Thank-You Notes
Timeless and Classy or Outdated and Meaningless
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
Circumcision. Gay marriage. Immigration. There are a handful of subjects so controversial, so likely to propel people into disparate, dueling factions, that one dare not even broach them in mixed company.
They’re surefire feud igniters. They’re quarrel kindling.
Who knew thank-you notes were among them?
With the holidays approaching, I asked some friends what they think of thank-you notes — those customary expressions of gratitude scribbled, stamped, and sent by refined recipients of thoughtful gifts and generous gestures — and I was surprised to find people staunchly divided on the value of these mannerly missives.
Starshine Roshell
Some insisted that thank-you notes are gracious, timeless, and classy. Others declared them outdated and meaningless. And the fight was on.
“I am dumbfounded at the numbers of people who think they don’t need to acknowledge a gift, or who think an email suffices,” said a woman who wouldn’t let her kids use any gift until they had written a thank-you note for it.
“Better to look someone in the eyeballs and say a sincere ‘thank you’ than to go through that paper-wasting ordeal,” argued another mom.
I send thank-you notes, and I make my kids send them because … well, because it’s the way we demonstrate our understanding of how polite society works. Like giving up a seat for an elderly person. Or wearing underpants. It’s a silly but longstanding rite by which our manners are judged.
Come to think of it, dashing off an “Oh, how I cherish this pie-scented candle” memo makes me feel more deserving of the thing in the first place. And it forces me to actively appreciate a kindness carried out on my behalf. How could that be a bad thing?
“Some thank-yous seem insincere, forced, or obligatory,” says one dad, “which seems to contradict the premise behind them.”
Well, yeah. There’s that. Are thank-you notes etiquette purely for etiquette’s sake? Do they lose all meaning when they’re scrawled out of duty and on deadline, rather than inspired by genuine, spontaneous gratitude?
Maybe. But we don’t always mean it when we say we’re sorry, either; sometimes “fake it ’til you feel it” is an honorable strategy.
“I’d take an obligatory thank-you over an obnoxious sense of entitlement any day,” says a young woman who traces her own good manners back to being forced to write thank-you notes as a kid. “I feel like it helped me become a more polite and conscientious person.”
My friend Kim says she would honestly rather not receive a gift than have to drag out the stationery and pen a merci beaucoup. “While I know that they are absolutely the right thing to do, I hate writing them,” she wrote on her blog, EverythingBugsMe.com. “When I give a gift, I always tell the recipient, ‘Do not write me a thank-you note.’ Now, in my book, that’s a gift.”
I wouldn’t turn down an offer like that — mostly because I loathe addressing the little buggers. But I recently received a thank-you note from a 13-year-old boy that was so authentic and amusing, so simple and yet carefully infused with voice, that it reminded me why the tedious task is worthwhile:
Roshell Family,
I LOVE your gift. I’ve been waiting for that book to come out for a while now, and your gift-giving instincts were right on the money for this one (not like they ever aren’t).
Thanks a hell of a lot.
—Colt
P.S. I get to say hell now that I’m 13.
It made me chuckle. It made me glad to have given him a gift. It absolutely made my day. Which means — aw, hell — I probably ought to send him a thank-you note.
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Starshine Roshell is the author of Wife on the Edge. Note to Readers: As of November, Starshine's column will appear every other week. Look for the next one November 10
Comments
What? Starshine will only be writing two columns a month? Please tell us , is this her choice ?
geeber (anonymous profile)
October 26, 2011 at 4:37 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Sad that the written word is becoming an endangered species. There's something joyous about receiving actual (hard copy) written correspondence and it seems to be a dying art. So much easier to send off an e-mail or text message (or make a phone call).
When my mother died, I was touched to find a drawer full of what appeared to be every greeting card I'd ever sent her or my father. Mama was far from sentimental, so finding that she apparently treasured these tokens makes me extrermely glad I took the time to mail them (and pen a brief personal note in each).
While I'm sure the younger crowd disagrees, I still believe in the value of written thank you notes. I'd add that when a loved one loses someone close to them, a written condolence note is required. These old-fashioned courtesies are a way of saying "you're worth the extra time and trouble to put my thoughts on paper and mail them to you".
winddancer1562 (anonymous profile)
October 26, 2011 at 7:47 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Starshine's column only twice a month? Say it isn't so, Marianne.
Starshine's column is one of the main reasons I pick up the Indy. There is so much generic news everywhere, Starshine make's the Indy...well...SHINE.
I don't know if it's her decision or the Indy's but if the Indy were smart, they'd make Starshine an offer she can't refuse and keep her on a weekly schedule.
Best wishes.
RobertRich (anonymous profile)
October 26, 2011 at 8:06 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Buy more ads and the Indy will have more pay for Starshine and more space available on the printed pages.
John_Adams (anonymous profile)
October 26, 2011 at 8:28 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Hi all,
Thanks for reading and being such big fans of the paper and our writers.
To be clear, this move to less columns per month was Starshine's decision, not The Indy's, as her career is blossoming with other work opportunities right now.
We wouldn't dare cut back on the Best of SB 2011's top columnist ourselves, but we appreciate that she's still dedicated to doing as much writing as she can for the paper. And we wish her well on her concurrent adventures as well, as I'm sure you all do too.
Thanks again,
matt
Matt (Matt Kettmann)
October 26, 2011 at 9:19 a.m. (Suggest removal)
There goes the neighborhood. BoL, Star.
niceFLguy (anonymous profile)
October 27, 2011 at 2:19 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Nice!!!!!
brimo7272 (anonymous profile)
October 27, 2011 at 4:15 p.m. (Suggest removal)