The Ultimate Guide to Bedding Part 1

The ultimate bed [Via Wikimedia Commons]

The ultimate bed [Via Wikimedia Commons]

This isn’t technically etiquette but it is etiquette adjacent, because hosting is a big thing in etiquette, and a gracious thing to do as a host is provide a nice bed. And if you are a guest, you are going to want to know what all the parts of a bed are so that you don’t accidentally mess it up.

First the components of a bed:

The frame: all beds should have some kind of a frame. Mattresses on the floor are for frat boys. This frame might simply hold the mattress and box spring or it might be connected to a headboard and foot board.

The box spring: this is sort of optional these days as there are many kinds of beds that don’t need them. But if your bed has a basic metal frame at the bottom, the box spring raises the height of the bed, provides a solid platform for the mattress to rest on (hence why a platform bed might not need one), and by preventing contact with the frame, also prevents wear and tear on the mattress.

The bedskirt: Goes between the box spring and the mattress and hangs down to cover the boxspring and frame. It’s entirely decorative but can really help pull the bed together.

The mattress: is pretty self explanatory- its the soft thing you sleep on. It can be made out of springs, memory foam, water, and other things.

Topper: this is an optional addition to make your mattress EXTRA comfy. It can be memory foam, egg-carton foam, or feathers. Basically, its a thin, extra mattress made out of a luxurious material.

Mattress pad: This is something that you put on top of your mattress to protect it from stains. Some will have a topper built into them, like an extra thick pad. Some are just some batting in cheap fabric.

Sheets: Traditionally, a sheet set includes a fitted sheet (with elasticized corners that no one can fold- it took me a year and many youtube videos to figure it out!), a flat sheet, and pillow cases. You can also use an additional flat sheet in place of the fitted sheet, you just have to make hospital corners on each corner to keep it in place.

Sheets can come in a number of different fabrics: cotton, flannel, polyblends, linen, satin, and silk. Generally, you will want to choose natural fibers- 100% cotton, linen, or silk. For cotton, Egyptian cotton makes the softest sheets because it has longer fibers than other cottons. Linen (which is made from the flax plant) is great for warm climates and flannel is great for when it’s cold. If you can’t afford silk sheets (so, um, everyone?), you might be able to spring for just the pillow cases- they are great for your hair and skin (full disclosure, I have a set). Thread count is important, but anything above 300-400 doesn’t matter much because they are just using thinner thread.

Blankets: Blankets are often pretty scratchy, so they are generally used over a flat sheet, for extra warmth in the winter. It does seem like blankets are falling out of favor these days, with a preference for heavier comforters and duvets. In very cold climates, you can use an electric blanket which have heating coils to keep you nice and toasty.

Duvets: A duvet is a down (feathers) or fiber filled blanket. It is plain white and made out of a cheaper material because it is meant to go inside a duvet cover. They are sometimes also called comforters.

Duvet cover: A duvet cover is two sheet-like materials sewn together on three sides and left open on the bottom. You shove your duvet up inside it and use it to cover your bed for both warmth and decoration. The duvet cover is often a pretty pattern that you can use to match to the rest of your bedroom. The advantage of using a duvet cover is that it can be washed easily without harming the expensive duvet inside. It is so easily done, that many people (especially in Europe) forgo a top sheet on their beds all together and use just a duvet to cover themselves (*shudder*).

Comforter: A comforter is very similar to a duvet+cover except that the warm part is directly sewn into the decorative part. Comforters can be very elaborate and are not easily washed, so you will always want to use a sheet with them.

Bedspread/Quilt/Coverlet: This is a heavy fabric that you put over your sheets and blankets to be mostly decorative (though its great in the summer if you find a comforter or blankets to be too hot). It’s a little old fashioned and you don’t see them much.

Pillows: You rest your head on them to sleep. They come in many types: memory foam, fiberfill, down, bran (idk, its a thing), and many others. They generally have utilitarian covers, so you want to put them inside a pillowcase both for comfort and to protect the pillow from your hair and face grease, sweat, and drool. When putting the pillows on the bed, the open side of the pillowcases should be on the outside edge of the bed.

Shams: Shams are very fancy, decorated pillow cases (usually matching or complimenting your duvet cover, comforter, or bedspread). There are two ways to use shams. Either the shams have their own pillows inside them (I use cheap or old gross pillows) and go on top of your sleeping pillows. The other method is to stuff your sleeping pillows inside the shams every morning and put them on the bed like that. You do not sleep on shams! When going to bed at night, either put the shams-with-pillows behind your sleeping pillows up against the wall or headboard, on the floor, or if the sleeping pillows were inside the shams, take the shams off and fold them up and put them on the floor or a chair or something.

Throw pillows: These are decorative pillows and should also not be slept on. They can be piled up in a handy chair or tossed on the floor.

On Friday, I will continue with part two: how to make a bed.

How To Be Considerate Of People Who Have Been Through Tragedies

Here’s a fun fact about your ol’ friend Jaya: I have either been present for or just barely missed many large-scale tragedies. On September 11, 2001, I was a high school sophomore in downtown Manhattan and vividly remember walking through the city with a dust mask for days. On August 28, 2005 I was set to fly to New Orleans to begin my sophomore year of college when I got word that a hurricane was approaching [ED: Victoria was also], and later had friends evacuate and sleep on my couch. The semester was cancelled. And in late November 2008 I was going to meet my grandparents in Mumbai and stay at the Oberoi hotel, owned by family friends, except my family wasn’t getting back to me about plans and I was being impatient and I booked a flight to Delhi instead and they changed their plans to meet me. I woke up my first day in Dehli to news of the bombings.

I’m not looking for pity. I’m lucky I wasn’t further downtown, or already in New Orleans, or that I didn’t wait a day and book my flight to Mumbai instead. But these things have a tendency to stay with you, even if you were on the outskirts. I can’t speak for everyone who has been through something like this. Even among friends who I experienced these things with, our reactions and traditions and the ways we remember are different. But there are ways to make sure you don’t cause more harm.

If it’s in the immediate aftermath and you’re trying to contact them, try to find one or two points of contact. In Delhi, it certainly helped to only have to email my mom and my boyfriend and have them relay that I was safe than answer 30 emails from concerned friends and relatives. If you can be that person, volunteer. Yes, now you’ll be the one answering all the emails and calls, but hey, it could be worse.

If you’re in a position to do so, offer help however makes sense, whether it’s a couch to sleep on, extra clothes, or legal expertise.

You may be tempted to let your friend know that they can talk to you. This can be good, but can quickly turn into a burden for the afflicted friend. It can either pressure them to talk if they don’t feel like talking (and don’t feel comfortable saying “I don’t want to talk right now”), or just subject them to an endless barrage of “How are you?” and “You must be going through a lot.” A simple “let me know if you need anything, I’m here for you,” just once, is effective.

As years pass your friend may still carry some trauma publicly, may be pained but prefer not to talk about it, or be honestly over the incident. It’s none of your business how that plays out.

Anniversaries can be a tough time, not just because it reminds the person of what transpired, but because it reminds everyone else of what transpired too. If it was a public tragedy there are going to be a million thinkpieces and news reels and conversations about it. Your friend may honestly not mind, but as a precaution, let them bring it up if they want to talk about it. Nothing is worse than having someone go “wow, what was 9/11 like?” when I’m not in the mood.

Similarly, if you know someone has been present for a tragedy, be careful about bringing up your own experiences. This is a tricky one, because in a lot of ways things like 9/11 or Hurricane Katrina are national tragedies. Everyone remembers where they were, and it’s natural to want to share what we were all doing when The Thing happened and commiserate together. But I’ve seen too many conversations turn into a pissing contest of who was the most traumatized?, and people talking over the person who perhaps witnessed or experienced it firsthand. And hey, they may still just not want to talk about it, and hearing what someone who wasn’t present feels about it won’t help. Yes, your feelings are valid, but they can also wait.

In a lot of ways it’s like helping a friend after a death. Let them know they have a support circle, be considerate and understanding if they need you, listen instead of talking over them, and let them handle it in their own way as long as they’re not causing themselves or others harm.

 

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

Etiquette at the DMV

c1dcf20a1201757bef3e6327688b2861I just had a lovely experience signing up for IDNYC (if you live in NYC you should get one!), and it had me thinking about all our stereotypes about the DMV and customer service in general. I wasn’t actually at the DMV, the signup took place at a local community college and I made the mistake of making my appointment on ORIENTATION DAY so oh god there were all these posters and helpful looking young people and ugh I just wanna find room E116 without making eye contact and accidentally signing up for the Gay-Straight Alliance. Aside from that it was actually quite painless and the woman who processed me was a delight.

But anyway, the DMV and similar places! They sort of suck, don’t they? There’s a lot of waiting, and forms, and people taking too long, and weird smells, and they just seem to bring out the crank in everyone. My theory is that paperwork and long wait times make everyone forget some basic etiquette that could smooth things over. No, etiquette will not make your wait shorter, nor will it make anyone less crabby to you, but it can help how you end up internalizing all your experiences.

Firstly, the practical stuff. If you can do it online, DO IT ONLINE, both to save you the hassle and to make one less body taking up space at the DMV. If you must do your business in person, research what forms you need to fill out and what you need to bring, and do them before you get there if possible. You probably already know this, but I was shocked when I got my learner’s permit renewed (a thing you can do, yes) a few years ago and saw the number of people who didn’t realize that a credit card isn’t a valid form of ID, or who had filled out completely the wrong forms, and held up things for anyone else. (A pass is given to anyone who doesn’t speak English well because they do NOT make those forms easy to read).

Next, the zen stuff. If there’s one humbling thing the DMV makes you remember it’s that you are not special. There is freedom in that. Use it. I think a lot of our etiquette faux-pas come from believing we alone are suffering the fools. We believe we are right and they are wrong, or we need something more than someone else, and no one understands us. That is rarely the case. At the DMV you are not suffering alone. Everyone around you is waiting, and probably has been waiting, and probably has places they have to be, or places they’d just rather be, or other stuff on their mind so they don’t hear their number called immediately. And the people who work there, yes it’s their job but they may also be tired or zoning out, like you are at your job sometimes. And maybe you think they shouldn’t be in customer service if they’re like that, but good jobs are hard to find. Nobody is always where they want to be.

It is satisfying in the short run to yell at someone for being unhelpful or rude or ignorant. On occasion it even works, and if someone has offended you or keeps giving you the wrong directions, by all means ask to speak to a manager. But returning rudeness with rudeness won’t make you feel better, really. You’ll stay resentful that you had to be rude. If you got an apology you’ll worry about if they meant it, and if they learned their lesson. If you didn’t, you’ll be wondering what you could have done to make them change. The rest of your day will be filled with the DMV. You don’t need that.

I don’t always like telling people to be nice. I think a lot of real issues get silenced under the pillow of “nice.” I don’t think niceness should come at the cost of human dignity. But people like to think places like the DMV are an affront to that dignity, and they just aren’t. They’re governmental processing buildings and they sorta suck. It’s not the worst thing you’ve had to endure.

This turned into being about a lot more than the DMV.

Office Kitchen Etiquette

Platonic ideal of an office fridge at the end of the day. [Via Wikimedia Commons]

Platonic ideal of an office fridge at the end of the day. [Via Wikimedia Commons]

The office kitchen is often the cause of the greatest strain among coworkers. People steal other peoples food, people don’t wash dishes, the refrigerator is disgusting, and everyone gets fed up. Some simple rules will make everyone much happier:

  • Use the fridge for only the food you will eat that day. Bring your lunch, put it in the fridge, eat it, and bring everything home at the end of the day. Repeat. If you aren’t using the fridge for long term storage, food doesn’t have a chance to rot and make things disgusting. Besides, depending on how many people are using that fridge, there probably isn’t enough room for everyone to store a ton of stuff, so don’t take more than your fair share of space!
  • Label your stuff. It might not prevent people from stealing if they were going to, but it will avoid accidental stealing! Plus, then your office manager will know who to come after when your labelled tupperware starts growing mold.
  • Practice good microwave etiquette. Use a cover so your food doesn’t splatter in the microwave. If it does splatter, wipe it up. Don’t leave your lunch sitting in the microwave when other people are waiting to use it. Avoid heating up extremely smelly food. Avoid burning popcorn. Some of the more uptight among us might add to clear the timer if you leave time on it (but this is asking a lot, I know.)
  • Clean up after yourself. When you finish preparing your food or eating if you eat in the kitchen too, make sure you clean up all wrappers, napkins etc. If you used any dishes, put them in the dishwasher (if you are lucky!) or hand wash them and put them away. Wipe up any crumbs. Unless you work at a very chi-chi office where there is someone whose actual job it is to clean up after everyone, then you MUST clean up after yourself!
  • Be considerate with office snacks. If you are truly lucky, maybe your office provides snacks for you. If so, don’t hog things (like taking 5 granola bars are once or something). Don’t take stuff and bring it home. Throw out empty containers (also don’t leave two chips in a bag and think that you don’t have to throw it out because it isn’t empty.) Clean up spills and crumbs.
  • Refill the coffee pot. If it is empty, make a new pot! If you have a pod machine, empty the pod catcher if it is full! If you have some sort of coffee buying club, follow the rules and contribute your fair share. If you aren’t in the club, don’t drink their coffee.
  • Communicate. If the fridge is running out of milk, sugar, paper towels, or whatever, let the person who refills them know! On the flip side, don’t leave passive aggressive notes about kitchen problems, bring them up to everyone at an appropriate time, such as a staff meeting.

Is An Irish Exit Rude?

Sepia Dancing Off StageThe Irish exit, Dutch leave, French goodbye, whatever mildly ethnic slur you want to call it, is when you leave an event without saying goodbye to anyone. Is it rude? Well, yes, often, but it can also be a relatively low level rudeness depending on the circumstances.

Unforgivable circumstances:

  • On an actual date with another person (unless they are being abusive, etc etc, caveats)
  • Small gatherings where your absence would be easily noticed
  • Any hosted event (you must always thank and say goodbye to your hosts- even at something as big as a wedding)
  • When you are supposed to be giving a ride to someone (unless you ghost away into the night together)

Forgivable circumstances:

  • A large, casual gathering such as 20ish friends hanging out at a bar
  • Casual, group oriented events such as a end of school picnic (though I would consider this just…leaving)
  • Anytime trying to say goodbye would disrupt the event (such as a religious service or when there are speeches happening. Though you should try to avoid leaving in these instances except when you are ill or have other extreme circumstances.)
  • When it’s a large family gathering where goodbyes take an hour (jk! love your family!)

When else do you find Irish exits acceptable/unacceptable? Let me know in the comments!