JoelF wrote:I'm really enjoying my meal, service has been pretty good (not stellar), food tasty, conversation and companionship outstanding... and the server comes back and insults the guy who got took the bill about a stingy tip (sarcastically calling it a math error -- which it was, but telling him we do things differently in this country is just crass).. and suddenly the whole meal turns on its collective ass.
I totally get you. A server can leave a bad taste in your mouth as surely as food can.
For an example of how the
exact same situation can be handled with grace, which you might not think possible, I give you Abril, sometime in the early nineties. I was picking up the tab for our merry group. Due to the number of Dos Equises I had consumed, I made a computational error that caused me to leave a tip of $2 when $22 would have been closer to right. (I was paying with cash, and to compound the felony, I made a magnanimous gesture along the lines of "No change required, my good man, it's all for you!") As we were putting on our coats, the waiter came over and, almost apologetically, said he believed I might have made an error. I guess he could tell from the conviviality we'd all been experiencing not only amongst ourselves but between us and the staff, and the fact that my magnanimous "it's all for you" gesture seemed genuine (it was), that it was unlikely I'd be deliberately stiffing him. And he was right. I was embarrassed, but also appreciative that he pointed out my error, and what's more, I had the impression that he
believed me when I professed my embarrassment, which was nice. I then left the amount I would have in the first place if I'd been thinking straight, we shook hands, and sincerely wished each other the merriest of Christmasses. I've always thought back to how remarkable it was that a waiter could find a way to question his tip and create
more good will by doing so rather than less. That guy should run for office.