Kennyz wrote:Marco wrote:I've still not actually been thereMarco wrote:It is starting to resemble a dysfunctional relationship where the sex [food] is out of this world, but the rest of the situation is unacceptable
Actually, it's starting to resemble the Jerry Springer show, where a one member of a dysfunctional relationship calls out her partner publically, then the audience - none of whom have any first hand knowledge of the situation - cheer and jeer from the peanut gallery in order to provoke a fight.
Stagger wrote:Marco wrote: It is starting to resemble a dysfunctional relationship where the sex [food] is out of this world, but the rest of the situation is unacceptable. It is not overall healthy. I've appreciated -all- the negative reports on Patty's as much as the positive ones. I've still not actually been there, but I know my tradeoffs and costs if I do go.
You know, I love LTH as much as anyone else but there is a certain dark side to having so many food and restaurant obsessed folks in one place. When we start providing pseudo-psychological deconstruction and doing a cost-benefit analysis before going to a DINER, it crosses the line. Seriously... At most of the diners I frequented in Maine during college, you were lucky if you got a grunt of acknowledgment when you made your order and a "later" when you left. Diners are not meant to be the second coming of Rainforest Cafe. This whole issue is about expectations... and in this case how they are out of line with reality. I don't expect to be coddled or "cared for" in any way at a diner. I expect decent salt-of-the-earth type food in a reasonable amount of time... period!
Marco wrote:Is it emotionally safe to eat at Patty's Diner? I am not reassured by these reports.
G Wiv wrote:Marco wrote:Is it emotionally safe to eat at Patty's Diner? I am not reassured by these reports.
Did you take that walk yet?
68° with a light breeze along the lake.
Marco wrote:"And it is no coincidence that the defenders of Patty would react uncomfortably to critical messages:
Marco wrote:I've still not actually been there
Oh give me a break, it is a diner. They weren't refusing to serve minorities. Let's not let this conversation get any more hyperbolic than it is. As I said, unlike some posters here, I have eaten at Patty's many times and have always felt welcome. It is just a diner. I do not expect the waitress to be my best friend. Just bring me edible food in a timely mannner. I am sorry if VickyP had an unpleasant experience there, but like I said, we have only heard one side of the story. Maybe the kids were unmitigated brats. Maybe Suzy just got done dealing with a particularly obnoxious family and just took it out on VivkyP's party. Whatever. Nothing beats when I was sitting at the counter of the "hillbilly grill" at Chicago and Damen years ago, and the woman behind the counter split a guy's skull open with an axe handle, when he complained too much about the food. The police were called and arrested the guy who got hit in the head (he was somewhat inebriated). Now that's bad service even for a crappy diner.Marco wrote:Stagger wrote:Marco wrote: It is starting to resemble a dysfunctional relationship where the sex [food] is out of this world, but the rest of the situation is unacceptable. It is not overall healthy. I've appreciated -all- the negative reports on Patty's as much as the positive ones. I've still not actually been there, but I know my tradeoffs and costs if I do go.
You know, I love LTH as much as anyone else but there is a certain dark side to having so many food and restaurant obsessed folks in one place. When we start providing pseudo-psychological deconstruction and doing a cost-benefit analysis before going to a DINER, it crosses the line. Seriously... At most of the diners I frequented in Maine during college, you were lucky if you got a grunt of acknowledgment when you made your order and a "later" when you left. Diners are not meant to be the second coming of Rainforest Cafe. This whole issue is about expectations... and in this case how they are out of line with reality. I don't expect to be coddled or "cared for" in any way at a diner. I expect decent salt-of-the-earth type food in a reasonable amount of time... period!
Eating, dining out, *is* a psychologically complex and overdetermined experience. You are trusting *strangers* literally to feed you, to duplicate the oldest experiences of nurturing that ---in previous generations of human history--- would only have transpired between family members. It is intimate; what they produce, and how they present it to you is ultimately *entering your body*. You are vulnerable, both to serious risk and delicious reward. The situation is always, therefore, volatile. The entire modern food service industry is premised upon reassurance that it is safe, emotionally and physically to be fed by strangers.
Is it emotionally safe to eat at Patty's Diner? I am not reassured by these reports. The notion that a family with young children present would be traumatized and mis-treated is below the safety threshold. I've never heard of any party, anywhere, having their seats confiscated in the middle of dining *for any reason*. Confiscating the water glasses, etc is a very clear hint that you are not welcome. That sends the message: I don't like you, I don't want you here, and yet *my* cooking is going in your mouth. Such humiliation is a violence perped not only on the dining party, *but upon every witness in the room*. It violates the basic unspoken premise of the situation: that your dignity will be respected here, and that you will be safe in exchange for your cash. Not coddled, not pampered, just safe.
It is no coincidence to me that the civil rights movement had as its flashpoint lunch counters, or busses. Because these are sites where you *are* trusting people your safety to strangers. And where your dignity is utterly on display. And it is no coincidence that the defenders of Patty would react uncomfortably to critical messages: because they *are* experiencing comfort, comfort food, and the intimacy of dining where they *do* feel welcome, acknowledged and familiar. But if I am sitting there, satiated and warm, proud to be amongst the secret society of the old potatoes, and Patty or Suzy start going off on a family with kids--then I am no longer so proud.
G Wiv wrote:Marco wrote:"And it is no coincidence that the defenders of Patty would react uncomfortably to critical messages:Marco wrote:I've still not actually been there
I don't have much more to say than suggest again you take a walk along the lake.
Marco wrote:"And it is no coincidence that the defenders of Patty would react uncomfortably to critical messages: because they *are* experiencing comfort, comfort food, and the intimacy of dining where they *do* feel welcome, acknowledged and familiar."
Marco wrote:Is it emotionally safe to eat at Patty's Diner? I am not reassured by these reports.

jesteinf wrote:Now this is an emotionally unsafe restaurant.
The Onion wrote:GARDEN CITY, NY—With its colorful striped awning, kids' jungle gym in the parking lot, and all-American fare, Ernie's Family Restaurant resembles many other down-home restaurants that promise to treat its customers like family. But what sets this nationwide chain apart is that it actually delivers on its pledge.
The recently opened Ernie's Family Restaurant serves up down-home, family-style anger, bitterness and denial at reasonable prices. "We believe in treating our customers like part of the family," manager Dean Friesz said during Friday's grand opening of a new Ernie's location on Jericho Turnpike in Garden City. "That's why Ernie's offers, free with every Old-Fashioned Super-Duper Ernie's Entree, accusations, belittlement, and other barely disguised expressions of bitterness, despair and sour regret that typify American family interaction."
ronnie_suburban wrote:Marco wrote:"And it is no coincidence that the defenders of Patty would react uncomfortably to critical messages: because they *are* experiencing comfort, comfort food, and the intimacy of dining where they *do* feel welcome, acknowledged and familiar."
This has nothing to do with defending Patty's. If you choose to read it that way, so be it. There's clearly a larger, more universal issue here about our expectations and how we as individuals handle it when they are not met. This particular discussion centers around Patty's but it could just as easily center around any other place at which a diner was disappointed by the service side of the experience and reported it here.
I believe that those here who are "defending" Patty's are really just saying that the idiosyncracies of the place -- no matter how severe -- do not diminish the experience for them. They know what to expect and yet, they still go there. There is also another camp who doesn't want to go there (and a small minority within that group who are actually glad it's closing). Thing is, no one's making these people go there yet they seem to be unhappy that others still do want to go there -- almost as if they are pleading that no one should go there because they don't like it. If these folks feel that it's not an "emotionally safe" experience to eat there, then they should stay home or go somewhere else. What others do should not be any of their concern, yet in following this discussion, it seems to be a primary focus of their concern.
=R=
Marco wrote:I did try to offer an analysis for *why* a diner, in particular can be such a flashpoint of emotional attachment or repulsion. But my attempt at an analysis was not to lobby for or against Patty's, for or against attraction or repulsion---just merely to try to understand the dynamics. For myself. Because I do think there is something mysterious and deep about diners, far more so than merely slightly slower fast food.
riddlemay wrote:My personal pet theory (which I've expressed here before) is that how we feel about restaurants has a lot to do with how we feel about our mothers, who were our first feeding systems.
Katie wrote:riddlemay wrote:My personal pet theory (which I've expressed here before) is that how we feel about restaurants has a lot to do with how we feel about our mothers, who were our first feeding systems.
Not to hijack this thread, but I'm intrigued. Is there another thread where you've elaborated why you think this is so?
riddlemay wrote:This led to the insight that restaurants do return us to a state of infancy-
Hellodali wrote:But as Freud said, sometimes a cigar is just a cigar. And sometimes a diner is just a diner. But ham hash is always delicious.
jimwdavis wrote:As I read these, I envision not the adult, but the elementary-school version of the poster as the kind of kid who is always first to frantically wave a hand in the air, almost levitating out of the seat, trying desperately to be the first to answer the teacher’s question and being rewarded for the effort by being scorned on the schoolyard at recess.
riddlemay wrote:I think you should examine that.
G Wiv wrote:riddlemay wrote:I think you should examine that.
Two more psychiatrists couch type posts then we lock the thread and move on.