More About Manners
Or: Donāt Fart In Small Cars During A Heat Wave In Bangkok
Hereās a definition for manners:Ā non-enforceable guides or rules of conduct that grease the cogs and wheels of human relationships.
Thatās a mouthful but ānon-enforceableā is one point and āgrease the cogs and wheelsā is the other.
āNon-enforceableā: So far there is no law against passing wind (or wearing cheap perfume) in confined spaces… so far.
Probably the closest youāll ever get to being forced to use or have manners is when a parent tells you to āmindā them. Thatās in an age when almost every aspect of human life is being legislated, from having ramps for wheelchair drivers to forbidding smoking. Whatās interesting is that these endless laws do not improve the quality of human relationships and often worsen them. So why are they there? Probably someoneās power trip.
āGrease the cogs and wheels of human relationshipsā: If you wanted to get even more basic you could say manners make people get along better by helping them to behave more considerately towards each other. Now weāre into the area of the Golden Rule, or what sociologists who get paid by the syllable call the law of ethical reciprocity.
Most religions and lots of philosophers have versions of this Rule. Hereās just a sampling:
Bahaāi
And if thine eyes be turned towards justice, choose thou for thy neighbour that which thou choosest for thyself.
Christianity
And as ye would that men should do to you, do ye also to them likewise.
Hinduism
One should never do that to another which one regards as injurious to oneās own self.
Jainism
He who desires his own good, should avoid causing any harm to a living being.
Islam
Hurt no one so that no one may hurt you.
Judaism
That which is hateful to you, do not do to your fellow.
Confucius
Never impose on others what you would not choose for yourself.
Buddha
Hurt not others in ways that you yourself would find hurtful.
Socrates
Do not do to others that which would anger you if others did it to you.
Plato
May I do to others as I would that they should do unto me.
Must be something in it, hey?
Some twits like George Bernard Shaw nit-picked that the rule meant: Do whatever you like to others so long as you donāt mind if they do it to you.
But even George would have objected if heād been locked in an air-conditioned car during a heat wave in Bangkok when someone dropped their lunch. On the other hand, George had a point because there was one person in that car who wasnāt gagging and chokingā¦
Manners also get trivialized into meaningless guff like:
āHave a nice dayā, āTake careā, āYouāre welcomeā etc.
These would become meaningful ā and useful āĀ if they went:
āHave a nice day, even though our species is doomedā¦ā
āTake care, because people like me are going to be doing everything we can to screw you over 24/7ā¦ā
āYouāre welcome, but I totally expect you to repay me in kind at my earliest convenienceā¦ā
List of Manners
We all love lists ā hereās the start of a list of non-denominational, non-ethnic, multi-cultural manners:
Donāt pick at and eat parts of your anatomy in public.
Save your methane venting for toilet stalls or vast empty, preferably windswept, spaces.
Donāt talk on your cell-phone when youāre in front of an actual living human being who deserves your attention because theyāre right there in front of you.
Donāt criticize others in front of their friends, relatives, or colleagues.
Donāt get so hung up on your own self-importance that you become a pain in the ass to everyone you know.
This list is way incomplete ā donāt just be a spectator – contribute!
In the interests public safety we also provide a link to this short instructional video from Japan on how to avoid fallout from your own farts without anyone noticing.
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