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My spouse and I are busy all summer. Can we give ourselves a break by backing out of plans with friends?

My spouse and I are busy all summer. Can we give ourselves a break by backing out of plans with friends?

Boston Globe12-06-2025
A.L.
/ Branford, Connecticut
I know the strict etiquette advice is that you must honor your commitments—but, oh, how I sympathize! And I'm sure your friends will, too. We all have such complicated and demanding lives nowadays, who could fail to understand your dilemma? Your friends might even feel slightly relieved to find that they're not the only ones who have to bail out on events occasionally. Etiquette is meant to make social relations more pleasant, not less—so you have my permission to drop out as long as you give your friends a sincere apology and plenty of time to find someone for whom the wine tasting would itself be a stress-reliever instead of a stress-inducer. Do make it a good apology, and schedule some alternate plans with them so that they'll know not to take it personally. If they have a sense of humor, you might want to send them a DVD of the movie
Sideways
with a note saying, 'This is why highly stressed-out people should not attend wine tastings!'
As a former art major now in medicine, I enjoy cultivating friendships with right-brain types. But the words I have come to dread hearing from some of these friends are 'I'm sending you a [vanity-pressed] book of my poetry [screenplay, novel], and I really want to know what you think!' The latest poetry submission was incomprehensible: cryptic, morose, and tangential. I feel I must offer my friend some complimentary reviews but don't want to be disingenuous or look like a dolt by admitting I didn't really 'get' a single poem. How can one navigate this potential minefield?
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G.Z.
/ Jamaica Plain
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Gentle readers, G.Z. was kind enough to send me a sample poem from her friend's collection, and it was indeed as described. In fact, G.Z., if you wanted to keep your day job in medicine and do a bit of arts criticism on the side, I think you'd be well suited to it.
Giving your thoughts on a published work is different from critiquing a rough draft. But you needn't conjure wild compliments that you don't feel. Go with vivid adjectives that neither praise nor damn. 'Cryptic, morose, and tangential' could just as easily be 'cryptic, moody, and impressionistic,' which is probably exactly what your friend intended her collection to be. Lead with that, and then start asking questions: 'So, who were your influences? What effect were you going for with this poem? These two poems remind me of each other; did you write them both around the same time?' Your friend will be so delighted to describe her creative process that she won't even notice that you've avoided a global critique.
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It's much the same as when you're asked to admire a friend's Hitchcock-resembling baby: You say something enthusiastic but neutral, like 'Oh, look at those eyes!' and then start asking, 'Is he an easy baby? Is he a big eater? What's the biggest change in your life since you had him?' When you can't generate great enthusiasm for the product, intelligent questions about the process will do just as well.
Miss Conduct is Robin Abrahams, a writer with a PhD in psychology.
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Michael Madsen's actress sister Virginia breaks silence on his shocking death: He ‘has left the stage'
Michael Madsen's actress sister Virginia breaks silence on his shocking death: He ‘has left the stage'

New York Post

time03-07-2025

  • New York Post

Michael Madsen's actress sister Virginia breaks silence on his shocking death: He ‘has left the stage'

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Sittin' Sidewayz: Beyoncé Stuck In Dangling Car At Hometown Concert As Beyhive Comes To The Rescue
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Black America Web

time01-07-2025

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Sittin' Sidewayz: Beyoncé Stuck In Dangling Car At Hometown Concert As Beyhive Comes To The Rescue

Source: Lyvans Boolaky / Getty Beyoncé survived a scary moment in the midst of her Cowboy Carter tour at its hometown stop at NRG Stadium in Houston. While performing '18 Carriages,' where she performs mid-air in a Cadillac retrofitted specifically for the tour, it began to sway and tilt. She continued singing but finally said, 'Stop. Stop, stop, stop, stop. Stop,' prompting the concert crew to lower her back to the stage. Fans cheered as the 43-year-old superstar was then led off the stage after saying, 'Thank you for your patience.' This was the first of two shows at the venue in Beyoncé's hometown. She's on the last leg of the Cowboy Carter tour, which continues through July, ending in Las Vegas. After returning to the stage, a smiling Beyoncé then said, 'I wanna thank y'all for loving me. If I ever fall, I know y'all would catch me,' to cheers from the crowd. Per the New York Times, Parkwood Entertainment, Beyoncé's production company, issued a statement, which read: 'a technical mishap caused the flying car, a prop Beyoncé uses to circle the stadium, and see her fans up close, to tilt. She was quickly lowered, and no one was injured.' Beyoncé's eighth studio album, Cowboy Carter , won the Grammy for Best Country Album this year, despite not being publicly endorsed by the genre's biggest stars or either of its main award organizations, the CMA and the ACM. A visibly shocked Beyoncé took the stage to deliver an acceptance speech encouraging people to genre-bend. 'I think sometimes genre is a code word to keep us in our place as artists, and I just wanna encourage people to do what they're passionate about and to stay persistent,' she said in part. Ever the professional, Beyoncé took the incident in stride, even posting pictures on her IG account accompanied by the song, 'Sideways' by Big Pokey and Paul Wall. The Beyhive rose up and said they'd be willing to save her if the car were to fully malfunction. See the reactions below. Sittin' Sidewayz: Beyoncé Stuck In Dangling Car At Hometown Concert As Beyhive Comes To The Rescue was originally published on

Jane Stanton Hitchcock, 78, dies; crime novelist who mocked high society
Jane Stanton Hitchcock, 78, dies; crime novelist who mocked high society

Boston Globe

time30-06-2025

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Jane Stanton Hitchcock, 78, dies; crime novelist who mocked high society

Advertisement The Stantons were known for their elaborate parties, where Leonard Bernstein might be found at the piano. For Jane's 21st birthday, Neil Simon composed a sketch. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up When she was 29, she married an heir of wealthy industrialist and Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon, William Mellon Hitchcock -- who had earned a bit of notoriety when he rented his mansion in Millbrook, N.Y., to psychedelic-drug guru Timothy Leary -- mixing her newish money with his gilded-age wealth. A tart observer and a professional wit, Jane Hitchcock drew from her rarefied ecosystem in all her work, beginning with a series of wanly reviewed films and off-Broadway plays -- and one London production, directed by Harold Pinter in 1990. It wasn't until she began mixing social satire with murder that she found her voice. 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But Lara Eisenberg, a poker buddy -- who in 2021 won the World Series of Poker Ladies Championship -- encouraged her to be more strategic. As an older woman, Eisenberg told Ms. Hitchcock, she could bluff like crazy and no one would doubt her sincerity. One night, having followed Eisenberg's advice, she took second place at a tournament at the Venetian in Las Vegas and won $60,000. In her last book, 'Bluff,' published in 2019, a 56-year-old socialite-turned-poker-player sets out to murder the celebrity accountant who has stolen millions from her family. It won that year's Dashiell Hammett Prize for Literary Excellence, given by the North American branch of the International Association of Crime Writers. 'Poker is like life,' she told the Post. 'At the poker table, everyone makes mistakes, everybody plays hands wrong. It's a game that teaches you about not dwelling on the past, but also learning from your mistakes. You play the next hand as it comes.' Jane Johnston Crowley was born Nov. 24, 1946, in Manhattan. Her father, Robert Crowley, was a surgeon; her radio-star mother, Louise (Abrass) Crowley, was known professionally as Joan Alexander. Jane's parents divorced and, when she was 9, her mother married Arthur Stanton. He adopted Jane, and she took his last name. Advertisement Jane attended the Brearley School in Manhattan, the Wheeler School in Providence, Rhode Island, and Sarah Lawrence College, graduating in 1968. Her first marriage ended in divorce in 1991. A year later, Tina Brown, who had just become editor-in-chief of The New Yorker, was giving a dinner for photographer Richard Avedon and realized on the day of the event that she needed more men. Susan Mercandetti, a veteran magazine and book editor, was drawn in to help. She coaxed Hoagland to take the train up from Washington in the pouring rain by promising that she would make the trip worth his while. Ms. Hitchcock, she reckoned, would be a captivating seat mate. 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