November 10, 2012
Be a good host and guest this party season
If you are a guest at a party, have respect for your host and the other guests by not drinking too much alcohol.
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  • Don't arrive starving, especially at a cocktail party.
  • If you bring wine as a host gift, do not expect it to be consumed at the party.
  • If you're the last to leave, do so very soon after the next-to-last folks to leave -- unless you have volunteered for cleanup duty.
  • After:

  • Within a few days of the party, call or write a thank-you note. And while it's not a tit-for-tat deal, reciprocating with an invite to your place, even for a glass of wine, is good form.
  • More guest behavior

    Laura Barclay of Etiquette Centre of Minneapolis offers this advice:

    "Hosts get caught up in trying to do everything right and they forget about the relationship. Don't worry about 'Am I serving the right meal?' or 'Is this the right centerpiece?' It doesn't matter if all the flatware or plates match. Be present at the event and socialize."

    Guests need to be thoughtful too. Some common faux pas that Barclay notes:

  • Arriving too early or too late (fashionably late varies by region of country, but usually 10 to 15 minutes late is OK for a dinner).
  • Monopolizing the conversation.
  • Dressing inappropriately.
  • Double dipping.
  • Drinking too much alcohol.
  • Bringing a gift when "no gifts" has been communicated.
  • Checking emails or talking on your cellphone.
  • Handing out business cards at a dinner party.
  • Starting an argument.
  • Not bringing a hostess gift.
  • Eating together

    Eating with others at a shared table is one of the most important human activities, says William Beeman, professor of anthropology at the University of Minnesota. There's even a word for it: commensality.

    "There's not a society on Earth where human beings don't engage in eating together as a really important activity," he said. "The process of eating together actually takes on the quality of a kind of social ritual."

    Consider how people, gathered around a table, generally don't start eating until everyone has food.

    "That little principle of starting at the same time is widespread on the planet and almost universally observed," said Beeman.

    Meals often have a ritual that reflects the beginning of the event, be it a toast or invocation as simple as "bon appetit!"

    Most table manners reflect a transition between the act of eating and other kinds of social life. In many societies, there may be a kind of hierarchical movement to the table, with the most prominent people first and then others following.

    Think rank doesn't matter in this country? At the White House, there is a chief of protocol who makes certain that people are placed at the dinner table in the right order. "The person who sits next to the first lady gets the real place of honor, and you might be insulted if you don't get that place," said Beeman.

    The act of eating is not particularly pleasant to watch, regardless of culture. Beeman noted that the physical body is an important boundary everywhere, and rituals are set so we make sure there's a clear transition between inside and outside (such as ingesting).

    Societies try to make eating as gracious as possible. In cultures where food is to be eaten with fingers, for example, hands are washed in public, as a courtesy to others.

    Generally, table manners are intended to facilitate the social event, whether it's a dinner party or a family sitting together at the table.

    "The goal is for the meal to go along well for everyone," Beeman said.

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