DEAR HARRIETTE: This Christmas, I would like my girlfriend to celebrate the holiday with my family. I love my girlfriend, but I sometimes fear that she did not have as formal an upbringing as I did. My family has a five-course meal for dinner, which is preluded with a cocktail hour of sorts for mingling and hors d'oeuvres. I have never seen my girlfriend in a formal situation like this, and I do not want to scare her off by warning her. I think she has the right to be prepared. She has previously said that she finds people who are excessively formal with their families stuffy, but she understands that not all families are as close as hers. I know suggesting etiquette lessons is bold, but a book or online guide isn't as pushy, right? I just want her to make the best impression possible. She's a great girl, but she may need a little help this holiday season from etiquette masters. -- Charming Christmas Girlfriend, Atlanta
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DEAR CHARMING CHRISTMAS GIRLFRIEND: You absolutely must tell your girlfriend that your family is that family, the one she gets skittish around, due to the formality. Assure her that your family loves each other, but they take the rules of the table and the whole sense of formality very seriously. Tell her that you are excited to welcome her to your family activities during the holiday and suggest that she might feel more comfortable if she has a sense of what she's walking into in advance. I don't think you need to suggest etiquette classes unless you plan to take them together. That could be fun! Shy of a formal class, can't you teach her what you know? Make it a date in advance of your family gathering where you walk her through everything you remember that you do -- from what to wear to which utensils to use when. Doing it together may take the edge off of any fumbles that will surely come.
You should also prep your family. Tell them you are bringing your girlfriend. Ask them to be kind to her.