Saturday, April 20, 2019

R is for Rules

#AtoZChallenge 2019 Tenth Anniversary blogging from A to Z challenge letter RThere are rules for just about everything. Some are important for safety. "Don't touch the high voltage wire." Some are important for order. "Please wait for the next available agent." And some don't make sense. "Don't wear your hat inside."


I was having a discussion with a co-worker about this nonsensical rule the other day.  One of our coworkers was wearing a hat inside and my friend was appalled because she considered that to be rude. I said that was the rule that I grew up with, but I thought it was relaxing a bit, especially with billed hats. I had seen a lot more people wearing a billed hat inside without much notice.  Well, apparently I'm wrong because according to  Levine Hats and also, the Emily Post Institute, it's still not okay for a man to wear a hat inside unless it's indicated for religious reasons. Actually there are a lot more rules about hat wearing than I realized. You can see them at the end of the post.

How did that rule ever get started in the first place? Once again, Emily Post gives some insight to this question. She said that knights would lift their visor or remove their helmet to show that they were friendly. Failure to do so could result in battle. It's hard for me to believe that a practice from over five centuries ago is still influencing what we wear on our head, but I read it on the internet so it must be true.

Also according to the Emily Post Institute here are the rules for hat wearing. See how many you follow. It looks like I follow most all of them.

Men
Hats can be left on…
  • Outdoors
  • At athletic events (indoors or out)
  • On public transportation
  • In public buildings such as post offices, airports,  and hotel or office lobbies
  • On elevators

Take hats off, including baseball caps …

  • In someone’s home
  • At mealtimes, at the table
  • While being introduced, indoors or out (unless it’s frigid!)
  • In a house of worship, unless a hat or head covering is required
  • Indoors at work, especially in an office (unless required for the job)
  • In public buildings such as a school, library, courthouse, or town hall
  • In restaurants and coffee shops
  • At a movie or any indoor performance
  • When the national anthem is played
  • When the flag of the United States passes by, as in a parade

Women

Fashion hats (not baseball-style caps) can be left on…



  • In someone’s home
  • At luncheons, weddings, garden parties
  • At religious services
  • At a movie or any indoor performance
  • When the national anthem is played
  • When the flag of the United States passes by, as in a parade

Take your fashion hat off…

  • Anytime it blocks someone’s view, such as at a wedding or in a theater
  • Indoors at work

Remove baseball-style (unisex) caps…

  • In someone’s home
  • At mealtimes, at the table
  • While being introduced
  • In a house of worship, unless a hat or head covering is required
  • Indoors at work, unless required for the job
  • In public buildings such as a school, library, courthouse, or town hall
  • In restaurants and coffee shops
  • At a movie or any indoor performance
  • When the national anthem is played
  • When the flag of the United States passes by, as in a parade

Cancer patients are exempt from hat rules. They may keep their hats or caps on at all times if they wish



7 comments:

  1. I rarely wear hats. I dislike how they feel and only wear them in cold weather. I guess I don't have to worry about hat etiquette! My husband and son both like to wear baseball caps but I think they (mostly) stick to the rules. I think oftentimes that when people wear a baseball cap, they are wearing it to disguise a bad hair day.

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    1. I am not a hat person either because they always seem too tight. When I need one for warmth, I much prefer a hood. I do need a sunhat and I finally found one that is loose enough but with a good strap so it doesn't blow off easily.

      A hat and a bad hair day. Sounds like the perfect combination to me.

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  2. I love hats and have a few, but I have hair that is only enhanced by a hat!

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    1. If my hair was enhanced by wearing a hat, I think I could learn to like them. :)

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  3. It's good to know the rules, isn't it? I am not much of a hat person, myself. I wore knitted hats when I had cancer (still have two of them that I knitted, to wear during winter) and I have a straw sun hat to wear when I am gardening.

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    1. I'm not much of a hat person either, but I do enjoy seeing them on other people, especially the strange ones (to me anyway) they wear in England.

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  4. I see a fair number of "baseball" hats worn in restaurants, and lots of other places, all the time these days. I think many guys don't know the rules or care about them. I do wear baseball-style hats a lot, outdoors - mainly because of my follicly-challenged head and the constant sun around these parts (enough so that my family sometimes says that I'm doing "my Beaver Cleaver look"; no disrespect, June and Ward), BUT I do still obey the rules indoors. I think there has been a generational shift in manners.

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What do you think?