Is it wrong to leave an event without saying goodbye?
There’s a longstanding discussion in my family about the best way to leave a gathering. Apparently, I am guilty of lingering a bit longer than needed, trying to make sure to say goodbye to as many people as I know before I hit the door. The woman I’d eat bees for, however, is a big proponent of the Irish goodbye, particularly at larger gatherings.
The term “Irish goodbye” refers to making a quick exit from a gathering without saying goodbye. It’s also known as the “French exit” or filerà l'anglaise, which kind of translates to “leaving in the English style,” although those who know the French phrase know it means “to leave quietly.”
The rideshare company Lyft had Wakefield Research survey 1,000 people older than 21 celebrating St. Patrick’s Day (apparently Bastille Day was deemed not as popular) in 2018. More than 40% of people said they’d frequently bolted an event without saying goodbye to anyone. Half of millennials indicated they’d done so. And 75% of those surveyed indicated they had at least one acquaintance who was notorious for engaging in Irish goodbyes. Disappearing from an event is not all that uncommon.
Some of the arguments in favor of the Irish goodbye are that it’s particularly useful at a large or informal gathering or at an event where you’re not all that close to whoever it is running the event. It also saves a great deal of time that would be spent trying to hunt down as many people as possible to say goodbye to, most of whom would likely not take offense at your sudden disappearance.
Irish goodbyes are not uncommon among those who go out in small groups bar-hopping for the evening. Sometimes, apparently, one of the hoppers simply has had enough and decides to retire for the evening.
If you’re the guest of honor at an event, it’s hard to justify making an Irish goodbye. Doing so would likely put a damper on the evening. If you’re someone’s ride for the evening, it would also be inappropriate to leave without letting your passenger know they must find their own way home.
Short of leaving someone stranded or insulting those who are throwing you a party, there’s nothing ethically wrong with engaging in the Irish goodbye. If it were me, I’d let at least one person in a small group know I was leaving, even if I did so by text on my way out the door so the group didn’t worry needlessly about me. I’d also try to find the host of the event and thank them for the invite. Then again, my attempts to do the latter often end up in a string of other goodbyes on my way to finding the host. (See my family’s assessment of my capacity for lingering above.)
When it comes to leaving, the right thing is to leave the way you want to leave and let others leave as they care to as long as you avoid inconveniencing any other attendees in the process. If you do catch someone engaging in the Irish goodbye, the best thing is to let them go, although a shouted “slán leat” or “slán go fóill” wouldn’t be inappropriate as long as it doesn’t slow them down.
Jeffrey L. Seglin, author of The Simple Art of Business Etiquette: How to Rise to the Top by Playing Nice, is a senior lecturer in public policy and director of the communications program at Harvard's Kennedy School. He is also the administrator of www.jeffreyseglin.com, a blog focused on ethical issues.
Do you have ethical questions that you need to have answered? Send them to jeffreyseglin@gmail.com.
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