Dedicated Etiquette Thread

How to pass, fit in, eventually set an example, and ultimately lead the way.
Hristo Botev
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Re: Dedicated Etiquette Thread

Post by Hristo Botev »

I appreciate etiquette as a subject--did cotillion as a middle schooler,, have been to countless social etiquette/networking events through law school and BigLaw firm life, we regularly host and are hosted as that is much preferable to "going out"--and I will certainly be on the look out for an older edition of the Emily Post book mentioned above, as that would be a fantastic edition to the library.

A topic that would be interesting to investigate further, however, would be where the concept of etiquette came from. I wonder if this is yet another thing we have to study via some outsourced resource (like Emily Post's treatise or like the consultants my old law firm paid to come in and train up new associates) that in earlier times--when people were less mobile and cultures, sub cultures, and sub-sub cultures didn't mix much--would sort of be like asking a pre-modern person to define "religion."

Honestly, these days I spend most of my time socially with family and with people I've known since middle school, and whatever "etiquette" I learned in cotillion wrt place settings and how to ask a girl to do the fox trot or whatever is wholly irrelevant to the actual rules of etiquette that a Tocqueville/Herodotus/Marco Polo outsider might discern from observing how my people behave socially in reality.

OED's etymology is interesting:Image

There are several others further down, including as an unwritten code of conduct followed by members of certain professions, esp. medicine and law. But none of the entries predate 1737.

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Ego
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Re: Dedicated Etiquette Thread

Post by Ego »

7Wannabe5 wrote:
Wed Jan 11, 2023 2:23 pm
... try to think of something true and complimentary to say about a home or similar environment you have been invited to for the first time.
That's a good one.


For those wondering why this etiquette thing may be a good idea, see this post on how and why to be ladylike (for women with autism): https://sympatheticopposition.substack. ... -for-women

The Art of Manliness is also an excellent resource https://www.artofmanliness.com/

Henry
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Re: Dedicated Etiquette Thread

Post by Henry »

What's interesting about etiquette is that it exists through all stratas of society. We think of Emily Post and whether we can rip apart bread or whether we should cut it before buttering it. But it's relative. There was an episode in The Wire that addressed the tradition that gang violence was not to take place on Sundays. However, a hit was ordered on Omar which resulted in his mother's church hat (a.k.a her crown) being blown off by a stray bullet. Here was this stone cold gangsta who made his living carrying a sawed of shotgun in order to rob drug dealers losing his mind because gangster etiquette was broken. And of course we all know what happens to child abusers in prison. The popularity of Larry David in Curb Your Enthusiasm is because of his disregard for basic etiquette and how we could live vicariously through it i.e. getting into fights over handicap stalls in bathrooms. And without getting political, much of the animosity against Donald Trump was based on his basic disregard of etiquette. I think it reminded people that when it comes to holding a society together, when it comes down to it, basic etiquette is probably more important than rule of law.

Frita
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Re: Dedicated Etiquette Thread

Post by Frita »

ertyu wrote:
Thu Jan 12, 2023 10:04 am
Add: if you want people to not wear shoes in your house, have slippers for them. Even "clean" floors will dirty feet and socks
Yes! Post-COVID communal slippers are rather off-putting, so lending a clean pair of socks is an option. I find us no longer inviting people (more outer-circle) who require us to provide footwear, also a post-COVID thing.

Hristo Botev
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Re: Dedicated Etiquette Thread

Post by Hristo Botev »

Henry wrote:
Thu Jan 12, 2023 1:03 pm
A lifetime's worth to unpack here; good stuff.

If I saw an Emily Post type character sitting around at one of our shrimp boils or fish fries observing and taking notes so that she could write a blog post or substack or something about "the ways and mannerisms of the coastal redneck," I'd politely ask her to leave and to throw her written notes in the trash on the way out, and if she refused I'd call her out until tribal pressure and chastisement forced her hand. If that Emily Post type character turned out to not be an outsider, but a member of our own tribe, I'd follow the procedure of Matthew 18:15-17. The outsider Emily Post is a voyeur; the insider Emily Post is someone seeking to exploit her own people and their institutions, and by doing so to ultimately to cause its dilution and eventual collapse.

Half-formed thoughts, for sure; but is not "etiquette" really a form of dishonesty at some level? You must study manners that are foreign to your own in order to mimic them and thereby pass yourself off as one of those foreigners; simultaneously betraying the manners of your own people and exploiting and abusing those of the foreigner.

Is "etiquette" not just LARPing?

I'm reminded of my/our reading of Moby Dick. Ishmael spends chapters and chapters explaining the ways and manners of whalemen and the various peoples and places he encounters on his adventure. But this is because Ishmael ISN'T a whaleman; he isn't a Nantucketer; etc. He's a LARPer.

basuragomi
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Re: Dedicated Etiquette Thread

Post by basuragomi »

@Hristo Botev, in that vein, how is studying etiquette any different than studying grammar or a foreign language? Your kids presumably learned language from yourself and their peers, what use is anything in the world beyond the tribe?

Is the purpose of etiquette simply a shibboleth to enforce class and tribe, or is it a way to communicate within the norms of that group?

Are deception and evasion not critical life skills for children to learn, while the stakes are low?

jacob
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Re: Dedicated Etiquette Thread

Post by jacob »

Hristo Botev wrote:
Fri Jan 13, 2023 9:41 am
Half-formed thoughts, for sure; but is not "etiquette" really a form of dishonesty at some level? You must study manners that are foreign to your own in order to mimic them and thereby pass yourself off as one of those foreigners; simultaneously betraying the manners of your own people and exploiting and abusing those of the foreigner.

Is "etiquette" not just LARPing?
Yes and no. Kegan to the rescue. It depends on whether someone IS-etiquette or HAS-etiquette. The former comes about after being told there are certain correct ways to behave. It allows people to become part of the group that abides the etiquette. It's the ticket to the group so to speak. Learning it is the cost of joining. Someone who IS-etiquette is likely to be personally offended by breaching that etiquette. They'll also feel bad or wrong by breaching it. They've formed their morality around the etiquette.

A person develops HAS-etiquette when taking the IS-etiquette into a situation with a different etiquette and separating etiquette from their ego. The conflict of IS-etiquette is resolved by separating etiquette from the self in order to HAVE two or more of them. There is no betrayal for someone who HAS-etiquette because HAS-etiquette is adopted under a "When in Rome do as the Romans"-framework. Betrayal for a HAS-etiquette would happen insofar one tries to impose foreign-etiquette into domestic-etiquette or vice versa, e.g. "Doing like the Vandals when in Rome".

Hristo Botev
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Re: Dedicated Etiquette Thread

Post by Hristo Botev »

@basuragomi, I like that way of looking at it: etiquette as another form of communication (I'm sure I'm butchering your point), which it of course is. A related discussion came up during my Thucydides seminar, when the topic of the credibility and/or historicity of Thucydides' practice of quoting pages-long speeches as if by transcription, which obviously they could not have been, or at least most of them could not have been. And the question came up as to whether these speeches could be relied upon as accurate accounts if they are not true transcriptions. But I deal with transcripts for a living and can attest to the fact that a deposition or hearing transcript most certainly does not accurately reflect everything that happens, and often a transcript can be less accurate than someone else's in-person summary would have been--i.e., who is to say that Thucydides' narrative retelling/summary isn't in fact MORE accurate than a scribe's word-for-word transcription would have been? And body language et al. of course plays into this, but I imagine "etiquette" does as well--you can communicate a lot by putting your feet up on a conference room table, choosing not to take your suit coat off despite an overheated deposition room, never looking a deponent in the eye when asking questions--none of which would be reflected in a transcript and which are more in the realm of what is conveyed when a person follows etiquette or doesn't follow etiquette, and if the latter whether they are not following etiquette as a strategic move or because they are ignorant as to what is and not generally deemed acceptable in a certain situation.

Anyway, I of course teach my kids etiquette as I also teach them grammar and the like. And I do that as their father. But that doesn't get to the religion point I made earlier: a pre-modern father would have taught his kids "religion," but religion as a secularized concept would have been largely unfamiliar to him (I'm supposing, I don't really know). Seems the analogy holds with respect to the "secularization" of etiquette--this is just how we are and who we are and how we act; to study someone else's etiquette and to try and mimic it in order to "fit in" or whatever is a form of deceit.

@jacob, as usual, you are speaking on a different plane beyond the one I live on (I'm just a caveman, after all:)). But if I'm understanding the kernel of what you are conveying, it seems to jive, I just think the rub (as always) comes in defining and distinguishing "our" group from "other" groups. Also, do we exist outside of our etiquette? Is there in fact no such thing as "IS-etiquette" that can be separate from the person/ego; there is only ego which is defined by, among other things, that "IS-etiquette." And any attempt to try on for size someone else's etiquette, and be HAS-etiquette if I'm grokking you, is to "be" something that one is not.

Henry
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Re: Dedicated Etiquette Thread

Post by Henry »

I had the unfortunate experience of being forced to have dinner at a private table in the back of a restaurant with a someone connected to costra nostra. The display of etiquette would have brought Emily Post to multiple, albeit silent, orgasms. It made me piss my pants.

7Wannabe5
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Re: Dedicated Etiquette Thread

Post by 7Wannabe5 »

Talking about money or personal finances is also generally considered to be poor etiquette. In fact, the transfer of self-help-circle behavior of "being transparent" about any otherwise considered to be personal matter to general etiquette-ruled realm of social interaction is likely to be problematic. As in, why AA is anonymous, etc. IMO, this may also serve to be a significant barrier between ERE (the book/the forum) and ERE2 (any generalized, in person, open access version of the former.)

Henry
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Re: Dedicated Etiquette Thread

Post by Henry »

Anonymous groups are interesting when it comes to etiquette as they really are not anonymous because as we learned early on its a small world after all. It's really a social contract agreeing to secrecy. A type of omertà. An agreement that if you see someone you know through an anonymous group in another setting you will not talk about "this thing of our's." Or if someone confesses to a crime for which they have not been caught/punished, you will not report it (although there have been incidences of reporting). Which is funny because when you put a bunch of recovering crackheads in a room, a perverse game of one-upmanship develops. It's basically "You are not an addict until you have..." and many of the dot dot dots are criminal in nature. A run of the mill cokehead can really develop a sense of inferiority if they never sucked off a corner boy or stolen their grandmother's entertainment center to get high. It's similar to someone entering a room of ERE people with an embarrassingly inadequate SWR. It's why I have come to the conclusion that status is not a social construct but is a genetic trait of human beings because I have never been exposed to any social interaction in which It is not playing in the background. Wherever there are people there is status and wherever there is status there is etiquette.

Myakka
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Re: Dedicated Etiquette Thread

Post by Myakka »

The advice to watch what other people are doing and catch their tone and follow it (which I take as very good advice), I nevertheless find myself at a loss when I go to think about how to actually do that. I wonder if I have some really bad attitudes in my head about 'fitting in' -- maybe that is my problem? Really, I do not know.

ZAFCorrection
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Re: Dedicated Etiquette Thread

Post by ZAFCorrection »

ertyu wrote:
Wed Jan 11, 2023 1:09 am

** if it's just one douche dropping f-bombs and no one else does, don't be like him.
A personal goal in the last year+ has been to significantly reduce and hopefully eliminate f bombs and any other vulgar language, having been guilty of talking some crap over the years. My finding is that even when there are situations where it is acceptable, it can both leak into other areas of life where it isn't, and like you said, offend people who don't feel comfortable giving me feedback about it.

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Jean
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Re: Dedicated Etiquette Thread

Post by Jean »

I think etiquette serves two function.
One is to show the respect we have for the group hierarchy (even if it's a flat hierarchy).
The other is to cover for many people's inability to think about what consequences their actions could have.
I have two examples.

Wenn going wild camping, I try to minimize my impact. Don't be loud, don't leave trash. But this is mostly governed by my will not to disturb, because i wan't to be able to enjoy a spot latter (or don't make the spot unavaillable for other people later).
Most people don't grow up wild camping, and started doing it on their own. And for long, it was practiced by a very small amount of peopl.
During COVID, a lot of people bought camper vans, and they are very anoying, because no formal etiquette is taught about camping.
It's way more than just not leaving trash. One day, i saw two vans blocking off a pic nic spot that was probably usually enjoyed by locals.
They didn't break any law, but they surely did a lot to make the local autority forbid camper van to park on the picnic spot.
They didn't mean bad, they just lack the ability to put themselves in the shoes of others, This wouldn't happen if a camping etiquette was wildy spread, like a table etiquette.

An other example is dumpster diving. This is usually practice by left radicals, that despise big corporation, and they usually consider supermarket we dumpster dive at like big corporations. This means they are very happy to leave a mess after dumpster diving. This is a part of their group respecting etiquette. But this is in full contradiction with the empathic etiquette, which is to leave the place as clean as possible, so that no one ever get any reason to make dumpster diving more difficult.

chenda
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Re: Dedicated Etiquette Thread

Post by chenda »

A few bad apples spoil the barrel.

chenda
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Re: Dedicated Etiquette Thread

Post by chenda »

Singapore once launched a '4 million smiles' campaign to encourage its citizens to be more friendly towards foreign visitors. One Singaporean attempted to raise some real smiles by launching a parody '4 million frowns' campaign. He was swiftly arrested.

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GandK
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Re: Dedicated Etiquette Thread

Post by GandK »

Probably a "southern thing," but I was told many years ago that unless you are picking your nose, good intentions + polite wording = good manners (where good intentions means pro-other intentions, as opposed to lack of negative intentions).

I would now amend this to add "... as long as you aren't dealing with a pedant of the manner-Nazi variety or a potential future mother-in-law." One can never be polite enough to please these people. But for pretty much anyone else, if people know you mean well toward them, as long as your language is neither grossly negligent nor peppered with unnecessary vulgarity, they will read you as being polite even when that is not your goal.

7Wannabe5
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Re: Dedicated Etiquette Thread

Post by 7Wannabe5 »

That’s true about the mother-in-law. The first time I met my daughter’s husband, who happens to be a Southerner, he brought me a small box of chocolates. That small gesture probably earned him ten years of not entirely taking my baby girl’s side whenever she is miffed with him. Well, really, that combined with the fact that I could tell he was head over heels for her.

Henry
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Re: Dedicated Etiquette Thread

Post by Henry »

7Wannabe5 wrote:
Wed Apr 12, 2023 2:27 pm
The first time I met my daughter’s husband, who happens to be a Southerner, he brought me a small box of chocolates.
Just out of curiosity, did he mention anything about his mother and how the box of chocolates related to her philosophy on life?

7Wannabe5
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Re: Dedicated Etiquette Thread

Post by 7Wannabe5 »

@Henry:

LOL- The resemblance to Forrest ends there.

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