DisneyJen0504
Wife, Mom, Teacher
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2004
- Messages
- 3,725
If I am given a gift, I give a thank you note. It takes two seconds to show my appreciation.
We have never recieved a thank-you note from a childs birthday party and my kids are older. We always have sent thank-you notes for gifts, even at christmas to family that was there when the gifts were open, but never to kids after a childs party and like I said, we have never recieved one either.

I've wondered the same thing. Last summer we sent flowers/items to four different funerals and never received one thank you note! I know they were received because I saw them at the funeral home.

I give funerals and grieving families a lot of leeway. This is one time when I do not expect a thank you. I hope my gesture is taken well, and reminds the family that they are loved and supported. When you are trying to cope with the crushing grief of losing someone plus the endless list of things you need to do when someone dies, the very last thing I would want the family thinking about was thank you's.
I know when my mum died in March I didn't sent thank you's for probably the first time in my life. I appreciated the gesture, but just getting up and facing each day was an heroic effort. I could barely feed myself, let alone attend to social niceties. I really hope everyone understood and no one felt slighted.
I do find it funny though when folks are rude about other folks not having what they feel are "manners".![]()
It takes me at least two minutes to find a pen! More like twenty minutes most of the time.It takes two seconds to show my appreciation.

Nope, my comment was a general observation about discussions about manners. You can generally tell when I'm saying something in response to something else; I'llI hardly think posting a question about thank you notes to be rude behavior! I certainly hope you were not referring to my original post.
it.
The kind of thing I'm referring to is when Person A aims to make Person B look bad, or feel bad, about doing (or not doing) something that Person A think "people" should (or shouldn't) do. Good manners is the practice of making other people look good or feel good, not making other people look bad or feel bad.
I always send a thank you note but rarely expect to receive one if I'm the gift giver.
Born and raised in the South.. maybe that has something to do with it?