaker 1: The home of # two.
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Speaker 2: My question is, what is the gift
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Speaker 1: protocol under these
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Speaker 2: circumstances? I fully
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Speaker 1: intend to give a generous gift and
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Speaker 2: card to grad
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Speaker 1: number one. I'm
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Speaker 2: thinking I'll bring a card
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Speaker 1: for number two and
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Speaker 2: enclose a gift card to a coffee
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Speaker 1: shop or amazon
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Speaker 2: in a smaller amount. I don't have an issue celebrating both of them, but I doubt number two will know who I am. Do I include a line in the card saying
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Speaker 1: Neighbour of # 1?
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Speaker 2: The easy solution
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Speaker 1: would be to skip the
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Speaker 2: open house and just give
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Speaker 1: Number one her gift privately.
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Speaker 2: Too late promised
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Speaker 1: to attend. Already
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Speaker 2: sincerely want to be party
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Speaker 1: proof for
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Speaker 2: PS. What's the least
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Speaker 1: amount of time was must stay at an open
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Speaker 2: house. Oh, I'm hesitant to
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Speaker 1: called wannabe party pooper an old dog learning
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Speaker 2: a new etiquette trick but
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Speaker 1: I feel like that
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Speaker 2: sometimes myself at all when I get to this PS
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Speaker 1: I particularly
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Speaker 2: identify with want to be a party because this is oftentimes
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Speaker 1: the nature of my etiquette questions,
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Speaker 2: what are the bare minimum social expectations
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Speaker 1: that I need to meet
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Speaker 2: here, qualify as a polite person?
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Speaker 2: Um,
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Speaker 1: let's start with that simple
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Speaker 2: one, lizzie post,
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Speaker 1: I think of
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Speaker 1: an open
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Speaker 2: house party is being a come when you want
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Speaker 1: leave, when you want
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Speaker 2: kind of affair
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Speaker 1: and in general,
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Speaker 2: I'm thinking about an hour as a timeframe that
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Speaker 1: plus or
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Speaker 2: minus is okay, depending on how you feel about it, you could probably stay a little longer than that if you were having a great time and wanted
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Speaker 1: to, you
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Speaker 2: could probably cut it a lot
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Speaker 1: shorter than that if
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Speaker 2: you weren't having a great
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Speaker 1: time and didn't want to or
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Speaker 2: had other obligations, but
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Speaker 1: I think of that
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Speaker 2: hour as sort of a,
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Speaker 1: not a
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Speaker 2: target, but just a rough time frame.
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Speaker 1: It's like, it would be good if I
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Speaker 2: stayed about an hour that would be
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Speaker 1: really bringing myself
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Speaker 2: and and really fully participating
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Speaker 2: without there being a firm etiquette
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Speaker 1: rule, what do you
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Speaker 2: think of that?
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Speaker 2: I think that makes sense. I think for an open house party
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Speaker 1: and
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Speaker 2: graduation parties,
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Speaker 1: it's funny, they could kind of
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Speaker 2: be either, it might be something that has more of a meal focus to it, where I think then
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Speaker 1: You're, you're pushing into the two
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Speaker 2: hour category for
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Speaker 1: being reasonable, but
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Speaker 2: an open house party can often have a drop in and take
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Speaker 1: off kind of vibe to
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Speaker 2: it and
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Speaker 1: in
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Speaker 2: fact it does have a drop in and take off kind
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Speaker 1: of vibe to it.
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Speaker 2: You might want to just
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Speaker 1: check with some other folks who are
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Speaker 2: going and maybe
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Speaker 1: even grad number
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Speaker 2: 1's family who you know
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Speaker 1: better and our neighbors of
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Speaker 2: just to find
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Speaker 1: out if there is some kind of a meal or
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Speaker 2: if there's gonna
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Speaker 1: be, sometimes there's like, you know, a cake or something like that that that people are going to kind of rally around
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Speaker 2: a little bit.
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Speaker 1: It doesn't have a speech
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Speaker 2: or something. Yeah,
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Speaker 1: there might be a speech, something
00:14:17
Speaker 2: like that. So
00:14:19
Speaker 2: just
00:14:19
Speaker 1: worth asking if the other participants know roughly what
00:14:22
Speaker 2: kind of the party timeline
00:14:24
Speaker 1: or the plans of, of marks that the hosts want to hit in the party are so that you, you make sure you're not ducking out before them unless
00:14:31
Speaker 2: of course you have to
00:14:32
Speaker 1: and that's a little different.
00:14:33
Speaker 1: But
00:14:34
Speaker 2: I like the
00:14:34
Speaker 1: idea of trying to go and really spend some, spend some
00:14:38
Speaker 2: time and and
00:14:39
Speaker 1: say hello and congratulate the graduate, you know, as well as the one that you don't and make sure that you
00:14:45
Speaker 2: speak to the host and
00:14:46
Speaker 1: in this case that is someone that you don't know,
00:14:49
Speaker 1: but you can introduce yourself and say, you know, I'm neighbor of grad number one and I'm so grateful you invited
00:14:54
Speaker 2: me, thank you so much.
00:14:56
Speaker 1: Really proud of all the kids, you know, a simple little
00:14:58
Speaker 2: conversation like that is
00:14:59
Speaker 1: perfect. Um, and then I think once you've, you know, hit the marks and as long as there aren't specific things about the party that are supposed to be marks,
00:15:09
Speaker 2: the party host is
00:15:10
Speaker 1: trying to hit um, that you can, you can leave before that or leave once you've done that
00:15:16
Speaker 1: um dan when it comes to these gifts,
00:15:18
Speaker 2: I got to say, I feel like
00:15:19
Speaker 1: old dog is like an old dog
00:15:23
Speaker 2: who could teach
00:15:23
Speaker 1: etiquette tricks
00:15:24
Speaker 2: because this all
00:15:25
Speaker 1: looks good to me that you get
00:15:27
Speaker 2: the card and the gift for graduate
00:15:29
Speaker 1: Number one Who, you know,
00:15:31
Speaker 1: and
00:15:31
Speaker 2: then you also do a
00:15:32
Speaker 1: card and a little something, whether that's a gift card or some nice fresh cut flowers,
00:15:36
Speaker 2: something simple
00:15:38
Speaker 1: for the
00:15:39
Speaker 2: grad number two
00:15:40
Speaker 1: that you don't know, I think that's perfectly fine and I love
00:15:42
Speaker 2: the signing of it with
00:15:44
Speaker 1: your name and then maybe in parentheses under a neighbor of, you know, graduate number one. And I think that that will help in case somebody didn't know who you were
00:15:53
Speaker 1: or forgot throughout the course of the event and is opening gifts and cards later on. I think that that that would really be both generous
00:16:02
Speaker 1: and
00:16:03
Speaker 2: appropriate.
00:16:04
Speaker 2: I
00:16:05
Speaker 1: couldn't agree more. I think that we started
00:16:07
Speaker 2: off on the
00:16:08
Speaker 1: right track in terms of the thinking here
00:16:10
Speaker 2: and
00:16:11
Speaker 1: I think just filling out that thought with the idea that you're in good
00:16:15
Speaker 2: shape and flowers
00:16:17
Speaker 1: would be a nice option. A little,
00:16:18
Speaker 2: something would be a nice
00:16:19
Speaker 1: option, You might just go
00:16:20
Speaker 2: with a card,
00:16:23
Speaker 1: it's not a shower, there's no
00:16:24
Speaker 2: expectation
00:16:25
Speaker 1: of gift giving, there's not
00:16:26
Speaker 2: going to be a big
00:16:28
Speaker 1: presentation of gifts
00:16:30
Speaker 2: moment where gifts are
00:16:31
Speaker 1: going to be compared
00:16:32
Speaker 2: and exposed.
00:16:33
Speaker 2: So the
00:16:34
Speaker 1: the issue with is this person going to feel like
00:16:36
Speaker 2: they weren't
00:16:37
Speaker 1: treated as well
00:16:39
Speaker 2: or in the same way
00:16:40
Speaker 1: as this other person. I don't
00:16:41
Speaker 2: think it's likely to come up
00:16:43
Speaker 1: shouldn't be a big deal.
00:16:44
Speaker 2: And
00:16:45
Speaker 2: we're talking about high
00:16:46
Speaker 1: school graduates, they're approaching
00:16:48
Speaker 2: adulthood. I think they also are capable
00:16:50
Speaker 1: of understanding that
00:16:51
Speaker 2: people have different relationships
00:16:53
Speaker 1: to different graduates even
00:16:54
Speaker 2: if they are sharing a party
00:16:55
Speaker 1: and that it
00:16:57
Speaker 2: might make perfect sense for someone to
00:16:59
Speaker 1: be thinking differently
00:17:00
Speaker 2: about acknowledging the graduation of someone they don't know or don't know as well
00:17:04
Speaker 1: as someone that they're close to.
00:17:06
Speaker 2: I want to be party pooper to be honest. From the sound of it, it seems like you're a really great party guest like and a wonderful neighbor. We hope that you have a really great
00:17:17
Speaker 1: time at this party
00:17:18
Speaker 2: and that both graduates
00:17:19
Speaker 1: feel really
00:17:20
Speaker 2: celebrated in the benton
00:17:22
Speaker 1: household graduation
00:17:24
Speaker 2: from high school is an event
00:17:25
Speaker 1: worthy of celebration
00:17:27
Speaker 2: and the family party in Dave's is in progress.
00:17:32
Speaker 1: Mhm.
00:17:33
Speaker 2: Our next question is about etiquette and
00:17:35
Speaker 1: the elderly.
00:17:37
Speaker 2: Hello,
00:17:38
Speaker 2: we are often asked to pick
00:17:39
Speaker 1: up our elderly mother, where
00:17:41
Speaker 2: is the appropriate place for
00:17:42
Speaker 1: her to sit in the
00:17:43
Speaker 2: vehicle? She has no
00:17:45
Speaker 1: difficulty navigating either spot in
00:17:47
Speaker 2: the front with my husband
00:17:49
Speaker 1: and me in the back
00:17:50
Speaker 2: seat or in the
00:17:51
Speaker 1: backseat. So my husband and I are together in the front seat. Thank you so much. Jill
00:17:57
Speaker 2: Jill, I like that you're thinking
00:17:58
Speaker 1: about this. I remember learning that other cultures, this can actually be a really important
00:18:06
Speaker 2: decision to be made
00:18:07
Speaker 1: in american etiquette.
00:18:08
Speaker 2: It's not quite so
00:18:10
Speaker 1: much because
00:18:11
Speaker 2: you could see
00:18:12
Speaker 1: value in either space.
00:18:14
Speaker 1: And
00:18:14
Speaker 2: so I think it
00:18:15
Speaker 1: really comes down to asking your mother and finding out what she prefers and feels more comfortable with. If your goal
00:18:22
Speaker 2: is to seek
00:18:23
Speaker 1: her comfort. If it's to seek your own,
00:18:25
Speaker 2: then it might be
00:18:26
Speaker 1: more you deciding that you're going to pick
00:18:29
Speaker 2: a specific seat
00:18:30
Speaker 1: that's going to be yours
00:18:32
Speaker 2: and direct
00:18:32
Speaker 1: her to the other one, especially since you're mentioning that she doesn't
00:18:36
Speaker 2: have trouble
00:18:36
Speaker 1: navigating either spot.
00:18:38
Speaker 1: But I think either could be perfectly appropriate. A lot of people think of that front
00:18:44
Speaker 2: passenger seat as
00:18:45
Speaker 1: a real seat of honor and other people really
00:18:49
Speaker 2: appreciate kind of
00:18:50
Speaker 1: the chauffeured feeling of being in the
00:18:52
Speaker 2: backseat so
00:18:53
Speaker 1: you could you can get different opinions either
00:18:56
Speaker 2: way.
00:18:57
Speaker 2: I agree
00:18:57
Speaker 1: lizzie post. I think the important thing here is that you're honoring your mother and whether that's a clear standard over the back seat is the seat of honor. So we offer that to her or whether as lizzie says,
00:19:10
Speaker 1: there's some question about that. Some people prefer that passenger seat better view, easier to get in and out maybe.
00:19:16
Speaker 2: Um,
00:19:17
Speaker 1: it's, it's something that if I wanted
00:19:19
Speaker 2: to confer
00:19:20
Speaker 1: that honor to my mother,
00:19:22
Speaker 1: I like lizzie
00:19:23
Speaker 2: post think that asking
00:19:24
Speaker 1: her would be the best way to do that and be
00:19:27
Speaker 2: prepared for
00:19:28
Speaker 1: any answer
00:19:29
Speaker 2: and be prepared
00:19:30
Speaker 1: to
00:19:31
Speaker 1: sit in the back seat or take the backseat if she prefers the
00:19:34
Speaker 2: front because do you
00:19:35
Speaker 1: and pooch have like different standards you use with like your different parent parent sets that you would be traveling in cars with?
00:19:43
Speaker 2: Not exactly,
00:19:44
Speaker 1: except that I think that there's sort of a competition
00:19:47
Speaker 2: to take the seat that is the least honored seat if that makes any sense. If there's
00:19:53
Speaker 1: like, I've got a switch
00:19:54
Speaker 2: in the back between
00:19:55
Speaker 1: the car seats and
00:19:58
Speaker 2: mother
00:19:58
Speaker 1: will want to take it and I'll be
00:20:00
Speaker 1: like, no, no, no, let me sit in the back with the girls and she'll say no, no, no, let me do what I can take care of them. And I say no, no, no, really, you should be more comfortable take the front seat and
00:20:10
Speaker 1: eventually
00:20:10
Speaker 2: I win because I
00:20:11
Speaker 1: insist
00:20:12
Speaker 1: I was thinking about when I go and especially
00:20:15
Speaker 2: because it's starting to
00:20:17
Speaker 1: be the kind of weather where
00:20:17
Speaker 2: we're going to start doing this
00:20:18
Speaker 1: again, Vermont ng with jenny and frank
00:20:22
Speaker 2: and they're
00:20:23
Speaker 1: one of my favorite couple
00:20:24
Speaker 2: of friends and we always take
00:20:26
Speaker 1: my car because it's the roomiest
00:20:28
Speaker 2: and then
00:20:29
Speaker 1: we, we kind of now
00:20:30
Speaker 2: called it, assume the
00:20:31
Speaker 1: positions
00:20:32
Speaker 1: and
00:20:33
Speaker 2: frank is the driver
00:20:34
Speaker 1: as long as he doesn't
00:20:35
Speaker 2: have to decide where we're
00:20:37
Speaker 1: going. So he wants
00:20:38
Speaker 2: directions from the two of
00:20:39
Speaker 1: us and decision making from
00:20:40
Speaker 2: the two of us. I'm in the front seat and jenny likes to sit in back with the dog so that she can cuddle
00:20:47
Speaker 1: with sonny or
00:20:48
Speaker 2: in past years it was
00:20:49
Speaker 1: with Benny
00:20:49
Speaker 1: and I
00:20:50
Speaker 2: just love the fact that it's, it isn't quite exactly what
00:20:53
Speaker 1: you think of, but it does kind of
00:20:54
Speaker 2: break up the couple a little bit
00:20:56
Speaker 1: and I'm friends with both of them, so that's really nice. But like we all kind
00:21:00
Speaker 2: of like love our little spot,
00:21:02
Speaker 1: but we have our little thing
00:21:03
Speaker 2: with it. Like I love
00:21:05
Speaker 1: not having to
00:21:05
Speaker 2: drive and I could care less whether I'd
00:21:07
Speaker 1: be in the front seat or the
00:21:08
Speaker 2: back seat, jenny loves getting to sit with the dog and frank just doesn't
00:21:12
Speaker 1: want to make decisions,
00:21:13
Speaker 2: but loves driving
00:21:14
Speaker 1: well, okay, so you just reminded me of two other
00:21:17
Speaker 2: considerations that I couldn't
00:21:19
Speaker 1: really do come into play
00:21:20
Speaker 2: and
00:21:21
Speaker 1: I think in general you want to defer to your mother, let her
00:21:24
Speaker 2: take her pick or have the seat that
00:21:27
Speaker 1: confers the most
00:21:28
Speaker 2: honor
00:21:29
Speaker 2: a
00:21:30
Speaker 1: couple of considerations
00:21:31
Speaker 2: that would maybe
00:21:32
Speaker 1: supersede that one
00:21:34
Speaker 2: is a safety concern or
00:21:35
Speaker 1: a comfort
00:21:36
Speaker 2: or accessibility concern and we've got in the
00:21:39
Speaker 1: body of this question that
00:21:40
Speaker 2: that's not an issue here. So
00:21:41
Speaker 1: we sort of skipped over that. But I think it's worth saying explicitly if someone has a real preference for a particular reason or if there is a
00:21:48
Speaker 2: safety concern,
00:21:50
Speaker 2: use that.
00:21:51
Speaker 2: The second is that oftentimes that passenger seat is the best seat for a good navigator. And there are
00:21:56
Speaker 1: times where it
00:21:57
Speaker 2: might be
00:21:59
Speaker 2: good or important to have
00:22:01
Speaker 2: your
00:22:02
Speaker 1: partner, your spouse, the person who's the dependable
00:22:04
Speaker 2: navigator in that
00:22:05
Speaker 1: passenger seat. And that might be something that's worth explaining if that's
00:22:08
Speaker 2: factoring into your decision
00:22:10
Speaker 1: making or it
00:22:10
Speaker 2: might be another
00:22:11
Speaker 1: consideration that's worth
00:22:13
Speaker 1: worth acknowledging
00:22:15
Speaker 2: at the start and making
00:22:16
Speaker 1: part of your decision
00:22:16
Speaker 2: making.
00:22:17
Speaker 1: Absolutely absolutely
00:22:19
Speaker 2: Jill. This is a
00:22:21
Speaker 1: great question
00:22:22
Speaker 2: and I actually hope
00:22:23
Speaker 1: we get a lot of fun feedback on this one. I feel like it could be one that has some good opinions on it.
00:22:28
Speaker 1: Jill whether you end up in the front seat or the back.
00:22:31
Speaker 2: Thank you so much for
00:22:32
Speaker 1: submitting this question.
00:22:34
Speaker 1: Perhaps the poor driver never learned the proper way to drive.
00:22:38
Speaker 1: You have more opportunity than he,
00:22:40
Speaker 1: you have the opportunity to learn the right way to drive
00:22:44
Speaker 1: the opportunity to avoid the mistakes and have it
00:22:48
Speaker 1: acquired by others.
00:22:54
Speaker 1: Our
00:22:54
Speaker 2: next question is titled
00:22:56
Speaker 1: bilingual. A bother
00:22:58
Speaker 2: dear
00:22:58
Speaker 1: dan and lizzie. If you're bilingual,
00:23:01
Speaker 2: is it rude to speak a foreign
00:23:03
Speaker 1: language among family and friends in
00:23:05
Speaker 2: a public space?
00:23:06
Speaker 1: For instance, my family's chinese, I
00:23:08
Speaker 2: did not hesitate to speak
00:23:10
Speaker 1: chinese to my grandmother since she did not speak english.
00:23:13
Speaker 1: I would tend
00:23:14
Speaker 2: not to have a conversation
00:23:16
Speaker 1: in chinese with my parents or any younger generation who do speak english in a
00:23:21
Speaker 2: prolonged or
00:23:22
Speaker 1: boisterous manner
00:23:23
Speaker 2: in a place such as an airport where
00:23:25
Speaker 1: people can't help
00:23:26
Speaker 2: noticing other people around
00:23:27
Speaker 1: them.
00:23:28
Speaker 1: I'm not sure if this is because it seems rude to other
00:23:31
Speaker 2: people who might
00:23:32
Speaker 1: hear but not
00:23:34
Speaker 2: understand us or
00:23:35
Speaker 1: purely because it marks
00:23:36
Speaker 2: us as other, which is sometimes not
00:23:39
Speaker 1: desirable in a public
00:23:40
Speaker 2: space. Sandra
00:23:42
Speaker 1: Sandra, thank you so much for this question.
00:23:44
Speaker 2: I question,
00:23:45
Speaker 1: I found myself reflecting on it in all
00:23:48
Speaker 2: kinds of different ways.
00:23:49
Speaker 1: I live in
00:23:50
Speaker 1: very bilingual family and navigate a
00:23:52
Speaker 2: lot of bilingual
00:23:54
Speaker 1: situations and I'm often the
00:23:56
Speaker 2: person who doesn't
00:23:57
Speaker 1: speak the what for me is
00:23:59
Speaker 2: a second or
00:24:00
Speaker 1: 3rd language but is often times the
00:24:02
Speaker 2: first language
00:24:02
Speaker 1: for members of my family
00:24:05
Speaker 1: and I really appreciate when they make an effort
00:24:07
Speaker 2: to speak english
00:24:08
Speaker 1: around me. I think
00:24:09
Speaker 2: that the real
00:24:10
Speaker 1: courtesy is that among a group, you try to find the language that's understood by the greatest number of people
00:24:17
Speaker 2: that makes it the easiest
00:24:19
Speaker 1: for everyone to
00:24:19
Speaker 2: participate.
00:24:21
Speaker 2: I
00:24:21
Speaker 1: think that is relatively intuitive to most people. I think it's something that's relatively well understood and that it can be really easy to
00:24:28
Speaker 2: map that
00:24:28
Speaker 1: expectation
00:24:30
Speaker 2: onto public behavior
00:24:31
Speaker 1: or situations like an airport where
00:24:34
Speaker 2: you
00:24:34
Speaker 1: find yourself in close
00:24:36
Speaker 2: enough proximity
00:24:37
Speaker 1: with other people that it feels like
00:24:39
Speaker 2: it would be more polite to be using a common language.
00:24:43
Speaker 2: I want to really give permission to use whatever language you find the easiest for
00:24:48
Speaker 1: you and the people you're
00:24:49
Speaker 2: communicating with in those
00:24:50
Speaker 1: situations
00:24:51
Speaker 2: that there is nothing rude about speaking.
00:24:55
Speaker 2: Uh, and I don't call
00:24:57
Speaker 1: it a different language, but a language that not everybody is familiar
00:25:00
Speaker 2: with in a public space, in a place where there's no
00:25:02
Speaker 1: reasonable
00:25:03
Speaker 2: expectation
00:25:04
Speaker 1: that they should be invested
00:25:06
Speaker 2: in the content of the conversation that you're having, where
00:25:09
Speaker 1: the only
00:25:10
Speaker 2: offense that you might offer is them not
00:25:12
Speaker 1: liking the fact that
00:25:13
Speaker 2: someone is speaking a different language and if you and your heart are true and know that you're not talking
00:25:20
Speaker 1: about those people, another
00:25:21
Speaker 2: thing
00:25:22
Speaker 2: that you could do
00:25:22
Speaker 1: that would be rude
00:25:23
Speaker 2: to use your
00:25:24
Speaker 1: knowledge of another language
00:25:25
Speaker 2: to talk about or to someone
00:25:28
Speaker 2: in a way that you wouldn't want them to hear.
00:25:30
Speaker 2: You don't need to worry about it at all.
00:25:33
Speaker 1: It's really up to them
00:25:35
Speaker 2: to negotiate how they feel about people speaking a different language in
00:25:38
Speaker 1: a public
00:25:39
Speaker 2: space. I do hear your awareness of that
00:25:43
Speaker 2: issue of not wanting to other yourself that feeling like a
00:25:47
Speaker 1: like something that's not
00:25:48
Speaker 2: desirable to you. And
00:25:49
Speaker 1: I think it's worth
00:25:50
Speaker 2: acknowledging that as an own impulse in yourself
00:25:53
Speaker 1: and and
00:25:53
Speaker 2: acknowledging where that feeling is coming from. But I don't think there's a
00:25:57
Speaker 1: question of etiquette
00:25:58
Speaker 2: about it being rude, what kind of choice you make about
00:26:02
Speaker 1: it?
00:26:02
Speaker 1: Yeah,
00:26:03
Speaker 2: that's the total personal decision as to whether you feel confident and comfortable doing it or even safe doing it in that
00:26:09
Speaker 1: manner
00:26:10
Speaker 2: versus not. I
00:26:12
Speaker 1: remember because growing
00:26:13
Speaker 2: up, my best
00:26:15
Speaker 1: friend's house, they
00:26:16
Speaker 2: all spoke the
00:26:17
Speaker 1: mother, the parents spoke
00:26:18
Speaker 2: french fluently
00:26:19
Speaker 1: and the kids all
00:26:20
Speaker 2: spoke french and
00:26:22
Speaker 2: my friend
00:26:23
Speaker 2: really didn't like it when her mom
00:26:25
Speaker 1: would speak french in front of
00:26:26
Speaker 2: her friends because she knew
00:26:28
Speaker 1: that we couldn't
00:26:29
Speaker 2: understand what she was saying
00:26:31
Speaker 2: and I always appreciated that
00:26:34
Speaker 1: the mom, it's
00:26:35
Speaker 2: easier for her to speak french and I frankly I liked it. I thought it was really cool that she came from my house where there were
00:26:41
Speaker 1: two languages that got spoken regularly, but
00:26:44
Speaker 2: I really appreciated
00:26:45
Speaker 1: that my friend's mom who french is a
00:26:48
Speaker 2: much easier language for her
00:26:50
Speaker 2: even though
00:26:51
Speaker 1: she speaks fluent,
00:26:52
Speaker 2: english, her
00:26:53
Speaker 1: french is what she would prefer to be speaking. Um and
00:26:56
Speaker 2: obviously comes more
00:26:57
Speaker 1: naturally for her and
00:26:58
Speaker 2: so she would speak
00:26:59
Speaker 1: french to her daughter and
00:27:00
Speaker 2: ask her a question
00:27:01
Speaker 1: and my friend would respond in english and I kind of
00:27:05
Speaker 2: love that because I ended
00:27:06
Speaker 1: up picking up a bunch of french from, from that and hearing the back and forth and stuff like that.
00:27:12
Speaker 1: Not always the easiest
00:27:13
Speaker 2: way to go for everybody,
00:27:15
Speaker 1: but that was one of my main experiences with a bilingual family
00:27:19
Speaker 1: and kind of how they did things and
00:27:21
Speaker 2: and also a little bit of insight
00:27:23
Speaker 1: into their perspectives on it. You know, the kids, I
00:27:26
Speaker 2: knew why the mom
00:27:26
Speaker 1: was doing it, but the kids found this kind of discomfort or disease when they were hosting their friends and that was kind of an interesting etiquette point for them. It didn't bother me
00:27:37
Speaker 2: The guest one bit,
00:27:38
Speaker 1: but I did think it was, it was kind of an interesting perspective to
00:27:42
Speaker 2: have.
00:27:43
Speaker 2: I
00:27:43
Speaker 1: find those dynamics within a group or within a home so interesting and
00:27:49
Speaker 2: I often
00:27:50
Speaker 1: absolutely find myself a visitor with PJ's family where oftentimes
00:27:56
Speaker 2: hindi is the language that's spoken in the
00:27:58
Speaker 1: home, the language that the family members are most comfortable with
00:28:03
Speaker 1: and I'll be if not the only soul english speaker, one of the only soul english speakers and
00:28:11
Speaker 1: I've learned a little bit of hindi
00:28:13
Speaker 2: enough that I can pick
00:28:14
Speaker 1: up
00:28:14
Speaker 1: the major words and some of the basic grammar and phrases, but I I lose the thread of a
00:28:20
Speaker 2: conversation very
00:28:21
Speaker 1: quickly.
00:28:22
Speaker 1: I like to offer that guest dispensation. I like to say,
00:28:26
Speaker 1: please
00:28:27
Speaker 2: talk whatever language
00:28:28
Speaker 1: is most comfortable. Don't
00:28:29
Speaker 2: worry about including
00:28:30
Speaker 1: me all the time. If
00:28:32
Speaker 2: this is the most
00:28:33
Speaker 1: natural, convenient, easy thing for
00:28:35
Speaker 2: you, I
00:28:35
Speaker 1: appreciate you making the effort
00:28:37
Speaker 2: to talk english
00:28:38
Speaker 1: for me on
00:28:39
Speaker 2: my behalf. So I'm
00:28:40
Speaker 1: included.
00:28:42
Speaker 1: But
00:28:42
Speaker 2: don't feel like you have to do it all
00:28:43
Speaker 1: the time. I don't find it rude if you're in the kitchen navigating, getting dinner ready just because I'm there, it doesn't mean you
00:28:49
Speaker 2: have to do that in english
00:28:50
Speaker 1: and
00:28:51
Speaker 1: I think that's a nice dispensation or, or consideration to offer as a guest if
00:28:56
Speaker 2: it's something that you don't
00:28:57
Speaker 1: mind because I think it can also ease
00:29:00
Speaker 2: that that question
00:29:01
Speaker 1: in the minds of other people a little bit
00:29:03
Speaker 1: Lizzie Post. There was one other
00:29:04
Speaker 2: thing that I wanted to mention
00:29:05
Speaker 1: here just because I'm working very hard with a five year old and an almost three year old on just taking it down a level and I'm thinking a lot about inside voices. Outside
00:29:19
Speaker 2: voices. I
00:29:21
Speaker 1: do think there's an etiquette consideration whether
00:29:24
Speaker 2: whatever
00:29:25
Speaker 1: language we're speaking on our boisterousness level in particular environment. I think there are some places where absolutely your boisterousness level can be much higher and it's going to be
00:29:36
Speaker 2: tolerated, encouraged
00:29:38
Speaker 1: not rub anyone the wrong way. I think there are other
00:29:40
Speaker 2: places
00:29:42
Speaker 1: together. Yes, the gate for a plane, People are trying to keep an ear out on the announcements. People are a little on edge. Anyway where
00:29:51
Speaker 2: again,
00:29:52
Speaker 1: whether it's your five year old or whether
00:29:55
Speaker 2: you're speaking
00:29:56
Speaker 1: chinese or hindi or
00:29:57
Speaker 2: english. That paying attention
00:29:59
Speaker 1: to your inside voice and just maintaining a tone and volume that's coordinated with the people around you is
00:30:05
Speaker 2: always good etiquette.
00:30:06
Speaker 1: Absolutely Sandra, thank you so much for this question. We really appreciate the chance
00:30:12
Speaker 2: to provide
00:30:13
Speaker 1: an answer and I would also really appreciate
00:30:15
Speaker 2: hearing like our last
00:30:16
Speaker 1: question what our listeners have to think about this topic.
00:30:20
Speaker 1: Pete has developed his skill in communication through words
00:30:24
Speaker 1: just as you can by being alert to words
00:30:28
Speaker 1: by using words that say exactly what you mean by building your vocabulary.
00:30:40
Speaker 1: Our
00:30:40
Speaker 2: next question is titled Family
00:30:41
Speaker 1: Secrets. It begins dear awesome etiquette team.
00:30:46
Speaker 2: I'm a new listener to
00:30:47
Speaker 1: Your podcast series. I've begun to suspect that two plus
00:30:51
Speaker 2: years of pandemic
00:30:51
Speaker 1: isolation have not done a lot to improve my
00:30:54
Speaker 2: understanding of modern
00:30:55
Speaker 1: etiquette and I agree with your basic premise that kindness and
00:30:59
Speaker 2: honesty are so
00:31:00
Speaker 1: needed now more than ever. So here
00:31:03
Speaker 2: goes,
00:31:04
Speaker 2: I
00:31:04
Speaker 1: Come from a large family of six
00:31:06
Speaker 2: siblings. I
00:31:07
Speaker 1: am the only female plus my brother's
00:31:09
Speaker 2: grown Children, grandchildren
00:31:11
Speaker 1: et cetera.
00:31:12
Speaker 2: We do not
00:31:12
Speaker 1: live geographically close to each other
00:31:14
Speaker 2: and the pandemic
00:31:15
Speaker 1: simply made the distance more
00:31:17
Speaker 2: pronounced.
00:31:18
Speaker 2: The issue
00:31:18
Speaker 1: I have now encountered more than once is some version of a major life event,
00:31:22
Speaker 2: a marriage, a divorce
00:31:23
Speaker 1: and new baby
00:31:25
Speaker 2: of which no
00:31:25
Speaker 1: announcement has made its way to me via any personal means.
00:31:29
Speaker 1: As an example, I've gotten a
00:31:31
Speaker 2: hint that a marriage
00:31:32
Speaker 1: has occurred but when I
00:31:33
Speaker 2: ask someone with direct
00:31:34
Speaker 1: knowledge if this has happened, the
00:31:36
Speaker 2: response is something like
00:31:38
Speaker 1: you'll have to ask this relative yourself or I
00:31:42
Speaker 2: don't know
00:31:43
Speaker 2: when the person
00:31:44
Speaker 1: asked turned out to know very well.
00:31:46
Speaker 2: I
00:31:47
Speaker 1: am observing then that these major family events, all
00:31:50
Speaker 2: part of a public records somewhere are
00:31:52
Speaker 1: supposed to be held
00:31:52
Speaker 2: secret and confidential.
00:31:54
Speaker 1: Until
00:31:55
Speaker 2: when question
00:31:56
Speaker 1: mark, question mark, question mark.
00:31:58
Speaker 1: And
00:31:58
Speaker 2: if I do find out via
00:32:00
Speaker 1: reliable member of the family, am I also
00:32:02
Speaker 2: supposed to act like I do
00:32:03
Speaker 1: not know what I know if asked to keep the
00:32:06
Speaker 2: information
00:32:06
Speaker 1: confidential. So
00:32:08
Speaker 2: my dilemma as the
00:32:10
Speaker 1: sister or sister in
00:32:11
Speaker 2: law or the aunt or the niece in any of these situations
00:32:16
Speaker 2: is what behavior do etiquette
00:32:18
Speaker 1: rules suggest
00:32:19
Speaker 2: when I wish to honor the new marriage or new baby or offer support in times
00:32:23
Speaker 1: of difficulty but
00:32:24
Speaker 2: have not been informed directly
00:32:26
Speaker 2: or how should I respond
00:32:28
Speaker 1: inter personally
00:32:29
Speaker 2: if I'm attending
00:32:30
Speaker 1: some family gathering
00:32:31
Speaker 2: where I'm suddenly introduced to my brother's new spouse
00:32:34
Speaker 1: of some two
00:32:34
Speaker 2: years or ask how a
00:32:37
Speaker 1: wife or husband is
00:32:38
Speaker 2: doing to find out a divorce
00:32:39
Speaker 1: has happened.
00:32:41
Speaker 2: Please know that while no huge argument has occurred. I am probably an outlier in my family as politically liberal
00:32:47
Speaker 1: and a single female.
00:32:49
Speaker 2: My siblings and I are getting older and we now have only are very elderly mother in assisted living. So maybe the family
00:32:56
Speaker 1: glue has
00:32:56
Speaker 2: come unstuck.
00:32:58
Speaker 2: I alas hate
00:32:59
Speaker 1: social media.
00:33:00
Speaker 2: So perhaps I'm left out due to that choice.
00:33:03
Speaker 2: In any case. I want to understand what etiquette options there are so that at least I can be fully prepared for any encounters which may
00:33:10
Speaker 1: occur
00:33:11
Speaker 1: and
00:33:11
Speaker 2: do not hesitate to tell me the hard parts too.
00:33:14
Speaker 1: Perhaps etiquette advises acceptance
00:33:16
Speaker 2: in a situation where one is not included by
00:33:18
Speaker 1: either default
00:33:19
Speaker 2: or design.
00:33:21
Speaker 1: I wish to cause no hurt
00:33:22
Speaker 2: nor harm and yet I need to honor my own values
00:33:25
Speaker 1: too.
00:33:26
Speaker 1: Thus your advice
00:33:27
Speaker 2: is deeply appreciated,
00:33:29
Speaker 1: awesome etiquette. Newbie,
00:33:30
Speaker 2: awesome etiquette newbie.
00:33:33
Speaker 2: It's, it's a really interesting question because it's like I really appreciate at the end newbie that you have let us know that
00:33:42
Speaker 1: you don't like social
00:33:43
Speaker 2: media that
00:33:44
Speaker 1: there might be some
00:33:46
Speaker 2: like personal differences between you and your family? You,
00:33:49
Speaker 1: you reference yourself
00:33:50
Speaker 2: as kind of an outlier
00:33:52
Speaker 2: even though there's been
00:33:53
Speaker 1: no big arguments or anything
00:33:54
Speaker 2: like that.
00:33:55
Speaker 2: I'll admit that like you asked for some of the hard parts too. I'll admit that I, I throw up a question mark as to why
00:34:02
Speaker 1: people are
00:34:03
Speaker 2: acting like they can't share
00:34:05
Speaker 1: the news when the
00:34:06
Speaker 2: wedding has already occurred or something like that that I find a little interesting or
00:34:12
Speaker 1: different from from what I would
00:34:14
Speaker 2: normally expect.
00:34:15
Speaker 1: But my solution right off the
00:34:17
Speaker 2: bat
00:34:18
Speaker 1: is is there someone in your family that you are kind of close to. Is
00:34:22
Speaker 2: there someone who could kind
00:34:24
Speaker 1: of act like
00:34:25
Speaker 2: that point
00:34:26
Speaker 1: person? I can remember on my other side of the family,
00:34:30
Speaker 2: Two
00:34:30
Speaker 1: cousins who we really didn't grow up
00:34:32
Speaker 2: with very much kind
00:34:34
Speaker 1: of came into our
00:34:35
Speaker 2: lives later
00:34:36
Speaker 1: and and started participating at that, that Martha's vineyard family farm that I talked about
00:34:41
Speaker 1: and
00:34:41
Speaker 2: I even just the other night,
00:34:43
Speaker 1: one of those cousins was
00:34:45
Speaker 2: saying, you know, people don't always know who I am
00:34:48
Speaker 1: or I don't
00:34:49
Speaker 2: always know, I have to go through
00:34:50
Speaker 1: you to get the
00:34:51
Speaker 2: family like
00:34:52
Speaker 1: the family run down or, and I don't want to call it
00:34:54
Speaker 2: gossip because it's
00:34:55
Speaker 1: things like
00:34:56
Speaker 2: marriages and babies which
00:34:58
Speaker 1: aren't really gossip, you know,
00:34:59
Speaker 2: and and we recognize that that dynamic is there because um
00:35:05
Speaker 1: he and his sister
00:35:06
Speaker 1: just weren't a part of the family when we were all
00:35:08
Speaker 2: younger and so it's sometimes it's about like
00:35:11
Speaker 1: finding that person you are close
00:35:13
Speaker 2: with and just recognizing
00:35:15
Speaker 1: that they're kind of be, they're gonna kind of be your
00:35:17
Speaker 2: portal into the family news
00:35:19
Speaker 1: thread
00:35:20
Speaker 2: or finding ways
00:35:21
Speaker 1: and maybe it's
00:35:22
Speaker 2: a group text that the family has or something like that that you can participate that don't require you to have
00:35:28
Speaker 1: to be on social media.
00:35:29
Speaker 2: I'm, I'm with you, I have a
00:35:31
Speaker 1: family that operates on social media a lot and I
00:35:34
Speaker 2: really don't like to
00:35:35
Speaker 1: participate there. It gives me a lot of
00:35:37
Speaker 2: anxiety
00:35:38
Speaker 2: and
00:35:38
Speaker 1: so I feel like I often
00:35:40
Speaker 2: miss out on news of family
00:35:42
Speaker 1: and friends because
00:35:43
Speaker 2: of it and I have a little bit, had to
00:35:45
Speaker 1: learn to live with
00:35:46
Speaker 2: that and and be more proactive about asking
00:35:49
Speaker 1: questions and
00:35:51
Speaker 2: comfortable with
00:35:52
Speaker 1: getting the answers sometimes 2nd, 3rd or fourth hand, you know, even when I might be closer
00:35:59
Speaker 2: with the person.
00:36:00
Speaker 1: Listen, you're pulling on all the threads that I would pull
00:36:02
Speaker 2: on here.
00:36:03
Speaker 1: I
00:36:05
Speaker 2: felt like the,
00:36:06
Speaker 1: the the question came together for me a little bit with that comment
00:36:09
Speaker 2: about, about the mom
00:36:11
Speaker 1: also that maybe
00:36:12
Speaker 2: the
00:36:13
Speaker 1: social glue for this family isn't functioning in the same way that it may have even a year or two ago.
00:36:19
Speaker 1: And and I also want
00:36:20
Speaker 2: to acknowledge that the pandemic can
00:36:22
Speaker 1: have that impact or effect, particularly
00:36:24
Speaker 2: in a family where
00:36:24
Speaker 1: maybe people felt differently about getting together or not,
00:36:28
Speaker 2: that
00:36:29
Speaker 1: it might be the
00:36:31
Speaker 2: natural consequences of certain parts of the
00:36:33
Speaker 1: family still gathering and
00:36:35
Speaker 2: certain members of a
00:36:36
Speaker 1: family that weren't
00:36:37
Speaker 2: available or interested
00:36:39
Speaker 1: or or felt safe or comfortable doing that. That I could see a number of things having
00:36:44
Speaker 2: produced a dynamic
00:36:46
Speaker 1: within the family
00:36:47
Speaker 2: where it's it's the
00:36:48
Speaker 1: social glue isn't holding. I loved that. Um, has come unstuck.
00:36:52
Speaker 2: It's it's a great line.
00:36:54
Speaker 1: This question was full of great writing. I also need to
00:36:56
Speaker 2: honor the sentence I
00:36:57
Speaker 1: wish to cause
00:36:59
Speaker 2: no hurt nor
00:36:59
Speaker 1: harm. And yet I need to honor my own values too. That's as great as
00:37:03
Speaker 2: summation
00:37:04
Speaker 1: of, of our big picture. Thinking about etiquette as anything
00:37:07
Speaker 2: I've heard in a while
00:37:09
Speaker 1: I know that one
00:37:10
Speaker 2: made me want to offer a
00:37:11
Speaker 1: hug. Not, not give a hug, but offer a hug.
00:37:14
Speaker 1: Um
00:37:14
Speaker 2: I thought it was,
00:37:15
Speaker 1: it was really great and I like you. I thought it was a really good summation of of the idea of etiquette that
00:37:21
Speaker 2: you you you really
00:37:22
Speaker 1: trying not to hurt or harm anyone, but you're also trying to protect
00:37:26
Speaker 2: yourself or at
00:37:27
Speaker 1: least honor yourself. And
00:37:29
Speaker 2: while I do think that
00:37:30
Speaker 1: there is a certain
00:37:31
Speaker 2: responsibility
00:37:32
Speaker 1: in accepting
00:37:34
Speaker 2: distance,
00:37:34
Speaker 1: particularly when other people
00:37:36
Speaker 2: are initiating it,
00:37:37
Speaker 1: that you can't force other people to have better relationships with you. You can you can
00:37:42
Speaker 2: do your best and be
00:37:43
Speaker 1: your best and meet people in the places that still
00:37:46
Speaker 2: honor your own values
00:37:48
Speaker 1: and beyond
00:37:49
Speaker 2: that.
00:37:49
Speaker 2: There
00:37:50
Speaker 1: is often a standard of of
00:37:52
Speaker 2: managing your own responses
00:37:54
Speaker 1: and emotions that is your responsibility
00:37:56
Speaker 2: at that point. And
00:37:58
Speaker 1: like
00:37:59
Speaker 2: you though, I was looking for the proactive things, the things that you could do that would maybe start to
00:38:04
Speaker 2: reintegrate
00:38:05
Speaker 1: you into that that
00:38:06
Speaker 2: family social dynamic or find your points of access. And
00:38:09
Speaker 1: I love that idea of
00:38:10
Speaker 2: finding a relationship or a
00:38:12
Speaker 1: person that can keep you
00:38:13
Speaker 2: informed. And that might even be
00:38:14
Speaker 1: just someone that reads the social
00:38:15
Speaker 2: media. If it's not something that you want to turn
00:38:17
Speaker 1: on yourself.
00:38:19
Speaker 2: And
00:38:19
Speaker 1: it
00:38:20
Speaker 2: could be someone who's a real
00:38:21
Speaker 1: dynamic center of the
00:38:23
Speaker 2: scene family
00:38:24
Speaker 1: member, it might also just be
00:38:25
Speaker 2: someone that
00:38:26
Speaker 2: has a facebook account and they're linked to everybody. So they get the announcement.
00:38:30
Speaker 1: Exactly exactly.
00:38:31
Speaker 2: Just saying announcements
00:38:34
Speaker 1: makes me want to make
00:38:35
Speaker 2: the etiquette point
00:38:36
Speaker 1: of, of
00:38:37
Speaker 2: commenting on the importance of announcements that happened outside of the social media space for just this kind
00:38:42
Speaker 1: of reason that
00:38:44
Speaker 2: we had a discussion a couple shows ago about
00:38:47
Speaker 1: birth announcements
00:38:48
Speaker 2: and who
00:38:49
Speaker 1: they get sent to
00:38:50
Speaker 2: and how far and wide and what's the purpose or intent. And
00:38:53
Speaker 1: I can't think of a
00:38:54
Speaker 2: better example of why a birth announcement would be something that would be really worthwhile
00:38:59
Speaker 1: and that it's not just
00:39:00
Speaker 2: something that's self
00:39:01
Speaker 1: serving or self
00:39:02
Speaker 2: aggrandizing,
00:39:03
Speaker 1: that it really is about
00:39:04
Speaker 2: sharing
00:39:05
Speaker 2: good news are
00:39:06
Speaker 1: important news
00:39:07
Speaker 2: with
00:39:08
Speaker 1: people who might want to know and
00:39:11
Speaker 1: not everybody who receives that announcement is gonna need
00:39:14
Speaker 2: it or need to know that or
00:39:15
Speaker 1: feel the same way about it, but you might very
00:39:17
Speaker 2: well include somebody in
00:39:19
Speaker 1: a way that's really important
00:39:20
Speaker 2: if you make that effort
00:39:21
Speaker 1: and do it and don't just rely on social media to do it because
00:39:25
Speaker 2: I also feel like
00:39:26
Speaker 1: one of the things that I'm picking
00:39:28
Speaker 2: up as I read this is not a ton of
00:39:31
Speaker 2: taking this too personally, identifying
00:39:34
Speaker 1: yourself as an outlier
00:39:35
Speaker 2: is always a reasonable thing and like I said, good, but like a reasonable thing to do and to
00:39:40
Speaker 1: recognize sort of the
00:39:41
Speaker 2: reality of
00:39:42
Speaker 1: of where you are with
00:39:43
Speaker 2: the family,
00:39:44
Speaker 2: we have some
00:39:45
Speaker 1: outliers in our family and I
00:39:46
Speaker 2: know that people make
00:39:47
Speaker 1: good efforts to, to reach out to them to tell them
00:39:50
Speaker 2: news and to kind of
00:39:51
Speaker 1: spread that family,
00:39:52
Speaker 2: great grapevine. I don't want to call it a gossip
00:39:54
Speaker 1: fine um,
00:39:55
Speaker 2: a little bit, but I also think that because it's not something
00:40:00
Speaker 1: that you feel
00:40:01
Speaker 2: deeply hurt by that you just want to navigate really well, that it makes me feel really confident giving the advice to newbie to actually
00:40:10
Speaker 1: when you do find out
00:40:12
Speaker 2: news,
00:40:12
Speaker 2: send a card,
00:40:13
Speaker 1: send a
00:40:14
Speaker 2: congratulations. Um
00:40:16
Speaker 1: you know, maybe
00:40:16
Speaker 2: if it's, yeah, maybe if it's the divorce you're
00:40:19
Speaker 1: hearing about, I wouldn't send
00:40:20
Speaker 2: a carter congratulations,
00:40:21
Speaker 1: but just take knowledge of it. But I do think that when you
00:40:25
Speaker 2: do find
00:40:26
Speaker 1: out that so and so got married, even if you don't know when it was or where it happened or who it was to,
00:40:32
Speaker 1: I think sending that card could be a really good
00:40:35
Speaker 1: way to show that you're interested and invested. I know that when we have done things like had major book launches or a really cool tv appearance or something and we have posted that to our Emily post social media
00:40:48
Speaker 2: and I've gotten
00:40:49
Speaker 1: some outreach from cousins or family members, congratulating us on it.
00:40:54
Speaker 1: It felt so good.
00:40:56
Speaker 2: Even if this was someone
00:40:57
Speaker 1: I don't talk to very much or even if it is someone that I'm on very sort of different, either political
00:41:02
Speaker 2: or lifestyle ideals
00:41:03
Speaker 1: from like it was
00:41:05
Speaker 2: really great to
00:41:07
Speaker 1: have that kind of support and encouragement and my my guess is that since there has been no argument, you make clear that that
00:41:14
Speaker 2: would be
00:41:15
Speaker 1: welcome and it might even
00:41:18
Speaker 1: get people to pop you on that, you know that that outgoing list for if they do send announcements or if they do have a list of people that aren't on social media, but I think it is
00:41:28
Speaker 2: okay for you to reach
00:41:29
Speaker 1: out even if you haven't heard directly from people, I think that within a family that's really okay
00:41:35
Speaker 2: socially,
00:41:35
Speaker 1: maybe, maybe not quite as much,
00:41:37
Speaker 2: but within a family.
00:41:38
Speaker 1: I think it could really be okay.
00:41:41
Speaker 2: I
00:41:41
Speaker 1: love the idea of leaning in and
00:41:44
Speaker 2: using traditional
00:41:45
Speaker 1: etiquette to help build
00:41:47
Speaker 2: those bonds up
00:41:48
Speaker 1: and to maintain them within a family and
00:41:51
Speaker 1: the holiday, birthday graduation call carter visit can really serve that function and those are important
00:41:58
Speaker 2: moments in people's lives. I think
00:42:00
Speaker 1: that's what we're feeling a little bit in this
00:42:02
Speaker 2: this question is that I
00:42:03
Speaker 1: feel like I'm maybe not as connected
00:42:05
Speaker 2: to those things and it
00:42:06
Speaker 1: results in interpersonal
00:42:07
Speaker 2: social awkwardness,
00:42:09
Speaker 1: that I love your suggestion
00:42:12
Speaker 2: of using
00:42:13
Speaker 1: the very traditional etiquette tools around those
00:42:15
Speaker 2: major life events to stay
00:42:17
Speaker 1: connected with people
00:42:18
Speaker 2: and to just touch them
00:42:19
Speaker 1: and that it can both serve the
00:42:21
Speaker 2: relationship and it can
00:42:22
Speaker 1: make people feel really good and and those are both really good outcomes to doing anything and you
00:42:28
Speaker 2: know, you mentioned that you're an outlier potentially
00:42:31
Speaker 1: for political reasons,
00:42:32
Speaker 2: it can remind people
00:42:33
Speaker 1: that there are many other things to connect about other than our
00:42:37
Speaker 2: our beliefs in
00:42:38
Speaker 1: particular, things
00:42:39
Speaker 2: that, um, just
00:42:40
Speaker 1: because we're, you know, on
00:42:41
Speaker 2: opposite sides of the
00:42:43
Speaker 1: political spectrum
00:42:44
Speaker 2: doesn't mean that I can't
00:42:45
Speaker 1: really be happy for you
00:42:46
Speaker 2: having gotten married or gotten
00:42:48
Speaker 1: out of a bad marriage
00:42:49
Speaker 2: Or had a baby or had your 4th baby.
00:42:52
Speaker 1: And I think that that's a really,
00:42:54
Speaker 2: really great way for us to be connecting right now when people do
00:42:57
Speaker 1: feel so divided
00:42:58
Speaker 2: and like it's been hard to come together
00:43:01
Speaker 2: before
00:43:01
Speaker 1: we leave this question. I know this answer has gotten
00:43:03
Speaker 2: long. I wanna just take a
00:43:05
Speaker 1: Brief 2nd to look at those interpersonal moments
00:43:07
Speaker 2: of awkwardness
00:43:09
Speaker 1: and to
00:43:09
Speaker 2: affirm for our awesome etiquette newbie that once something is public,
00:43:14
Speaker 1: there's no need to pretend
00:43:15
Speaker 2: that you don't
00:43:16
Speaker 1: know
00:43:16
Speaker 1: that
00:43:17
Speaker 2: once someone has gotten married or a baby has been born. Those are things that happened in the public space. And once the announcements are in
00:43:24
Speaker 1: the papers
00:43:25
Speaker 2: or the
00:43:26
Speaker 1: on the social
00:43:27
Speaker 2: media, just because
00:43:28
Speaker 1: you haven't been told personally doesn't mean you
00:43:30
Speaker 2: have to pretend that you don't
00:43:31
Speaker 1: know
00:43:32
Speaker 1: if
00:43:33
Speaker 2: you do end up in a situation
00:43:35
Speaker 1: where you've made a mistake
00:43:36
Speaker 2: where you're asking about a spouse that's no longer a spouse or you haven't heard about a major life
00:43:42
Speaker 1: event.
00:43:43
Speaker 2: Just having at
00:43:44
Speaker 1: your disposal an
00:43:45
Speaker 2: easy sorry, I hadn't heard or my apologies, I didn't know or I'm still getting caught up on the news
00:43:51
Speaker 1: is the
00:43:51
Speaker 2: only thing that's required of you from an
00:43:53
Speaker 1: etiquette perspective that
00:43:55
Speaker 2: you don't need to participate in
00:43:57
Speaker 1: a
00:43:57
Speaker 2: deception or you
00:43:59
Speaker 1: don't need to pretend
00:44:00
Speaker 2: that you don't know things that are public information
00:44:03
Speaker 2: to ease someone else's experience
00:44:06
Speaker 1: that, that
00:44:07
Speaker 2: it's considerate to think
00:44:08
Speaker 1: like that. But as
00:44:09
Speaker 2: long as you're prepared to
00:44:10
Speaker 1: apologize for any hurt or
00:44:11
Speaker 2: offense that you cause it's okay
00:44:13
Speaker 1: to talk about those
00:44:14
Speaker 2: things.
00:44:15
Speaker 1: Absolutely awesome
00:44:17
Speaker 2: etiquette. Newbie, Welcome to the show. Thank you so much for participating. Right off the bat. We are
00:44:22
Speaker 1: very glad to have you part of our
00:44:23
Speaker 2: audience and we certainly hope that our answer helps
00:44:27
Speaker 1: in any family.
00:44:28
Speaker 2: We are bound to encounter a certain amount of rivalry among
00:44:32
Speaker 1: the brothers and sisters
00:44:33
Speaker 2: rival.
00:44:34
Speaker 1: Report attention
00:44:35
Speaker 1: for a steam
00:44:37
Speaker 1: and it's not too strong to say for love
00:44:40
Speaker 1: development is always accompanied by some friction
00:44:44
Speaker 1: and in the very nature of their growing up, the Children must develop. Therefore if there is no friction,
00:44:51
Speaker 1: somebody is hiding something.
00:44:56
Speaker 2: Thank you for your questions. Please send us updates or feedback on our answers to awesome etiquette at the Emily Post dot com. You can leave a voicemail or text message at 802858 kind. That's 8028585463 or reach us on social media on twitter. We're at Emily Post institute on instagram. We are at Emily Post institute
00:45:17
Speaker 2: and on facebook were awesome etiquette just use the hashtag awesome etiquette with your social media posts so that we know you want your question on the show.
00:45:30
Speaker 2: Yeah.
00:45:34
Speaker 1: If you love
00:45:35
Speaker 2: awesome etiquette, please consider
00:45:37
Speaker 1: becoming a
00:45:37
Speaker 2: sustaining member. You can find out more about this by visiting us at patreon dot com slash awesome etiquette. You'll get
00:45:44
Speaker 1: an ad free version of the show and access to bonus questions and content plus you'll feel great knowing that you helped to keep awesome
00:45:50
Speaker 2: etiquette on the air
00:45:52
Speaker 2: and to those of
00:45:52
Speaker 1: you who are already
00:45:53
Speaker 2: sustaining members. Thank you so much for your support.
00:45:57
Speaker 1: It's time for our feedback
00:45:58
Speaker 2: segment where we hear from
00:46:00
Speaker 1: you about the questions we answer in the topics we cover and
00:46:03
Speaker 2: today we have feedback from
00:46:04
Speaker 1: Grace about the proof reader.
00:46:06
Speaker 2: In our last
00:46:07
Speaker 1: episode.
00:46:08
Speaker 1: Hi lizzie and dan. I just listened to episode four oh one where a listener
00:46:12
Speaker 2: asked how to deal with a
00:46:13
Speaker 1: friend who isn't taking her proof reading corrections.
00:46:17
Speaker 1: As a longtime professional proof reader. I thought your advice was excellent.
00:46:21
Speaker 1: Beverly needs to directly address with her friend why this one correction keeps getting
00:46:25
Speaker 2: ignored.
00:46:26
Speaker 2: I would add that She
00:46:27
Speaker 1: should also discuss why this mistake is incorrect in the first
00:46:30
Speaker 2: place, especially
00:46:32
Speaker 1: if the mistake alters the meaning of the
00:46:33
Speaker 2: sentence
00:46:34
Speaker 2: when
00:46:35
Speaker 1: I prove a document.
00:46:36
Speaker 2: I don't just make
00:46:37
Speaker 1: corrections. I asked questions so we can
00:46:39
Speaker 2: discuss why the writer made a
00:46:40
Speaker 1: particular choice that looks off
00:46:42
Speaker 2: to me.
00:46:43
Speaker 2: If
00:46:43
Speaker 1: I was working with a writer who continuously ignored the same
00:46:46
Speaker 2: correction, I would tell them
00:46:48
Speaker 1: why I'm suggesting that
00:46:49
Speaker 2: particular change. No
00:46:51
Speaker 1: links. Just a quick this is done this
00:46:53
Speaker 2: way because
00:46:55
Speaker 2: if
00:46:55
Speaker 1: they insist they prefer it
00:46:56
Speaker 2: anyway,
00:46:57
Speaker 1: then that's their
00:46:58
Speaker 2: choice. But if it's something
00:46:59
Speaker 1: that changes the actual meaning of the sentence, it really needs to be
00:47:03
Speaker 2: addressed.
00:47:04
Speaker 1: The # one thing I've learned over the years
00:47:06
Speaker 2: is that language is
00:47:07
Speaker 1: mutable. Not everything
00:47:09
Speaker 2: has to be technically
00:47:10
Speaker 1: correct all the time.
00:47:11
Speaker 2: If it doesn't fit the voice
00:47:12
Speaker 1: or tone of the piece
00:47:13
Speaker 2: of writing,
00:47:14
Speaker 2: you
00:47:15
Speaker 1: just want to stay consistent.
00:47:17
Speaker 1: Best proof reader who reread this email
00:47:20
Speaker 2: 10 times before
00:47:21
Speaker 1: sending. I
00:47:24
Speaker 2: also love that there are dashes between all those words which
00:47:27
Speaker 1: would be correct.
00:47:29
Speaker 2: Oh, proof reader who read
00:47:31
Speaker 1: this email 10
00:47:32
Speaker 2: times before sending. Thank you so
00:47:34
Speaker 1: much for your feedback.
00:47:35
Speaker 2: This is
00:47:36
Speaker 2: this is this feedback makes me so happy because it's so exactly the type of
00:47:39
Speaker 1: feedback I like
00:47:40
Speaker 2: and not because it says you guys did a great job with the answer, but because it's a, it's a professional
00:47:45
Speaker 1: in this world who would have dealt
00:47:47
Speaker 2: with these types, who does
00:47:48
Speaker 1: deal with these type
00:47:49
Speaker 2: of questions all
00:47:50
Speaker 1: the time. These type of etiquette
00:47:52
Speaker 2: navigations in their workspace.
00:47:54
Speaker 2: And I
00:47:54
Speaker 1: just I love
00:47:56
Speaker 2: getting that kind of an in depth
00:47:58
Speaker 1: perspective from someone.
00:47:59
Speaker 2: So thank you so very much
00:48:01
Speaker 2: Proof reader who read this email 10 times before sending. We really appreciate your feedback
00:48:08
Speaker 2: and thank you for sending us your thoughts and updates. Please do keep them coming. You can send your next question feedback or update two awesome etiquette at Emily Post dot com. You can also leave us a voicemail or text at 802858 kind. That's 8028585463.
00:48:35
Speaker 2: It's time for our post script segment where
00:48:38
Speaker 1: we dive deeper into a topic of
00:48:39
Speaker 2: etiquette and today we're going to talk about the history of etiquette. Books.
00:48:44
Speaker 2: Lizzie
00:48:44
Speaker 1: recently unpacked an
00:48:45
Speaker 2: old box of books from our E P. I storage
00:48:48
Speaker 1: and in it found a book titled Extraordinary
00:48:51
Speaker 2: Origins of everyday things by Charles Panati. And we should state up front
00:48:55
Speaker 1: That this book was printed in 1987.
00:48:58
Speaker 2: So it's a little dated at this point,
00:49:00
Speaker 1: but it did have some
00:49:01
Speaker 2: interesting points about
00:49:02
Speaker 1: etiquette, including
00:49:03
Speaker 2: where western etiquette books come from. So that's the section we will be sharing with you today.
00:49:08
Speaker 1: It begins on page
00:49:09
Speaker 2: 83
00:49:11
Speaker 1: and
00:49:12
Speaker 2: I am excited eventually
00:49:13
Speaker 1: to share the Emily
00:49:14
Speaker 2: Post section that we found in here.
00:49:16
Speaker 1: But I did think this one was kind of cool
00:49:19
Speaker 2: Western etiquette books, 13th century Europe
00:49:23
Speaker 2: during the dark days of the Middle
00:49:25
Speaker 1: Ages when barbarian
00:49:26
Speaker 2: tribes from the north raided and sacked the civilized nations of southern europe manners were people's least concern,
00:49:34
Speaker 2: Formal codes of civility fell into disuse for hundreds of years. It was the popularity of the 11th
00:49:42
Speaker 1: century
00:49:42
Speaker 2: crusades and the accompanying prestige of knighthood with its own code of chivalry that reawakened an interest
00:49:51
Speaker 1: in manners and etiquette.
00:49:53
Speaker 2: One new court
00:49:54
Speaker 1: custom
00:49:55
Speaker 2: called coupling paired a nobleman with a lady at a banquet.
00:50:00
Speaker 2: Each couple sharing one goblet and one plate.
00:50:04
Speaker 2: Entomologists locate the practice as the source of a later
00:50:08
Speaker 1: expression for
00:50:09
Speaker 2: cohorts aligned
00:50:10
Speaker 1: in any
00:50:11
Speaker 2: endeavor. Said
00:50:12
Speaker 1: to quote unquote,
00:50:14
Speaker 2: eat from the same
00:50:15
Speaker 1: plate.
00:50:16
Speaker 2: The rebirth of strict codes
00:50:18
Speaker 1: of behavior
00:50:18
Speaker 2: Is historically documented by the appearance starting in 13th Century Europe of etiquette
00:50:24
Speaker 1: books.
00:50:25
Speaker 2: The upper class was
00:50:26
Speaker 1: expanding
00:50:27
Speaker 2: more and more people had access to court and they wanted to know how to behave.
00:50:33
Speaker 2: The situation is not all that different from the 20th century social phenomenon of upward mobility, also accompanied by etiquette books here is a sample of the advice
00:50:45
Speaker 1: such books offered.
00:50:46
Speaker 2: The upwardly mobile through the centuries.
00:50:49
Speaker 2: Keep in mind that what the
00:50:51
Speaker 1: etiquette writers caution people
00:50:52
Speaker 2: against
00:50:54
Speaker 1: usually
00:50:54
Speaker 2: represents the behavioral norm of the day
00:50:58
Speaker 2: 13th century and they've
00:51:00
Speaker 1: got four points.
00:51:01
Speaker 1: A
00:51:01
Speaker 2: number of people gnaw a bone and then put it back in the dish.
00:51:06
Speaker 1: This is a serious
00:51:07
Speaker 2: offense.
00:51:09
Speaker 2: Next
00:51:10
Speaker 2: refrain from falling upon the dish like a swine while eating snorting
00:51:14
Speaker 1: disgustingly
00:51:15
Speaker 2: and smacking the lips.
00:51:18
Speaker 1: Do not spit
00:51:19
Speaker 2: over or on the table in the manner of hunters.
00:51:24
Speaker 2: When you blow your nose or cough,
00:51:26
Speaker 1: turn around so that
00:51:27
Speaker 2: nothing falls on the table, there is a lot of actual etiquette that stayed
00:51:32
Speaker 1: from the 13th
00:51:33
Speaker 2: century. The more
00:51:34
Speaker 1: things change, the
00:51:35
Speaker 2: more they stay the same. We weren't joking when we said table manners don't change much.
00:51:41
Speaker 2: Alright, 14th century.
00:51:43
Speaker 2: A man who clears his throat when he eats and one who blows his nose in the
00:51:48
Speaker 1: tablecloth are
00:51:49
Speaker 2: both ill bred. I assure you
00:51:53
Speaker 2: you should not poke your teeth with your knife. As some
00:51:56
Speaker 1: do. It is
00:51:57
Speaker 2: a bad habit.
00:51:59
Speaker 2: I hear that some eat unwashed
00:52:02
Speaker 2: for
00:52:02
Speaker 1: this next one.
00:52:03
Speaker 2: We want to just
00:52:04
Speaker 1: Remind people this was written in the 14th century, not 1980
00:52:08
Speaker 2: seven, because it's quoted.
00:52:10
Speaker 1: I hear that
00:52:11
Speaker 2: some eat unwashed
00:52:12
Speaker 1: may their fingers be
00:52:14
Speaker 2: palsied
00:52:16
Speaker 1: 15th century.
00:52:17
Speaker 2: Do not put
00:52:18
Speaker 1: back on your plate. What has been in your mouth.
00:52:22
Speaker 2: Do not
00:52:22
Speaker 1: chew anything you
00:52:24
Speaker 2: have to spit
00:52:24
Speaker 1: out again.
00:52:26
Speaker 1: It is bad manners to dip food into the salt.
00:52:31
Speaker 2: During these
00:52:31
Speaker 1: centuries there was much
00:52:33
Speaker 2: advice on the proper way
00:52:35
Speaker 1: of blowing one's nose. There were of
00:52:37
Speaker 2: course, no tissues
00:52:38
Speaker 1: and handkerchiefs had still not come into common
00:52:41
Speaker 2: use
00:52:42
Speaker 1: frowned upon. Was the
00:52:43
Speaker 2: practice of blowing into
00:52:44
Speaker 1: a tablecloth or coat sleeve
00:52:46
Speaker 2: accepted was
00:52:47
Speaker 1: the practice of
00:52:48
Speaker 2: blowing into
00:52:49
Speaker 1: the fingers. I am not sure that is any
00:52:52
Speaker 2: better
00:52:53
Speaker 1: painters and
00:52:54
Speaker 2: sculptors of the age
00:52:55
Speaker 1: frankly
00:52:56
Speaker 2: reproduced
00:52:57
Speaker 1: these gestures.
00:52:59
Speaker 1: Among
00:52:59
Speaker 2: the night's
00:53:00
Speaker 1: depicted on the tombstone of french
00:53:02
Speaker 2: king Philip the
00:53:03
Speaker 1: bold at Dijon France, one is blowing his nose into his coat,
00:53:08
Speaker 2: another into his
00:53:10
Speaker 1: fingers.
00:53:12
Speaker 1: I
00:53:12
Speaker 2: still think it's
00:53:13
Speaker 1: fascinating that so many things are very much the same, but it is interesting that apparently blowing
00:53:18
Speaker 2: the nose was
00:53:19
Speaker 1: like the big, how the heck do we deal with this like the cell phone manner of the day, you know, Although I've got two little girls right now who are, they're learning very diligently coughing into their the crook of their elbow and sneezing into the crook of their elbow and
00:53:34
Speaker 1: I don't know if that would have been considered strange or gross or awkward 10 even 10 years ago or 15
00:53:40
Speaker 2: years ago. Yeah.
00:53:41
Speaker 1: Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
00:53:43
Speaker 1: Good case for ye Kleenex.
00:53:46
Speaker 2: You
00:53:47
Speaker 1: know, you know, we
00:53:50
Speaker 2: we talk a
00:53:51
Speaker 1: lot on this show and we reference things all the way back to Emily Post because that's that's, you know, our our category, it's our company, it's our family, it's our history, it's where
00:54:02
Speaker 1: Our knowledge of etiquette kind of starts and I do really love getting to hear about etiquette from before the 1920s. It's been fun exploring gilded age etiquette at times. Um but
00:54:13
Speaker 2: it's also really
00:54:14
Speaker 1: interesting to
00:54:16
Speaker 2: hear someone also talk
00:54:18
Speaker 1: about knights and chivalry and that being a time when etiquette kind of had a renaissance
00:54:23
Speaker 2: and came back
00:54:24
Speaker 1: from a time where it wasn't as focused on
00:54:27
Speaker 1: and really interesting to think
00:54:29
Speaker 2: about
00:54:30
Speaker 1: what implements people were using
00:54:32
Speaker 2: back then and how
00:54:34
Speaker 1: they might have helped us to be polite or not be polite like to me, I would like,
00:54:39
Speaker 2: oh I could just imagine
00:54:40
Speaker 1: your coat being more polite than your hands, but
00:54:44
Speaker 2: clearly I would have been
00:54:45
Speaker 1: On the outs, back in the 14th and 15th
00:54:47
Speaker 2: centuries
00:54:48
Speaker 1: in europe,
00:54:49
Speaker 1: that
00:54:50
Speaker 2: those hands are
00:54:50
Speaker 1: really what you should be sneezing into.
00:54:53
Speaker 2: It makes me want to go
00:54:54
Speaker 1: wash my hands easier to wash your hands than your code.
00:54:57
Speaker 2: It is
00:54:58
Speaker 1: easier to wash your hands in your
00:54:59
Speaker 2: coat. That is that
00:55:00
Speaker 1: is really true. That is really true. It makes me want to go wash my hands right now. Thinking about,
00:55:06
Speaker 2: well, I'll tell you what you've
00:55:07
Speaker 1: done with the post. You've got me thinking
00:55:09
Speaker 2: about a book
00:55:10
Speaker 1: that I read way back in High school. Castiglione is the quarter
00:55:13
Speaker 2: and it
00:55:15
Speaker 1: predated the Prince Machiavelli's the Prince. And I've heard people talk
00:55:19
Speaker 2: about it as
00:55:21
Speaker 1: one of the earliest etiquette books in
00:55:24
Speaker 2: sort of renaissance
00:55:25
Speaker 1: era europe. And you've got me thinking I need to go dig around and find
00:55:29
Speaker 2: us a reading from the court here as well. Oh, that would be great. That would be really, really great. Once
00:55:34
Speaker 1: upon a time, that book
00:55:35
Speaker 2: sat on my
00:55:37
Speaker 1: bookshelf
00:55:38
Speaker 2: at our Emily Post
00:55:40
Speaker 2: Institute Burlington
00:55:41
Speaker 1: offices and this will force me to go
00:55:43
Speaker 2: to the boxes of books, what I now
00:55:45
Speaker 1: call the Revolution
00:55:46
Speaker 2: Library and to
00:55:48
Speaker 1: find the court here. I'm sure I will also
00:55:50
Speaker 2: find some other gems
00:55:51
Speaker 1: to bring to the post script
00:55:53
Speaker 2: series. Well, I definitely
00:55:54
Speaker 1: look forward to that
00:55:55
Speaker 2: because well, thank you for taking us back into the archives to be continued.
00:56:14
Speaker 2: Mhm
00:56:19
Speaker 2: We like to end our show on a high note. So
00:56:21
Speaker 1: we turn to you to hear about the good
00:56:22
Speaker 2: etiquette you're seeing and experiencing out in
00:56:24
Speaker 1: the world and that can come
00:56:25
Speaker 2: in so many forms. And today we have a salute from Jessica.
00:56:29
Speaker 1: My parents live in ST George Utah
00:56:31
Speaker 2: and I'm in the Seattle area
00:56:33
Speaker 1: and they own a shop in las
00:56:34
Speaker 2: Vegas. So they're frequently traveling to
00:56:36
Speaker 1: Vegas to attend
00:56:38
Speaker 2: the shop
00:56:39
Speaker 2: for
00:56:39
Speaker 1: Mother's Day this year. I decided it would be a
00:56:41
Speaker 2: great idea to send my mom a gift box
00:56:43
Speaker 1: of local Seattle
00:56:44
Speaker 2: chocolates, which she loves.
00:56:47
Speaker 2: What I didn't think about was that in ST. George in may can be up to 90° during the day and chocolate will melt.
00:56:54
Speaker 1: I sent the package
00:56:55
Speaker 2: to their home address and you guessed it, they weren't home and weren't going to be home all week.
00:57:01
Speaker 2: Fortunately
00:57:02
Speaker 1: one of my
00:57:03
Speaker 2: parents and neighbors in ST George noticed the package the day it was
00:57:06
Speaker 1: delivered,
00:57:07
Speaker 2: knew they were out of town and texted my parents to let them know that it had
00:57:10
Speaker 1: arrived and
00:57:11
Speaker 2: asking if they would like the neighbor to take care of it for them.
00:57:14
Speaker 1: The neighbor took the package
00:57:16
Speaker 2: and then drove to
00:57:17
Speaker 1: las Vegas to
00:57:18
Speaker 2: deliver it to my mom in time for Mother's Day.
00:57:22
Speaker 1: So this salute goes to my
00:57:24
Speaker 2: parents neighbor
00:57:25
Speaker 1: in Saint George who saved
00:57:27
Speaker 2: my mother's Day gift from becoming a pile of melted chocolate
00:57:31
Speaker 1: mess
00:57:33
Speaker 2: and got it to my mom
00:57:34
Speaker 1: just in time.
00:57:35
Speaker 2: Thank you for all that. You do keep up the great
00:57:38
Speaker 1: work kind regards
00:57:39
Speaker 2: Jessica
00:57:40
Speaker 2: Jessica, thank you so much
00:57:41
Speaker 1: for that salute with a
00:57:42
Speaker 2: twist. I love those. That is like, you know you, I figured we were gonna, you know, have the neighbor put it in the fridge and hold it like that. This is the basic, this was amazing. Like big salute to your parents neighbors,
00:57:58
Speaker 1: hmm
00:57:58
Speaker 2: big salute
00:57:59
Speaker 1: to your parents neighbors
00:58:00
Speaker 2: and you know, trip to Vegas.
00:58:02
Speaker 1: Good
00:58:03
Speaker 2: excuse, good excuse, good excuse. Thank you so much for the salute
00:58:12
Speaker 2: and thank you for listening. Thank you to everyone who has sent us something and everybody who supports us over on Patreon.
00:58:18
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00:58:50
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00:59:18
Speaker 2: Mhm.