DEAR MISS MANNERS: When my daughter and son-in-law were on their way over for Christmas, they called to ask if I minded if they brought their roommate, who had no family and no other plans for the holiday.
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While I did not want to be rude, especially on Christmas, I did feel like I was put on the spot. I explained to my daughter and son-in-law that while I empathized with their roommate’s situation, I felt Christmas should be more intimate and was to be shared with family. After all, this was my daughter’s and son-in law’s first Christmas as a married couple. Was I wrong to tell them to leave the roommate at home?
GENTLE READER: It seems to Miss Manners that you have a strange idea about the meaning of Christmas: that it involves excluding stranded outsiders. That is not the general interpretation. Nor is it held by your daughter and son-in-law, whose exclusivity you say you wanted to protect.