jporgeck
Familiar Face
- Messages
- 71
- Location
- Fort Lauderdale
Barrelhouse said:UGH!!!
What's the lesson to be learned here: that ideas of acceptable behavior change over time.
That's what I'm talkin' 'bout.:eusa_clap :eusa_clap
Barrelhouse said:UGH!!!
What's the lesson to be learned here: that ideas of acceptable behavior change over time.
That's what I'm talkin' 'bout.:eusa_clap :eusa_clap
Shangas said:Shadows of Raiders of the Lost Ark?
skyvue said:Merriam-Webster defines the tolerance as "sympathy or indulgence for beliefs or practices differing from or conflicting with one's own." So when the majority of people share a particular viewpoint regarding a particular behavior, it is the person who is acting outside those norms who is to be tolerated (or not), not those adhering to the traditional rules.
The paucity of hat-wearers today may indeed have made limited the availability of hat racks in dining establishments, but I don't find that a problem. I just ask the maître d' or host if they have somewhere safe they could place my hat, and the answer is always yes. They're always happy to do so.
skyvue said:The paucity of hat-wearers today may indeed have made limited the availability of hat racks in dining establishments, but I don't find that a problem. I just ask the maître d' or host if they have somewhere safe they could place my hat, and the answer is always yes. They're always happy to do so.
Edited for small bit I feared came off as contentious.
Honda Enoch said:I have to say that yes times have changed and things once thought to be rude are now acceptable. But is that really for the better? This topic can cover many things, hats, movies, music.
If we were to go back to the 20's/30's and walk into a dinner and not take of our hat, some may looks at us with a "how dare you" look. but at the same time, take some of today's music back there and play it, or today's movies.
The more things became socially acceptable, the more out of control the world became.
And I know they were saying the exact same thing back then, but honestly think about it. We look at things today that they thought were risque and laugh. But back then they were considered porn.
Anyway, my point is that times have changed but not necessarily for the better when it comes to etiquette. It is hard to be a proper hat wearer in today's world, but I feel the world should still accommodate hat wearers. there should be hat stands or hooks in every restaurant.
ScottF said:Well-said, but I don't think wearing a hat in a restaurant is an indication of a downturn in etiquette. Give me a hat rack and I hang my hat. Better examples are 'spitting on the sidewalk', or young people pushing past old people to get through a door, or in Seattle at least, constant dropping of the 'F'-bomb in public.
Do you tip your hat every time you meet a lady? Should you....in 2010? I have early 1900's hats that have the brim binding worn away at the front right. I haven't seen a woman or girl curtsey in ages - I can't believe how rude they are!
Scott <=== living in 2010, but wearing a hat
ScottF said:Well-said, but I don't think wearing a hat in a restaurant is an indication of a downturn in etiquette. Give me a hat rack and I hang my hat. Better examples are 'spitting on the sidewalk', or young people pushing past old people to get through a door, or in Seattle at least, constant dropping of the 'F'-bomb in public.
ScottF said:Do you tip your hat every time you meet a lady? Should you....in 2010? I have early 1900's hats that have the brim binding worn away at the front right. I haven't seen a woman or girl curtsey in ages - I can't believe how rude they are!
Scott <=== living in 2010, but wearing a hat
Possibly no one is interested? Maybe there's a sticky somewhere that explains it? If there is, please point the way, I would like to read it.Got to wonder who set these rules of what is "proper" when it comes to hats. Who decided that it was rude to eat while wearing a hat and why?
Tenuki said:I enjoyed how most comments assumed the lady was either a girlfriend or a secretary, not a colleague or his boss. I'm not offended just curious that here in the 21st Century, we haven't advanced all that much, hat etiquette aside.
it's just that her posture etc. doesn't say "boss." Of the two, she does look like the one with a real job, though, if that helps.
Emerson said:Ask the waiter for a chair if necessary, but get the hat OFF YOUR HEAD! You are in a restaurant. End of discussion.