MoralFaceSubscribe

Search

Search posts

Staff forgot about us, I didn’t tip

Elise Dubois

A husband and wife went out for a celebratory dinner at a quiet restaurant where the total bill was around $200. After being seated, the couple waited a significant amount of time before a server approached them, even for drinks. The husband, the original poster (OP), tried to signal their readiness to order to the hostess after the initial long wait.

After another extended period, the OP found both the server and the hostess distracted by their phones at the front desk. The OP directly addressed them to place their order, which caused both staff members to react with surprise. Because of the 25-minute delay in service and the observation of the staff's inattention, the OP decided to withhold the tip, leading to an internal conflict about their actions.

Staff forgot about us, I didn’t tip
'Staff forgot about us, I didn’t tip'

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

In the field of service dynamics, Dr. Dakota Butler is known for noting, "Compensation for service is a feedback loop; the tip is the most immediate and direct form of consumer evaluation of performance." The OP's decision to withhold the tip stems from a perceived breach of the social contract in dining: prompt attention in exchange for expected compensation. Waiting 25 minutes to place an order, especially when the venue is not busy, suggests a severe lapse in attentiveness or priority setting by the staff. The OP acted based on the principle of reciprocity; substandard service received an unsubsidized outcome. From a business perspective, however, completely withholding a tip can sometimes mask systemic issues (like understaffing or poor floor management) that the server may not fully control, though their personal inattention is certainly relevant. The analysis suggests the OP's action, while understandable emotionally as a protest against poor service, represents the extreme end of guest recourse. A path forward in such situations often involves clear communication at the time of the incident—perhaps speaking to a manager rather than just withholding the tip—to allow the establishment a chance to rectify the service lapse immediately. However, given the observed inattention, the OP's choice to withhold the gratuity remains a justifiable, albeit final, statement on the quality of the experience provided.

AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.:

It didn’t take long before the comment section turned into a battleground of strong opinions and even stronger emotions.

The OP feels justified in withholding the tip due to the significant and unacceptable delay in service, which occurred despite the restaurant being relatively empty. The core conflict lies between the OP's expectation of basic service quality worthy of a tip and the staff's apparent inattention and lack of professionalism during the initial part of the dinner.

The question for consideration is whether the OP's decision not to tip, based on the observable lack of attention and the long wait time, was a fair response to poor service, or if withholding the tip punished the server disproportionately for an issue possibly involving poor management or system failures. Should the OP have tipped based on the eventual service, or was the initial failure enough to negate the tip entirely?

ED

Elise Dubois

Narrative Coach & Identity Reconstruction Specialist

Elise Dubois is a French narrative coach who helps individuals reframe personal stories after major life transitions. Whether it's a career change, loss, or identity crisis, Elise guides people to reconstruct meaning through narrative therapy and reflective journaling. She blends psychological insight with creative expression.

Narrative Therapy Identity Life Transitions