DEAR MISS MANNERS: A friend and I have a long-standing, semi-joking disagreement, but I do think my behavior bothers her, and I just don’t understand why.
We typically meet for dinner. Now, I am not a big dining-out person. I am just not that interested in food. I’m more of an “eat to live” person, if you know what I mean.
My friend gets a lot more enjoyment out of food than I do, and I’m perfectly happy to spend time with her at a restaurant, even though the food itself isn’t a main selling point for me, if that makes sense. It’s a fine place to catch up with her.
The problem is that I usually ask the server to decide what I will have, instead of ordering myself. I have little interest in the food, and as employees, they certainly know the menu much better than I do, and what people want when they come to that restaurant.
Last week when asked for my order, I said, “Whatever makes sense!”
Well, the server and I had already chatted a little and he didn’t seem to have a problem with my order. He recommended something, and I was fine with it, but my friend was embarrassed and accused me, essentially, of being a poor restaurant patron.
She seems to feel that I’m putting some kind of burden on the servers and possibly making them uncomfortable by asking them to decide what I get. But to me, I’m simply streamlining an interaction in which the server is best placed to know what I should order. Is this really that weird?
GENTLE READER: That you do not have a passion for food is fine. That you are open to suggestions from your server is also fine.
But showing disdain for those who take it seriously by openly expressing your apathy is where Miss Manners — and your friend — found fault. That is what made the interaction with the server uncomfortable, not the asking itself. If that makes sense and you know what Miss Manners means.
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