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A person who is very considerate and courteous towards others is supposed to have good manners. Such a person generally is respected by others and is also respectful to his superiors, very courteous to his equals and also sympathetic towards his subordinates. He always shows concern and often sees for the well-being and comfort of others.
As you improve your manners, you will enjoy more support, admiration and respect from everyone around you.
If someone treats you with bad manners, do not lower yourself to the same level. Smooth out the friction with your best manners.
Use the magic words as often as possible: "Hello," "Please," "Excuse me," and these two most important words: "Thank you."
Do not try to show off or prove you are more important than others. This is called "one-upmanship" and is poor manners.
Be a Master of Divine expression. Live the Universal Laws of Love, Peace, Truth.
Live in the present moment. Life can only be experienced now.
If you receive a rude message, do not respond with rudeness, but be polite.
A good sense of humor is good manners. However, jokes about race, disability or sex are bad manners. Tell clean jokes about yourself or pass on humorous stories that anyone would enjoy.
Take responsibility for your actions. You always have a choice; how you feel, act or what you say. Act, don't react.
Fully and unconditionally
love yourself. Recognize
your Divinity. Honor
yourself.
You create your life (by your choices, feelings and actions). Live in joy.
Leave generous tips for food servers, luggage handlers, car valets, hairdressers or barbers who do their jobs.
Your body is the temple of your soul. Nurture and care for yourself.
Arrive on time or early for appointments. When you arrive late, you appear to be disrespectful, disorganized or both.
Unconditionally love and accept others. Recognize their Divinity and honor them.
Let go and allow (let God). Listen to and follow, unconditionally, your small quiet voice; your spirit (God)
Your sustenance comes from inside you (God). Trust. You will always be provided for.
Be thankful and humble. Give thanks for what you have and receive. Be grateful.
Do not blow your nose, use toothpicks or perform other bodily activities in front of guests or people you respect. Never smoke around a non-smoker.
Use good manners as a driver. Weaving in and out of heavy traffic and cutting in front of other cars only gains you a few seconds of time. If you are courteous, patient and calm, you arrive safely and more relaxed.
is the ability to get yourself to take action regardless of your emotional state.
ability to set a course of action and say, "Engage!"
are a set of behaviors which mark someone as a civilized and cultured member of a society.
the ability to maintain action regardless of your feelings. You press on even when you feel like quitting.
"In a culture, manners are the lubrication that ease the frictions of social contacts." -- L. Ron Hubbard
The precise behaviors involved in good manners vary from place to place. Cultural traditions play an important role in manners, as do religious beliefs, social status, and economic class.
formal or
perfunctory
politeness
a way of
acting
or behaving
excellence of
manners or social
conduct
usually taught from a very young age, with some people receiving additional training in etiquette, formal rules of conduct which apply to a variety of situations.
a courteous
manner that
respects accepted
social usage
polished
courtesy;
elegance of
manner
manners are the unenforced standards of conduct which show the actor to be cultured, polite, and refined. They are like lawsin that they codify or set a standard for human behavior, but they are unlike laws in that there is no formal system for punishing transgressions, other than social disapproval.
How do we maintain our good manners?
What is GMRC?