I stole a red ramekin of guacamole from an Applebee's once. I just put it in the take-home box; I don't know what came over me. It was the guac!
Natter 72: We Were Unprepared for This
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Timelies all!
Gary and I divided up writing the thank-you notes for our wedding gifts. We did do them in batches, fwiw.
Oh god, we took ages to write our thank-you notes for wedding gifts. Months, at least. I *think* we had them all done by the time our first anniversary rolled around, but I couldn't swear to it.
I avoid doing anything in life that would require me sending thank you notes.
How do you avoid letting nice people do nice things for you? Avoid nice people, or just hurt their feelings so they aren't nice to you?
I thank people individually when they do nice things for me. I just don't send tiny cards with handwritten notes because I am a terrible person.
Is there anything that requires thank you notes where a personal thanks wouldn't do? I mean, if you had the patience to thank each person face to face for their lovely ba? mitzvah/graduation/christening/wedding gift, would that count, or is etiquette firmly decided on cards?
(I love cards, I have many, and then I have blanks so I can insert photos or draw my own).
I am a terrible person.
All the words are spelled correctly, yet it fails to make sense.....
I am laughing at the buffista restaurant swiping confessional here. It helped temper my reaction, I'll tell you what.
is etiquette firmly decided on cards?
My understanding is that etiquette says a card/note (and, I suppose, the attendant effort put into writing/mailing it) is a more appropriate response than a verbal "thank you," even if effusive, genuine, and accompanied by tears and/or song and/or interpretive dance.
I'm a shitty dancer, so I'ma go with notes.