a poll of sorts

Nov 01, 2010 15:09

so. thank-you notes. what's your experience with them? is sending them the done thing in your social circles? what sort of thank-you notes have you sent before? how does one write a thank-you note to a friend's parents? ;_;

i ask this because the concept of thank-you notes was incredibly foreign to me until i came to the UK.

poll

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Comments 13

erushi November 1 2010, 17:37:03 UTC
what precisely is this thank-you note you need to send for?

i mainly send them to tutors, and people in my faculty, after i bother them.

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ambientlight November 1 2010, 17:47:32 UTC
i stayed at a friend's place over the weekend and ended up having two meals there. ._.

yeah, i've sent thank-you emails and cards to tutors before. it's always so hard finding the right tone, though! i usually go with a combination of semi-formal and the odd exclamation mark to gesture towards slight informality. x_x

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erushi November 1 2010, 18:04:52 UTC
how close is this friend? if very close, i suspect s/he won't mind; i know i certainly won't. alternatively, buy that person a pint the next time you guys meet, and text him/her in the meanwhile promising as such?

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erushi November 1 2010, 18:06:20 UTC
oh wait. i just saw. it was to the friend's parents. sorry. *headdesk*

erm. a thank you card would do, i guess? and possibly a small present, something edible. did you give them something when you first visited?

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lesstraveled November 1 2010, 17:41:56 UTC
even in the age of e-mail, we're taught here that the polite thing to do is still to send a proper paper one (or i guess there's a lot of ~contention about that, but to be on the safe side, physical notes are always kosher). generally i have sent them to relatives after they've given me something for my birthday and i also sent them to people who gave me stuff at my high school graduation party-thing... i guess just any semi-formal situation like that, esp. where older people Do Things For You. past grade school i've never sent them to friends, since errrr i am not exactly that sort of stuffy, posh person ( ... )

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ambientlight November 1 2010, 17:52:32 UTC
where older people Do Things For You
hahaha best summary of the relevant social situation ever.

i was meant to just crash at a friend's place for the night (with another friend), so it's not like his parents extended a proper ~invitation... but then we ended up having lunch there... and then eating with them at their weekly Family Dinner... and i hadn't brought wine or anything with me when i arrived. ._. it's pretty strange because i'm quite close to the guy but that was the first time i'd ever met his parents.

to keep it from sounding like you've copied the note from things Googled online
yeahhh i was totally doing this earlier, before i despaired and made this post. >_<

thanks for sharing! etiquette is always so interesting to find out about/stress-inducing in practice.

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lesstraveled November 1 2010, 18:19:05 UTC
ohhhh i see! Meeting The Parents even in a friend context is incredibly awkward, yes. (especially the kind that has a weekly Family Dinner, omg dkjfkalskd; wha) i guess i would just go on awkwardly about how i was very appreciative of their hospitality & generosity in opening their home to me etc. etc. ... striking the right tone is SO hard. i always want to be more flippant/cutesy than i suspect i should to cover up my awkwardness, so perhaps i should not be giving advice. >___>

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ambientlight November 1 2010, 18:25:55 UTC
(ikr! it was all so weirdly Polite and Formal and Proper. THERE WERE CLOTH TABLE NAPKINS.) thanks for the tips, definitely working the words '(kind) hospitality' and 'generosity' in there, eheh. i always find 'appreciative' a tricky word, it doesn't sound like i'm being humble enough. ;_;

and i hear you re: being flippant, i always find myself making kind-of jokes and using the odd exclamation mark in an attempt to, i don't know, seem like less of a robot. but maybe robots have better manners anyway. ._.

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