Guy Throws Tantrums In Restaurants Because He Misunderstands What He Orders, GF At Wit’s End
In an ideal world, our partners would never do a thing that embarrasses us. But, in reality, we’re often embarrassed by their joke that didn’t land, the funny shirt they decided to wear, or, sometimes, even the way they walk.
This boyfriend kept embarrassing his girlfriend with his poor restaurant etiquette. The guy would imagine he was ordering one thing, and flip out after the waitstaff would present him something he didn’t expect.
Tired of the mishaps, the girlfriend sought advice online on how to handle his behavior: should she confront him and try to ask him to be more flexible, or is this a dealbreaker?
A guy kept embarrassing his girlfriend in restaurants by repeatedly not understanding what he was ordering
Image credits: Mohamed hamdi / unsplash (not the actual photo)
The woman felt she couldn’t take it anymore, and sought some relationship advice
Image credits: Jeremy Yap / unsplash (not the actual photo)
Image credits: Abbie Tanner / unsplash (not the actual photo)
Image credits: Heidelbeere27
Checking the menu beforehand or asking the staff to clarify can help people avoid embarrassing situations in restaurants
Dining etiquette sometimes might get away from all of us. After all, who hasn’t been confused about which fork they’re supposed to use while at a fancy restaurant? In fact, people have differing opinions about what’s okay and not okay to do at restaurants.
Last year, YouGov asked Americans what restaurant behaviors are a no-no for customers. The top two cardinal sins are not paying for the dish you didn’t like but ate anyway and letting your kids roam free around the restaurant.
People also think that debating the menu prices with the staff, staying well past closing time, snapping your fingers at your waiter, bringing outside food or drink, and showing up late for your reservation are signs of poor restaurant etiquette.
In essence, eating out shouldn’t be a difficult thing. Servers and restaurant staff are there for a reason (even in the most fancy places) and should help people with anything that is unclear. In fact, high-end restaurateurs even want to explain it to you: ” If you have a conscience and you’re going to take people’s money, part of it is like, let me explain what we’ve done here,” Adam Gersten, owner of the New Schnitzel House in Miami, told Eater. “Why is this like this, and why you don’t get that at Wendy’s.”
Another way to avoid the potential embarrassment of ordering a thing you don’t like is to pick what you’re going to eat ahead of time. Pop Sugar’s Taylor Andrews calls this ‘menu sleuthing.’ “I rarely have to experience order regret,” she writes. “It isn’t about being a control freak, it’s simply knowing what to ask for.”
Image credits: Tayla Brand / unsplash (not the actual photo)
We might be overestimating how much attention people are paying to our partners’ embarrassing behavior
When something embarrassing happens to you in public, do you automatically assume that everyone is looking at you and having a laugh? We all embarrass ourselves in front of others, but the reality is that we tend to grossly overestimate how much others care about our behavior.
Psychologists call this the spotlight effect. It’s the feeling we get when we’re in public and think that everyone’s judging us for our wrinkled shirt or uncombed hair. Research shows that we overestimate the attention others pay us by 50%.
But we also get embarrassed on behalf of others; our partners, for example. That’s what researchers call the vicarious spotlight effect. Researchers have found that the successes of our partners boosts our self-esteem. We feel the spotlight on us when our partner acts positively, but instead of embarrassment, we feel pride.
Embarrassment and shame, however, are stronger, as we believe that more people notice when our partners engage in embarrassing behavior. We also get more embarrassed when it happens in front of strangers or acquaintances, not close family members or friends.
Psychologists theorize that if we’re overestimating how much attention people are paying to our embarrassing behavior, the odds are not many people care about the ridicule we think our partners are inviting upon us. Perhaps we really are thinking about ourselves too much.
Image credits: Chermiti Mohamed / unsplash (not the actual photo)
Some people couldn’t believe a grown man could act like this
Some speculated that he may enjoy causing drama, while others concluded that he’s maybe just “straight-up stupid”
Poll Question
Thanks! Check out the results:
There's another alternative - he likes the theatre of it all. Standing heroically (tm Blackadder III) and shouting "Woe is me!". Sounds a complete a**e more than ignorant / illiterate.
Load More Replies...Confront him about it in case it's some kind of unconscious action he learned growing up or something if he does not correct it immediately dump him.
No adequate correction possible IMO. Temper tantrums for his failure to understand a basic concept such as a menu item is a huge red flag. End relationship immediately and run.
Load More Replies...If you want a large black coffee with milk, just order a large black coffee with milk. Don't play with words you don't understand. And I totally judge people's manners at the table. I wish people love themselves more instead of putting up with idiots in relationships.
If you want a black coffee with milk, order a white coffee.
Load More Replies...The suggestion to think of things as 'a variation of' is very smart (I might even say "brilliant"). I have ADD (diagnosed as an adult, although I remember walking home from 5th grade crying because "I think differently than everybody else"). I have found that when I get irrationally irritated it's because my brain expected *something* and reality didn't match that expectation. Over the years I've learned to control myself so I don't become irrationally *angry* but I wish I'd heard 'a variation of' earlier in life. Oh, and the way she handles his behavior is by kicking his a*s to the curb.
Like you, I've had a later diagnosis, and I also think this 'version of' suggestion is a great one. I like to know what I'm going to be eating and can also have expectations that don't match what I actually end up getting (although if I'm at a restaurant, I would just ask rather than assume!)
Load More Replies...Teach/tell him to read the mother-effing menu! Or at least don't eat out with this dumb-a*s.
Right, and if he still doesn't get it then he could just google it. It's not that difficult. If I genuinely have no clue what a dish is I can just look it up, complete with pictures and everything
Load More Replies...i had this happen to me once. restaurant we were at had a meal that included fish and i thought the fish was cooked all the way but it wasn't. it was a lightly steamed fish prepared sous-vide (half cooked). it was 100 percent my fault and i certainly did not throw a fit about it. they offered to take it off my bill but i instead asked for a to go box for it and ordered a second entrée i was more familiar with. paid for both, took the first one home and cooked it more to my taste for a meal the next day. now i look at the menu online ahead of time and ask questions if im not familiar with it. i also developed a taste for sous-vide fish over time and it's one of my top 5 foods
Sous vide does not mean half cooked, it means very slowly and evenly cooked in a low-temp water bath. If your fish was not cooked through, they served you raw fish and you weren't wrong to avoid it. Non-sushi-grade raw fish is a great way to get parasites.
Load More Replies...If he's too poor to pay attention to what he's actually ordering then he should stick to McDonald's.
There's another alternative - he likes the theatre of it all. Standing heroically (tm Blackadder III) and shouting "Woe is me!". Sounds a complete a**e more than ignorant / illiterate.
Load More Replies...Confront him about it in case it's some kind of unconscious action he learned growing up or something if he does not correct it immediately dump him.
No adequate correction possible IMO. Temper tantrums for his failure to understand a basic concept such as a menu item is a huge red flag. End relationship immediately and run.
Load More Replies...If you want a large black coffee with milk, just order a large black coffee with milk. Don't play with words you don't understand. And I totally judge people's manners at the table. I wish people love themselves more instead of putting up with idiots in relationships.
If you want a black coffee with milk, order a white coffee.
Load More Replies...The suggestion to think of things as 'a variation of' is very smart (I might even say "brilliant"). I have ADD (diagnosed as an adult, although I remember walking home from 5th grade crying because "I think differently than everybody else"). I have found that when I get irrationally irritated it's because my brain expected *something* and reality didn't match that expectation. Over the years I've learned to control myself so I don't become irrationally *angry* but I wish I'd heard 'a variation of' earlier in life. Oh, and the way she handles his behavior is by kicking his a*s to the curb.
Like you, I've had a later diagnosis, and I also think this 'version of' suggestion is a great one. I like to know what I'm going to be eating and can also have expectations that don't match what I actually end up getting (although if I'm at a restaurant, I would just ask rather than assume!)
Load More Replies...Teach/tell him to read the mother-effing menu! Or at least don't eat out with this dumb-a*s.
Right, and if he still doesn't get it then he could just google it. It's not that difficult. If I genuinely have no clue what a dish is I can just look it up, complete with pictures and everything
Load More Replies...i had this happen to me once. restaurant we were at had a meal that included fish and i thought the fish was cooked all the way but it wasn't. it was a lightly steamed fish prepared sous-vide (half cooked). it was 100 percent my fault and i certainly did not throw a fit about it. they offered to take it off my bill but i instead asked for a to go box for it and ordered a second entrée i was more familiar with. paid for both, took the first one home and cooked it more to my taste for a meal the next day. now i look at the menu online ahead of time and ask questions if im not familiar with it. i also developed a taste for sous-vide fish over time and it's one of my top 5 foods
Sous vide does not mean half cooked, it means very slowly and evenly cooked in a low-temp water bath. If your fish was not cooked through, they served you raw fish and you weren't wrong to avoid it. Non-sushi-grade raw fish is a great way to get parasites.
Load More Replies...If he's too poor to pay attention to what he's actually ordering then he should stick to McDonald's.


































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