Mar. 24th, 2018

cereta: Laura Cereta (cereta)
[personal profile] cereta
Dear Annie: Recently, I attended the funeral of a lady at my church, whom I didn't know very well; but when I read her obituary in the newspaper and found that she had sung in the choir in her younger days, I made a donation to the church's choir fund. Afterwards I received a thank-you note from her daughter and her husband (who only signed the card from "Bob" and "Cindy," even though I don't know them), saying, "Thank you for the memorial gift". It would have been much nicer if she had said something like, "Thank you for the memorial gift to the church's choir fund in my mother's memory." The same kind of thing applies to bridal couples who send out thank-yous for wedding presents. I hope that you will share this advice with the rest of your readers. -- Memorial Gift Forgotten

Dear Memorial Gift Forgotten: I've received and printed many letters about thank-you notes, and I thought I was done with the subject for a while. But I wanted to address this one, because it's a special case. Yes, thank-yous for wedding gifts are a must, but memorial gifts are different. This is one situation in which it's completely understandable for someone not to send a thank-you.

Memorial gifts are meant not only to commemorate the dead but also to comfort the grieving. If the bereaved forget to thank you for the comfort you've offered, or if they thank you in the "wrong" way, forgive them. Grief has a way of being distracting. Your gesture was kind. Don't tarnish it with unmet expectations.

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