I have only ever been asked to remove my hat in one place, and that was inside the Houses of Parliament. They may or may not have a Rule about it, but as I was being asked by two uniformed men, I decided not to question it and did as I was asked.
Personally, I'd remove it in the actual chapel out of respect.
You guys are too funny. I'm reading this as the museum person pointing out that should he want to, he could remove his hat, although it wasn't required for him to do so; if she was bold enough to say something to start with, I doubt she'd then go passive aggressive on him. As always, there are many good reasons for people to leave their hats on.
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The Akubra Cattleman's hat only gets a stare when I go to the city, the travelling Fedora- same.
I have only ever been asked to remove my hat in one place, and that was inside the Houses of Parliament. They may or may not have a Rule about it, but as I was being asked by two uniformed men, I decided not to question it and did as I was asked.
You guys are too funny. I'm reading this as the museum person pointing out that should he want to, he could remove his hat, although it wasn't required for him to do so; if she was bold enough to say something to start with, I doubt she'd then go passive aggressive on him. As always, there are many good reasons for people to leave their hats on.
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This was not passive aggression, but rather a particular form of English politeness where they do this dance of suggesting things that you "might like" to do, in the expectation that you will pick up on the social cue and follow the instruction. It can be delivered in a passive aggressive manner, but it is not, in itself, passive aggressive. They remind me of the Chinese sometimes - they're mustard for 'suggesting', and saying 'Maybe you'd like to hand this in, because the deadline is today' and such. No aggression in it, it's just a cultural notion of politeness.
This was not passive aggression, but rather a particular form of English politeness where they do this dance of suggesting things that you "might like" to do, in the expectation that you will pick up on the social cue and follow the instruction. It can be delivered in a passive aggressive manner, but it is not, in itself, passive aggressive. They remind me of the Chinese sometimes - they're mustard for 'suggesting', and saying 'Maybe you'd like to hand this in, because the deadline is today' and such. No aggression in it, it's just a cultural notion of politeness.
I think it was indeed about politeness, but I disagree on the sort of politeness. Canterbury Cathedral is just as much a tourist destination as it is a place of worship, and as such, it draws visitors from a wide range of cultures and conditions, not all of whom agree on when it is appropriate to remove hats. To me, the staff member's request was fantastic: we remind you that you're wearing a hat so that if you are inclined to remove it, you may, but if you're inclined to keep it on (for whatever reason), you may. That's the core of this politeness: the staff member isn't placed in a position where she has to insist that a man remove his hat, only to be rebuffed on cultural (or other) grounds, and the man isn't shamed or embarrassed into removing a hat if he doesn't feel the need to do so. Everyone walks away, ideally, feeling whole and good. Hooray!
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