Dave

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Monday, December 21, 2009

Times Change, Attitudes Change, We Get Over It...

My wife and I enjoyed a delicious meal at Ruby Tuesday in Alamo Ranch this evening. We were treated with great care from the waitstaff, and I am starting to think that for a nice quiet dining experience at a reasonable price, this will be one of the places that I prefer to go.
I shan't bother you with the full details of our selections since I reported on Ruby Tuesday just a month or so ago (read about it here), and just suffice to say that the salad bar is simply wonderful. My wife's salad is on the left, mine is on the right. Can you tell which one of us was really starving? Oh, and those really dark croutons? They are awesome. Do not let your salad go without tossing on a handful or so.

Ruby Tuesday is not what I would consider to be upscale per se, I mean, a jacket and tie is not required but people do seem to be at least wearing their duds from the office. There is no valet parking (and if someone does attempt to park your car for you, they are probably a thief), and our waitress didn't come equipped with one of those fancy towels draped over her arm as she poured wine. Though that may have been possible, had we ordered wine. My point is, it isn't Morton's, but it isn't McDonald's either.
There was a time when men would not enter a building wearing a hat; men would remove hats in the presence of a lady and certainly, no man of any culture would wear his hat into a restaurant. And this was a custom that two diners at different tables near us had failed to appreciate during our dining experience this evening.

Just so you don't think this is an assault on the younger generation, I should tell you that both of these gentlemen were in there mid to late 50's. Now in my grandfather's day, someone might have walked up to one of these fellows and asked them politely to respect the women folk and remove their cap. I suspect though that before it got to that, a manager may have intervened.

But times and certainly styles have changed. Men these days have to be cajoled by stadium announcers to please remove their hats for the playing of the National Anthem. But as the types of hat styles have changed over the years, as it has become common-place for people to wear jeans or sweatpants instead of slacks, so too has our acceptance of more casual wear in the work place.

Remember when only sailors and criminals had tattoos? Remember when a man wearing an earring meant he was either a pirate or gay? Have you been to the airport lately and watched middle-aged woman after middle-aged woman have to be wanded by the TSA employee to verify that the metal detected is a belly-button piercing and not a gun?

I hate to discuss work here, but I was actually involved in a conversation today about an employee who was alleged to appear unprofessional. The complaint? No it wasn't about how well the person did their job - in fact the customer had nothing but praise for the employee's courtesy, kindness and professionalism. Instead, it was thought that the piercing on the employees lip was so outrageous that something had to be said to management. It was suggested that the employee be moved out of sight. Oh, you mean where they keep the Blacks and the Mexicans?

The explanation given was that the employee was in a customer facing position - that is, seen by the public - and that just as this customer had been offended by the sight of such a thing - a piercing of the lip, other customers would also be offended. And of course, a piercing doesn't give the appearance of a professional organization.

So said the man wearing jeans and a cap in the professional office.

------<<<>>>------

So I sat with my wife and enjoyed the great service and wonderful meal at Ruby Tuesday's this evening, in spite of the fact that other diners chose to wear their caps indoors. Was the site of someone else's appearance, in spite of my particular views on the appropriateness of it going to ruin my meal? Not in this lifetime.

Times change. Attitudes change. Get over it.

Thoughts?

8 comments:

Maureen said...

I don't have a problem with piercings or tats...EXCEPT for the earring-things they put in their earlobes to make a gigantic hole that looks like a carnival game--"toss the beanbag through and win a prize!" I just get really queasy and have to catch myself on something so I don't pass out. Creeps me out, but hey, it's their earlobe, not mine.

Albatross said...

I don't like hats at the table, but I'm not going to raise a fuss outside of my house. But the moment someone starts farting out loud and stinking up my booth while I'm trying to eat I'm crackin' skulls!

Let's hope that never becomes acceptable.

Michelle said...

I absolutely agree with you. Honestly, I would be happy if people would say please and thank you, hold the door for you, things like that, no matter what they are wearing. Sometimes I feel like common courtesy doesn't exist anymore.

Deep Forest said...

That guy got Leprosy ??? (lol)

Unknown said...

>>Dave wrote: "Oh, you mean where they keep the Blacks and the Mexicans??"

ROFLMAO! You.Rock.

DILLIGAF said...

I held a door open for a woman the other day and she flounced past and called me a 'male chauvanist'.

what a weird world we live in eh?

Dave said...

That guy got Leprosy ???

That is my new tear-drop pixelization technique. Or Leprosy.

Whichever.

Albatross said...

Today, in church (Christmas mass), I had to remind a man that he had left his hat on and should remove it. And it wasn't no nice fedora, it was just an old baseball cap. I know he didn't do it consciously, and he seemed embarrassed when I pointed out to him that he still had his hat on, but I thought I'd share this story because it fits in so well with this thread.

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San Antonio, TX, United States
I love to observe the odd things happening around me as I go about my day. I especially like it when I can get a picture of people being themselves. Here, I attempt to report the various people and events I have encountered in my neighborhood, and my city. I'd also love to hear from you. Feel free to e-mail your experiences and photos of life in San Antonio.

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