credit: www.southernliving.com |
Remember
those thank you notes back from your sixth birthday party? The ones that were
already printed, with some cute cartoon character or other. All you had to do
was fill in the name of your friend and what they got you. So easy. But you
made sure to do it every year.
Just
because you’re 20-something now doesn’t mean you get to skip out on the thank
you cards. Maybe the cartoon, fill-in-the-blanks version isn’t quite
appropriate anymore, but a hand-written note can go a long way, especially this
holiday season. As Southern Living puts
it, “the art of writing an ‘old-school’ note is being lost,” but if you go
against the flow and send one anyway, it’ll make a huge difference.
Whether
it’s for a relative, a co-worker, or even a friend, a hand-written note goes a
long way, especially when it’s for someone you want to impress. Sending a nice
letter not only keeps you in their mind, but it also shows that you took the time
to show them appreciation and that you are cognoscente of at least a mild form
of etiquette (and I’m not ashamed to admit most of us millennials aren’t).
Leslie Harpold of The Morning News wrote in her article “How to Write a Thank-You Note” that though someone from your grandmother’s generation might
not say anything to you, “she and her friends are probably at this very moment
sighing over how young people today just don’t have manners.” Thank-you cards
were and still are a thing, and not sending them can come across as rude. Sure,
email or text are so easy, but how often do you skim emails and texts and just
don’t give a sh*t? I do it all the time! But how often do I get a card? Never.
And I love getting mail. So when someone takes the time to actually put
something in the mail, and spends the $3 it’ll cost to buy a card and a stamp,
it means a lot.
When you’re
writing a thank you note, according to Southern Living (because who knows manners better than a southerner?), invest
in some nice stationary. You'll use it more than once so pick something
you can use for a variety of occasions. Personalize your letter. “If you’re
going to see the person in the future, refer to the event and say you’re
looking forward to it,” Jennifer Beeler of Southern Living said in her article
“How To Write a Charming Thank You Note.” Don’t just re-write the same cut and dry thing every time, think of
something that applies to them. And be sincere! Don’t write something like, “oh
my god this was the cutest pair of Christmas socks ever” if you are actually
using them to clean your stove. Instead, say something like “they were so
thoughtful and I will get great use out of them.” It’s really not that hard,
and it doesn’t take that long. This holiday season, don’t forget to not only
say thank you, but to put it in words.
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