Miss Manners: Is it really so horrible to have a guest sleep on used sheets?

DEAR MISS MANNERS: We are empty-nesters who always seem to have a guest stopping by for a night.

Related Articles

Advice |


Miss Manners: Is my wife right that our college grad owes us a thank-you card?

Advice |


Miss Manners: Does my neighbor really think this makes things right with me?

Advice |


Miss Manners: How do I tell him he’s coming across as creepy?

Advice |


Miss Manners: What should he have said to the rude shopper?

Advice |


Miss Manners: My gift wasn’t on the child’s registry, and the disapproval was thunderous

I love having guests. What I don’t love is stripping and making the beds!

Do I need to provide each guest with a new set of sheets? Is it horribly rude and unsanitary to have two subsequent guests use the same set of sheets? Guests are sometimes cousins, if that makes a difference.

GENTLE READER: Are you asking if being cousins makes your guests less likely to think “Ew!” when they open the bed to used sheets?

Miss Manners doubts that.

But being cousins does make a difference in that you are probably on more informal terms with them than you would be with an unrelated, infrequent guest. You can therefore leave a set of fresh sheets in their room the day before they depart and say, “Would you mind changing the bed before you leave?”

DEAR MISS MANNERS: Some of my (grown-up) family members will pluck loose hairs off their shoulders and clothes, then drop them onto my carpet, without even trying to hide it!

I don’t say anything, but I wonder if I may ask them to put these loose hairs in the garbage can or compost container.

I’m pretty grossed out by their behavior. Your thoughts?

GENTLE READER: First, that you need one of those vacuum cleaners that they make for people with hairy pets. Then — Miss Manners presumes you would prefer to stop the habit — you could pick up the offending hair and say absently, “Is this yours?”

DEAR MISS MANNERS: Many people’s cellphones are set to show an image when they call. I have a friend who uses a full-face image of her husband — who has been dead for over eight years — as “her” photo when she calls someone.

She is in therapy but still voices her heavy grief all the time.

I realize grief has no proper timetable, and I respect her choice to speak about her husband and how much she misses him. But I find it profoundly jarring to see the face of this long-dead man whenever she calls me.

Is there a reasonable way to let her know the image is disturbing?

GENTLE READER: No.

[Ask Amy answered the above question two months ago. Here’s what she said.]

DEAR MISS MANNERS: My father has passed, and we received many condolence messages, memorial donations, meal deliveries, flowers and assistance in other ways.

My mother, sister and I all live in different cities. My dad, sister and I share a last name, but my mother’s is different. I will be writing the thank-you cards on behalf of the three of us.

Related Articles

Advice |


Dear Abby: I am not OK with my new girlfriend going to this wedding. What should I do?

Advice |


Ask Amy: My husband wants me to stay home, but I can’t do that

Advice |


Harriette Cole: My girlfriend’s astrology obsession has become too much

Advice |


Miss Manners: Is my wife right that our college grad owes us a thank-you card?

Advice |


Dear Abby: When I mentioned my fiance’s name, my great-aunt freaked out

What is the best way to sign them? My name first? My mother’s? We can’t sign with “the Smith family,” as my mom is not a Smith, so to speak.

GENTLE READER: Generally, there is only one signature to a letter, and others are included by preceding it with something like “Charlotte and Kevin join me in thanking you for …”

However, Miss Manners will allow you to shorten this by identifying all of you as “the family of the late Horace Smith.”

Please send your questions to Miss Manners at her website, www.missmanners.com; to her email, dearmissmanners@gmail.com; or through postal mail to Miss Manners, Andrews McMeel Syndication, 1130 Walnut St., Kansas City, MO 64106.

You May Also Like

More From Author