Showing posts with label Dignity and Etiquette. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dignity and Etiquette. Show all posts

Saturday, November 19, 2022

Etiquette and Dignified Behavior

Again, Mrs. Chester Adams requests her friends to bring to her their Social Problems and Perplexities by letter at any time.


BE DIGNIFIED

WE HAVE heard of the sweet dignity of women, and if we are mortal we have been charmed by that element in a person's deportment; we also must be aware of the fact that dignity in women is on the wane. It is to be deplored that it has gone far below par in the estimation of many, though its value is still to be appreciated by an elect few.

Now I am not preaching against a charming natural spontaneity, and no one appreciates the joy of fresh and hearty living more than I do. But I like women too much to see them lowering the standards of behavior, there-by affecting the status of our sex. And nothing is quite so effective in the destructive work as a lack of dignity.

Some one has said that dignity rarely goes hand-in-hand with haste. As soon as your actions are unduly quickened, there is a lack of judgement and equipoise which are associated with dignity, Cultivate a habit of allowing plenty of time to say and do things. In your conversation, acquire a natural dignity of intona- tion and choice of words. This does not mean to be a pedant and to flaunt long, involved sentences at a tired listener. It does mean that a statement can be made in well-chosen, pure English. As soon as slang or dioms are allowed, there is a loss of dignity.

Your correspondence, too, should receive careful consideration. Never allow one word to flow from your pen that might rebound to your discredit. The written word often stands out as a witness against the writer's good breeding.

Perhaps in your actions there is greater opportunity to throw dignity to the winds than in your words. 1 have seen women hurling wrath, in the shape of undignified words, at conductors, newsboys, children and grown people, and there has generally been nothing gained except the laugh and disrespect of the onlookers. A lack of dignity may be funny at times, but it never gains a sincere admiration or respect.

In the general attitude toward men, I must exhort women, young and otherwise, to be extremely careful. I would far rather be marked as “too dignified” than to err on the other side. I much prefer my self-respect to a familiarity which breeds contempt. It is better to possess dignity than a popularity gained at a disregard for this quality.

I do not wish to sermonize, my dear friends. I merely wish to bring to the minds of my readers the fact that in an unexplained manner we are seeing less of a serious dignity in women than in former days. We are losing one of the traits that, “in spite of the popularity of the jolly good fellow” will ever be worthy of sincere satisfaction. Are you forgetting it? Or do you stand with those who insist upon upholding the high ideals of behavior? — Dear Mrs. Adams, San Francisco Call, 1910


🍽Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia

Thursday, July 10, 2014

Etiquette's Rewards

Society is not necessarily too formal or too “showy.” Society implies also that society of fellow-men you meet every day of the year -- people you come into contact with in the social and business worlds.

What Manners Will Do For You


Every day you come into contact with people, with strangers, who judge you by what you do and say. They go away carrying an impression of you--and it depends upon your manners whether it is a good impression or a bad impression.

It is a mistake to think that good manners are meant for the elaborate ball room or for the formal dinner. Society is not necessarily too formal or too "showy." Society implies also that society of fellow-men you meet every day of the year--people you come into contact with in the social and business worlds. And in order to make contact with these people agreeable and pleasant, in order to win the admiration and respect of strangers, in order to avoid embarrassment and humiliation because of bad blunders at most conspicuous moments, it is essential to know what is right and what is wrong.

Good manners will enable you to be easy and graceful at all times. You will be able to mingle with the most cultured people and be perfectly at ease. You will lose all self-consciousness, all timidity. And instead you will become dignified, well-poised, calm. Instinctively people will respect you; in business and in society you will find yourself welcomed and admired.


       
If you follow the laws of good conduct, if you do only what is right and in good form, you will find yourself an acknowledged leader, an acknowledged success, no matter in what station of life you may be. Pope Francis was named the most well-mannered person of 2013, for “spreading the message of God’s love while treating all people with dignity and respect.”

Etiquette's Rewards


Etiquette is like the binding of a book – just as the binding reveals the name of the book, and protects the valuable pages that are inside, so does etiquette reveal the breeding and culture of an individual, and protects him from the disrespect, ridicule and snubs of the world.

Etiquette will make you dignified. It will make your actions and speech refined, polished, impressive. It will make you a leader instead of a follower, a participant instead of a looker-on. It will open the doors of the highest society to you, make you immune to all embarrassment, enable you to conduct yourself with ease and confidence at all times, under all circumstances.

The rewards of etiquette are too numerous to recount. If you follow the laws of good conduct, if you do only what is right and in good form, you will find yourself an acknowledged leader, an acknowledged success, no matter in what station of life you may be. The world is quick to perceive good manners, just as it is quick to perceive the blunders in etiquette. If you study the rules of good conduct, and follow good form in everything you do and say, you will become courteous and kind and well-mannered. Etiquette will attract people to you, make you and your home a center of social activity. But most of all, it will make you respect yourself. And that is more important than riches or fame--for self-respect is the only thing that brings true happiness.

Remember the words of the prophet, "He who respects himself will earn the respect of all the world."



From Lillian Eichler's 1921, "Book of Etiquette"

Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J. Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia