Good manners, what for?

3 minutes read - Published at Jul 26, 2022
Professor DeRose @ Learn DeROSE

Text automatically translated. See original text in Português

The rules of etiquette are basically applicable to followers of the clean proposal. However, these tips will be useful to everyone, as they aim to develop an aesthetic sense of behavior with universal scope.

It is indeed true that a DeROSE Method practitioner has a more elegant, cordial behavior and a polished ability to manage conflicts. Therefore, we must be attentive to a perfect family, social and professional integration. Obviously, we try to maintain mimicry in order not to attract attention. But sometimes it doesn't work. So, may we be noticed and remembered for our elegance, sympathy, culture and cordiality.

Most of the rules of conduct arose from practical reasons. If you can discover the vein of human consideration, you will also have discovered the origin of all the formulas of etiquette. It all comes down to a matter of education. Good manners are the ways of acting in the company of other people so as not to invade their space, not to embarrass them and to make everyone feel good and at ease in your presence. Therefore, good manners are a matter of common sense.

By the way, with regard to this detail, let's recognize that good manners are also constantly changing conventions, depending on time and space. Therefore, the etiquette manual that is useful for Europe is not useful for Japan and what was published a few years ago may already be outdated today, as the world is changing rapidly.
So, the best thing you can do when you are out of your habitat is to wait for others to act first, observe and do the same. If they eat with their hands, follow suit; if with chopsticks, try to do the same.
But if, despite everything, you cannot follow certain customs, simply decline them. I will never be able to slurp soup or tea, or burp at the end of a meal as is correct in some countries. In these cases, I count on the indulgence of the hosts for the fact that I am a foreigner who does not know how to behave 100% according to local manners. I settle for about 95%.

However, if you are the host, put your guest at ease, doing as he or she does — whenever possible. I have a friend who, in order not to embarrass his guest, accompanied him and drank the lavender that was served after the meal to wash the tips of his fingers.

Another well-known fact was that of an Arab diplomat who, at a gala reception, finished eating a chicken drumstick and threw the bone back over his shoulder. For a moment, everyone looked at each other as if asking: What shall we do?. Immediately afterwards, the host imitated him and then everyone was throwing their bones over their shoulders... and having a lot of fun with it.

From the book Method of Good Manners,
Professor DeRose, Egrégora Books

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Subtlety is synonymous with good manners

5 minutes read - Published at Jul 12, 2022
Professor DeRose @ Learn DeROSE

Text automatically translated. See original text in Português

Where there is subtlety, in general, there is good manners. Subtlety has to do with polish, refinement.

Subtlety in the way of holding a cup, a glass, a fork. Subtlety in the way of sitting on the sofa without throwing yourself on it or turning over in bed without disturbing the partner who is there. Subtlety in the way of touching people and objects. Subtlety in the way of closing a friend's car trunk. Subtlety in replacing things exactly where we took them from, in other people's houses, no matter how intimate we are. Subtlety in selecting friendships and the people we will get involved with emotionally. Subtlety in the way of complaining or in the way of telling a truth.

There is nothing more pleasant than being able to say to someone:

  • I don't know if I would like that. And the other person understands that you don't want it in any way, doesn't insist and doesn't ask why. Can you imagine if, to obtain this result, you needed to say:
  • Look here, my friend. I'm not in the mood, do you understand me? Stop insisting.

And, worse, if the specimen of Homo sapiens did not understand words and you needed to resort to physical force in order to be respected! For example, having to lock a room so that the humanoid understands that it is not to enter! Once, I had a secretary who did not respect the closed door of my office. It had to be locked or she would burst into my privacy.

I believe that by comparing with the opposites, the concept of subtlety and its value become clearer, right?
Subtlety is the assistant not leaving for later (Leave it there, I'll do it later.) what his superior requests and, on top of that, forgetting and not doing it.

Subtlety is not borrowing anything, but if you do, returning it soon and in perfect condition. It is not touching other people's books and other objects. It is not putting anything on the other person's desk, and leaving it there, contributing to the confusion or increasing the stress.
Subtlety is being delicate, attentive, careful, gentle, kind. Being subtle is striving not to do anything that might displease others. It is being a cat and not a dog when moving, stepping, bumping and touching.
Being subtle is absorbing and assimilating a polite hint instead of behaving like a stone wall and rejecting the criticism, returning it automatically to defend yourself.

The city of Canela, in Rio Grande do Sul, is very cold in winter. Once, visiting a friend, I stayed two days at her house. She was a very good hostess, as the gauchos usually are. She provided tasty snacks, fragrant bed linen, fluffy towels for the bath. After the shower, she elegantly asked if everything was to my liking. Subtly, I informed her that the shower in the guest room was not heating up and joked that it didn't matter because a cold shower in winter is an excellent benefit for circulation. We were intimate enough for the joke. Imagine my perplexity when I heard her reply:

  • Yeah... but I also had to take a cold shower at your house[1]. We laughed a lot at the reciprocal misfortune and remained friends. But I still carry with me the cruel doubt: could she have been offended? It is atrocious to have to preserve a friendship at the cost of walking on eggs. One thing she lost forever. I will never contribute with constructive criticism again, because I realized that she does not accept it. And I will never use subtleties with her again.

Being subtle is recognizing a mistake that has been pointed out to you by someone else, even when you disagree and think you are right. I have some friends, excellent people, but who are always on the defensive. They never listen and never accept. They need to justify themselves always.

In fact, if we analyze coldly, as coldly as my bath, we need to recognize a definition that states: neurosis consists of having learned wrong, in having assimilated a wrong education. Thus, we can conclude, the ill-mannered is a neurotic. An example is the behavior observed in some cultural strata that learn to not take offense home and, as a result, perhaps take home a black eye, an enmity for the rest of their lives or a criminal lawsuit for assault. There is no question that such people have learned the wrong way to live.

Being subtle is synonymous with being well-mannered, even when the origin is humble, even if one has never read a book of etiquette.

[1] Because she didn't know how the shower with central gas heater worked, with one hot water tap and one cold water tap.

From the book Method of Good Manners,
Professor DeRose, Egrégora Books.

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