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PetraG
Guest
Yeah, well…people get touchy about it, let’s just say that.
This reminds me of this Miss Manners column:Most of our mothers tried to teach manners…
It doesn’t take a sociologist to note that not all learned the lesson.![]()
The look doesn’t have to be stern. You can use the same look that someone would use to turn down dessert…and, like turning down dessert, you do not owe anyone any explanations. A simple “no, thank you” is all that is needed, whether that is a look or in a conversation.Do you find this alienates you from that person? My concern is that if I were to do the same my attempts to integrate into the community would be even more difficult as I would be seen as hostile or unfriendly.
Well, that’s why I’m not a lawyer.It appears we weren’t discussing torturous battery.
As an ex-cop, I can tell you a battery charge could indeed stand. You would NEVER tolerate someone forcefully grabbing your hand to hold it in, say, Target - so why in the world would church be OK? It would be battery in Target. Same thing.
Would it happen? No. But fishing for my hand when I’m not offering it is going to get the other person’s hand shoved away. I won’t acquiesce just because someone else wants me to.
Or at least have individual bottles of Purell available in each pew.I propose the hand-holding during liturgy be preceded and followed by the washing of the hands.![]()
Both Catholic Churches that I attend, one is my main church and am a member of the other is the one I grew up in as a kid, a lot of the laity do it. When I first came back to the church I did it because I forgot parts of the Mass and was relearning it. I dont do it anymore, has been a few years.That really is reserved for the Priest alone.
Now as far as hand holding, sometimes I do but mostly I don’t. I guess it just depends on the situation.
By “grab”, I mean people who occasionally will not take “no” for an answer.Well, if the person grabbed your hand, I would say they were rude.
And so I guess it is okay to be rude back…![]()
Let’s just say that even for a handshake, if you offer your hand and someone doesn’t want to shake your hand, you don’t grab their hand and just shake it, anyway. I don’t think your mom taught you to think less of someone who didn’t go for that. If you tried to hug someone, even for the Sign of Peace, and they made it clear they didn’t want to hug you and you decided to hug the person anyway and th person shook you off, I certainly wouldn’t say that the person who tried to refuse more intimacy than they wanted “topping it off.”We can agree to disagree.
I would lay dollars to donuts that the majority of people who are strongly against holding hands, would, if they met the same person in a different setting other than church, shake hands with that individual.
I don’t have a dog in the fight; I don’t really care whether people hold hands or don’t hold hands. If someone wants to hold my hand during he Our Father, I would never make an issue out of it; I would just hold their hand, and if they do not reach out to me, I do not reach out to them.
I guess I was simply taught a different set of manners. If per chance we were ever sitting next to each other in Mass, I certainly would not make an issue of it with you; as I say, I don’t initiate. On a rare occasion I have seen an individual “force the issue”, and I consider that wrong. But it is my humble opinion that something could be said after Mass to the individual rather than making a scene during the OUr Father; it will be obvious to some behind you that not only did the person next to you act rudely, but that you topped it off. You call it being firm; I call it making a scene to make your point, something that could be done after Mass.