TELL ME ABOUT IT

Note is no way to tattle

— DEAR CAROLYN: Two acquaintances are having an affair, one married, one single. They are not being discreet, and a lot of people know. We live in a pretty small city, so I am surprised the spouse has not heard yet, as it has been going on for well over a year. The spouse is not the sort of person who would react well, so I am pretty sure there is no tacit understanding or agreement going on.

I am so very much for a mind-your-own-business stance in situations that don’t directly involve me. But I keep thinking, if I were the partner, I would be very grateful if someone told me. Mortified, for sure. But eventually grateful. I was wondering if there was ever a situation where an anonymous buttinski note was appropriate?

  • Over-Thinker

DEAR READER: Your impulse is generous, but anonymous notes are awful. They deny recipients the chance to gauge the credibility and motives of the source, ask follow-up questions, and process how many people know, how much they know and for how long they’ve known - basically, all the paths a mind travels upon receipt of news like this. Hitting a brick wall on each one adds a helpless feeling to this jackpot of pain.

And that’s before the person experiences the bizarre transformation of every errand for milk and eggs into a small-town whodunit: Is that the person who sent me the note? Or did he do it? Did she?

Presumably you are not close to this person, or else you’d have said something already. If you just happen to be close to someone who is, then that’s it for options - to ask that person whether and why (ahem) the spouse still doesn’t know. Besides, of course, MYOB.

DEAR CAROLYN: I have a friend who lives in the suburbs, so when he plans a night out, he stays with a friend in the city. We recently attended the same party, and when it was over he was unable to get in touch with the friend, so he asked if he could crash on my couch.

Apparently he overindulged, because in the middle of the night I was awakened by him being sick. It was everywhere - in my living room, hall and bathroom (but not the toilet). He watched me clean up some and then face-planted on my couch.

He sheepishly apologized the next morning and left without offering to finish cleaning. I have spent over three hours cleaning/disinfecting my house and doing laundry. I also discovered that my couch is stained. Is it inappropriate to ask him for some money to help pay for the costs of all of this? Or is this just a hazard of having house guests?

  • Sick of Cleaning

DEAR READER: It’s hard to imagine a world where it’s more appropriate to stain someone’s couch without taking responsibility than it is to ask the guilty party to reimburse you for cleaning expenses. So let’s not.

He owes you whatever you spent in removing him from your worldly goods. You, meanwhile, owe him a measure of gratitude on behalf of your metropolitan area, for knowing to stay off the roads.

You also owe him a call to his customary host for these sleepovers. If this house guest routinely overindulges, then it’s time for concerned friends to step in.

Chat online with Carolyn at 11 a.m. Central time each Friday at washingtonpost.com. Write to Tell Me About It in care of The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15th St. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20071; or e-mail [email protected]

Style, Pages 25 on 02/19/2013

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