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Pet Peeves: Aka Things That Make You Go "Gah!"


Message added by JTMacc99,

Your pet peeves are your pet peeves, and you should feel free to express them here. This topic is not to be used to say you are peeved by another member of this community or something they said, either in this topic, or somewhere else in the forums. Additionally, please take ALL language related peeves (word usage, regional sayings, punctuation...) to the Grammar topic.

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I actually changed supermarkets because the one I used to use was like walking into a poorly supervised daycare.  My mom used to bring me to the store when I was a child but when we got there she would give me a cart and a list so I could do half the shopping.

 

Stupid question:  why has tipping gone from 15% to 20+%? since tips are a percentage of the bill and the prices of the food go up regularly? 

Edited by Qoass
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Don't get me started on tipping.  I live in Canada, where servers are paid at least minimum wage.  I believe two provinces allow alcohol servers to be paid 50 cents an hour less.  So your waiter is already making at least $10 an hour just for showing up.  Is it great money? No, but it's the same as in many industries in which workers are not tipped.  Yet wait staff are looking for 20% tips, because that's what happens in the US.   The suggested tip on point of sale machines are 15, 18 and 20%.  Our sales tax is also 15%, and the machine calculates tip on the post tax amount.  I just choose "other amount" and manually enter the figure that I was charged as 15% tax.  

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I'm well aware, which is why I tip at least 20% when in the US, and have explained as much to relatives travelling to the US. But I'll be damned if I will do it Canada unless the service is truly exceptional.

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I actually changed supermarkets because the one I used to use was like walking into a poorly supervised daycare.  My mom used to bring me to the store wen I was a child but when we got there she would give me a cart and a list so I could do half the shopping.

 

Stupid question:  why has tipping gone from 15% to 20+%? since tips are a percentage of the bill and the prices of the food go up regularly? 

It is kind of hard to understand, because there are times when a lower-priced meal at a casual restaurant is generally cheaper than a fancier place.  If I'm paying $100 for dinner, why do I give the waiter $20, but a $40 tab at a less-fancy place might mean the waiter works just as hard, but gets $8?   Similarly,  when a waiter opens and pours a $20 bottle of wine, it is exactly the same amount of work for the same waiter at the same place  to open and pour a $100 bottle.  Why is the tip a percentage of the PRICE of the food or wine?  

 

I know waiters don't get paid a ton of money, and have to work for tips.  But, there are times when I'm paying $10 or $15 for someone to BRING THE FOOD TO THE TABLE, and the same person is waiting on a bunch of other tables at the same time, it just seems like they could be making a couple hundred bucks during the dinner service.  

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That's why I'm confused!  I don't understand why I would leave the same tip for someone who has taken my order and served and cleared it as I would someone who filled my water glass as I walked to the buffet line.

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Why is the tip a percentage of the PRICE of the food or wine?

In part because the IRS calculates the taxable tip income of waitresses and waiters as being X percent of the meal's price, regardless of the size of the actual tip. I don't know what the rate is now, but in the late '90s it was 8.5%. Which means that if you give the guy who served you a $100 meal the same tip that you gave the guy who served you a $40 meal (say $6.00), he's getting screwed because the IRS taxes him as if you gave him $15.

And that's not even counting the fact that in many places the waiters have to split their tips with the busboys and bartenders.

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Tipping brings to mind the "delivery charge" by Papa John's. They specify it isn't a tip for the driver and the driver should still be tipped. From what I understand, some other pizza chains do this as well.

My restaurant delivery does, too. A 30$ meal becomes 55-60$ with tax, delivery fee, and tip. But, a lot of times, I'm not leaving my house, and I dont want pizza. Although, yesterday it was icy, and even Papa John's was closed. Boo.

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Am I horrible

 

 

'I was in a large grocery store on a Saturday morning - my bad - and the place was packed.  You could hear a child "literally" screaming bloody murder throughout the store.  Seriously, shoppers were stopping in the aisles to ask each other "Is someone murdering a child?"   When I finally entered the same aisle as the not-yet-dead child, I saw a boy about 8 screaming his head off, while mom and grandma carried on shopping.   Finally, one older lady whispered "poor dear, maybe he's autistic."  I don't give a tiny rat's hiney what the child's problem was. There were two adults.  If he can't handle grocery stores at all, he can stay home with one of the adults.  If he was just having a temporary meltdown, one adult should have taken him the car. I get there are times when parents don't have a choice but to drag a child along.  But this parent had a choice.

Am I a horrible person that your story made me laugh? Not at the child, but at the visual image of the idiotic adults who ignored that poor child's cries of distress.

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I'm tired of people insisting that someone doesn't count as a celebrity just because they're useless and/or haven't done anything special. A celebrity is someone who is famous, and a person can be famous without having done anything special. "Celebrity" does not imply worthiness. Like it or not, people like the Duggars and Bristol Palin are celebrities.

 

(And trust me, I don't like it!)

Edited by galax-arena
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A long standing peeve...why don't the latches and locks in a public restroom ever match up?

 

ETA:  I was in the grocery store today and they had a number of products on sale for $1.88.  The regular price for these items (which is shown) is $1.89.

Edited by DeLurker
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When you're talking to someone and they act like they have some earth shattering observation that turns out to be..

"Well, I actually think BBTheory isn't a smart show like everyone else thinks. And, it's not even funny"

"All of Nickleback's songs sounded the same"

Or

"Kristen Stewart only makes one facial expression"

It's like....yeah, I have heard that before. You're brilliant. Now, please leave me alone.

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I had a French teacher in high school who said he hated TV so much that he'd thrown his parents' TV out a high-rise apartment

He also brought me a large gift basket one day after asking me to stay after class (and miss my next period) because he said I'd been looking sad. That was an odd thing to explain to all my other teachers and some other students who were wondering why I was carrying a huge wicker basket filled with candy, notebooks, and cat calendar/pencils. Nice or creepy? Who knows. He was gone the next day.

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I hate, hate, haaaaaaaate people who eat food at the grocery store before paying for it. Whether it's opening cookies to appease your little brat, grazing on chips as you shop ('cause, you know, you don't want to starve), or, even worse, breaking open cases of berries and eating a bunch then closing them back up and putting them back, exposing others to your grubby, sticky-fingered germs, I have to fight the urge to scream at them in a spittle-flecked rage. Honest to God, if you can afford to shop for groceries, you can afford to wait to eat after you pay, you entitled bunch of pigs!

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That is an interesting one.  What exactly is it you hate about somebody giving a cookie to an 8 year old in the supermarket or somebody eating a grape from the bunch he or she has placed in the cart?

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(edited)

grazing on chips as you shop

 

I did this once, and was so embarrassed.  After a busy day in which I skipped lunch, a friend and I hit traffic on an already-long drive to a vacation condo, so by the time we checked in and headed to the local store to pick up food for the weekend I was shaky and lightheaded from hunger.  And my friend is a slow, indecisive shopper.  So I scarfed down quite a few chips while we meandered the aisles.  Now, I handed the half-empty bag to the cashier to scan once we reached the register, so I didn't steal the chips (as opposed to people who eat a handful of nuts from the bulk bin or put away half their bunch of grapes by the time they check out) -- I just looked quite tacky walking through the store eating them. 

Edited by Bastet
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I opened a bottle of water once that I grabbed in the checkout line from one of those little refrigerators. There was a person in front of me engaged in extreme couponing. I felt no remorse. Of course I paid for it.

Nor should you feel any remorse.  It's not like you were chowing down on a bag of Five Guys in the middle of the Macy's shoe department.

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What exactly is it you hate about somebody giving a cookie to an 8 year old in the supermarket or somebody eating a grape from the bunch he or she has placed in the cart?

 

I'm not the original Peevee, but I'll respond:

 

eating food that is sold by weight without paying, placating kids with food when they're not really hungry, (or if they are hungry, why are you shopping at meal time?), the fact that no one looks good shovelling food into their mouths without utensils and napkins while walking...

 

and the simple fact that North Americans seem incapable of going more than 30 minutes without shoving food in their pie holes.   Movie theatres are now more about the food than the movie.   Don't get me started on people munching on food during a Broadway show when I've paid a lot of money to hear the dialogue.  Or the guy sitting next to me on a 60 minute flight who had to eat a bag of zesty cheese Doritos 12 inches away from my nose.   The notion of "hunger" is meaningless to most of us. 

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My tipping pet peve is when someone uses a gift certificate at a restaurant, and then doesn't leave a tip, to make sure they have a "free meal", even though the tip is obviously not part of the gift certificate.     I've had this happen more than once, then I feel obligated to cover thier tip, rather than get in an arguement about it. 

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I'm not the original Peevee, but I'll respond:

 

eating food that is sold by weight without paying, placating kids with food when they're not really hungry, (or if they are hungry, why are you shopping at meal time?), the fact that no one looks good shovelling food into their mouths without utensils and napkins while walking...

 

and the simple fact that North Americans seem incapable of going more than 30 minutes without shoving food in their pie holes.   Movie theatres are now more about the food than the movie.   Don't get me started on people munching on food during a Broadway show when I've paid a lot of money to hear the dialogue.  Or the guy sitting next to me on a 60 minute flight who had to eat a bag of zesty cheese Doritos 12 inches away from my nose.   The notion of "hunger" is meaningless to most of us. 

 

Thank you for having my back, quof. Children should learn to wait for treats, or else you're going to have hateful, gluttonous brats on your hands. If you're not starving, you can wait until you've paid to eat. Not to mention it's gross when people stick their dirty fingers in packages of fruit and leave them, leave a crumb trail down the aisles as they shop, and I used to work as a bagger, I've seen many a greasy credit card handed to the poor cashier to pay because they just had to have their fried chicken from the deli right now. One woman in line was licking and sucking her fingers from the chicken so damn loudly, I wanted to ask her if she wanted a minute alone.

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At the Whole foods near me, they had a gelato counter where you could buy (over-priced) gelato cones.  You were SUPPOSED to get the cone, then walk to the cashier and PAY FOR IT.  plenty of parents would head right for the gelato counter, and let their kids eat the cones while they walked around and shopped.  It's an ice-cream cone, so there's no wrapper or anything, you just tell the cashier to charge you.   I even heard one mom refer to the ice cream  as "free".    Really?  because when I get it, they charge me $3.  

When i shopped with my kids, I'd let them pick out a snack or even a dessert, for LATER.  Like, pick out a flavor of ice cream that we will all have after dinner.  They didn't need to eat at the store - unless there were specific samples that I let them have.  

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I once watched a man with four children circle an entire Costco store, taking 5 of every single sample being offered on a Saturday morning.  They didn't have a cart. They weren't shopping.   Apparently this was how he fed them breakfast , and recovered the membership fee?  There's a reason it's called the Trailer Park Buffet.

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I once watched a man with four children circle an entire Costco store, taking 5 of every single sample being offered on a Saturday morning.  They didn't have a cart. They weren't shopping.   Apparently this was how he fed them breakfast , and recovered the membership fee?  There's a reason it's called the Trailer Park Buffet.

 

Funny, at my Costco they call it the "Senior Lunch". 

 

 One sample of each is fine. Two…. eh, pushing it, but forgivable. Five of each, though? Tacky to the extreme.

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(edited)

The five refers to one sample for each person, I think (father plus four kids), rather than one person taking five helpings.  They're almost always bite sized, and you only get a fork/spoon/toothpick/whatever, so it would be hard to split one sample between two or more people.  I guess, then, I'm not automatically opposed to members of a large family taking one sample each; it sounds bad, because then there isn't much left of that batch for the other patrons hovering around the table like they haven't eaten in weeks, but I guess it really isn't any different than my mom and I each taking one when we make a Costco run together.

 

But going to Costco for the express purpose of making the rounds of the sample stations?  Now I'm going to have to keep an eye out for cart-less samplers, to see if this is a trend at my local store.

Edited by Bastet
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Yeah, my parents and I used to go to Sams Club sometimes on the day they had samples and try them. But, it wasn't a routine. We'd always buy other things, and we often bought what we sampled if it was good and relatively inexpensive. It was just fun. Yes, that was my idea of a fun day when I was in 7th grade.

Anyway, I don't think I've eaten a sample of something in years except some coffee last year, which I did buy because I needed a new whole bean coffee. I saw another girl say she'd buy it, and then throw it randomly on a shelf. What was that about? Change your mind that quickly or just want to lie to sound...like a baller?

Lol. I have no clue. Maybe she has trouble saying "no" to people.

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I once watched a man with four children circle an entire Costco store, taking 5 of every single sample being offered on a Saturday morning.  They didn't have a cart. They weren't shopping.   Apparently this was how he fed them breakfast ,

 

 

Years ago I heard a "date from hell" story from a woman whose date took her to the local supermarket for "dinner".  Girl was smart to ditch the jerk before they even left the store.  Nothing about that date would have ended well anyway.

 

I'm not crazy about people who eat groceries before paying for them, but it's way worse when you have people who eat and then stuff the empties on another shelf somewhere! 

 

Another peeve for me related to the abuse of store samples involves free samples available at Farmers Markets.  I've seen people who help themselves to the samples (which could be anything from honey to fruit to cheeses or meats) then walk off, and not even buy something.  It's not as if the person didn't like what s/he was eating (since s/he took so many samples) but s/he's too cheap to buy.  Plus, that person selling their wares spent a lot of time and money crafting the foods they're selling.  They lose money to these jerks!

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Another peeve for me related to the abuse of store samples involves free samples available at Farmers Markets.  I've seen people who help themselves to the samples (which could be anything from honey to fruit to cheeses or meats) then walk off, and not even buy something.  It's not as if the person didn't like what s/he was eating (since s/he took so many samples) but s/he's too cheap to buy.  Plus, that person selling their wares spent a lot of time and money crafting the foods they're selling.  They lose money to these jerks!

It would be nice that if you are going to sample something, you would at least have some intention of buying something if you really like what you are tasting. 

 

How about the people who jump on the wine tasting tour with only the intention of getting loaded?

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(edited)

Sam's/ Costco sells in bulk and some of the sample items are expensive/too much food. While I might like the sample, I don't want eleven billion of them in my freezer. If I like a sample, I seek and price out a smaller box of product elsewhere. My family all take samples. If I do buy the product, I don't want it to be sitting there in the family fridge just for me.

 

I've taken/drank a soda soon after I've arrived at a store because we had to park forever back. They just ask you if you want it separate from your bagged items and hand it over to you.

 

I hate it when you go to a restaurant and your food is brought to you cold. It's happened to me on several occasions, and I've always politely let the waitress know. But I kind of don't want to eat something you vaguely knocked the chill off of the second time around. I also hate when a waiter or waitress remarks that someone didn't eat very much during their meal. Sometimes portion sizes are huge. And I will never send something back because I didn't like the food itself (as long as it was prepared well).  I ordered shrimp at a seafood restaurant. It was "endless" and I thought the flavors sounded interesting. I hadn't had shrimp in forever. Turns out that's because I truly hate shrimp. Yes, I could have something I do like, but I still have to pay for the shrimp so I'll just soldier on. Remarking about not eating enough just makes me feel guilty.

Edited by AltLivia
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I don't like it when wait staff push dessert. I don't really like desserts usually, and I'm not going to change my mind. I understand a lot of places they have to ask or leave a dessert menu just in case, but the pleading and asking again and again is just annoying. I've finished my meal. I liked it. I'm full. I'm paying you and tipping. Move on. I try so hard to be friendly and polite. I never say anything. I just wish they wouldn't do that. It's embarrassing and wastes time if I need to head out. Or, that they think I'm cheap.

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(edited)
I hate it when you go to a restaurant and your food is brought to you cold. It's happened to me on several occasions, and I've always politely let the waitress know. But I kind of don't want to eat something you vaguely knocked the chill off of the second time around.

 

 

Here's a tip.  Put ketchup on it before sending it back. (Hell, even if it's not French fries, although serving cold fries should be a hanging offense).  That way you know they prepared new food rather than simply throwing your plate in the microwave.

Edited by Quof
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(edited)

 

Here's a tip.  Put ketchup on it before sending it back. (Hell, even if it's not French fries, although serving cold fries should be a hanging offense).  That way you know they prepared new food rather than simply throwing your plate in the microwave.

Thanks, Quof. I'll try that one next time.

 

 

I don't like it when wait staff push dessert.

I will go to a restaurant (after a light meal at home) and get dessert and coffee, and that's all, I haven't ordered dessert at the end of a restaurant meal since I was a kid. Even then my parents rolled their eyes at me. I couldn't finish it. I hate when they push dessert too. Especially, when your table is loaded with dishes and everything's obviously winding down, I totally understand that they have to offer, though.

 

Sort of in the restaurant pet peeve line. Anyone know why they give you bread at the beginning of a meal? Fills you right up (to the point that I can't finish my meal). Especially if you're waiting awhile. At home, I have bread with my meal - to dip in sauce, gravy or what - have -you. I love bread, but it;s just like, "ah yes, bread with my nothing!"

Edited by AltLivia
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Good bread is such a treat - I don't often eat it at home. I'd feel totally g***** if I didn't get bread early. I'll fill up on it happily and take the bilk of my main course home.

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On the other hand, I'm annoyed when they bring bread to the table without asking.  I'm not a big fan, and depending on who I'm dining with, they may not be, either -- wasted food disgusts me, so if they drag out a big chunk of bread that will have to be tossed because of the collective tastes of the particular diners, my meal has just turned into something disturbing through no fault of my own.  A simple, "Would you like some [whatever kind of] bread for the table?" seems a small thing to ask, and is the norm at many restaurants, but there are still a significant number that just plop a plate of bread down on the table.

 

Restaurants here no longer automatically bring a glass of water for every diner to the table, since we're in a perpetual drought, and I similarly see no reason for bread to still be exempt from the "we shouldn't run such a high risk of this going to waste by serving it to everyone" philosophy.

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(edited)

As a former server, please allow me to jump into these pet-peeves!!

I'm sorry about the dessert thing; we hate asking about it too and would rather just turn over your table so we could get another round of diners. But most every restaurant expects/requires its servers to ask, and some diners would likely take offense to *not* being asked/offered a dessert menu, so please just realize that it's just an expected formality.

Also, I acquired an odd habit as a server of just having a hunch when a couple was up to ordering a dessert, usually indicated by their food/drink choices. And they would usually share one dessert between them, which I often do with my husband as well.

As for the bread, it depends upon the restaurant. Some places just offer bread as a nice perk and specialty, just a way for diners to get their tastebuds flowing and not get too cranky while waiting for their food's arrival(or too tipsy if they're drinking heavily), especially if app's aren't even being ordered before the entrees.

On the one hand, I appreciate it as a diner because I love fresh warm bread and just appreciate something complimentary to munch on while awaiting my order. I actually get annoyed at restaurants nowadays that either don't offer bread, or charge for it---or worse yet, forcing diners to ask for it.

On the other hand, I *hated* offering bread as a server---it took up valuable time, was often an extra hassle, and there were always those tacky customers who would either immediately demand bread before I could even introduce myself/take their drink orders, and/or the ones who would practically make meals of multiple bread baskets.

There are some frightening levels of cheapskates out there, especially the older folks who think a cup of soup, endless water refills and 3-4 baskets of bread warrant a good long lunch and a barely-tipped server.

Edited by Sun-Bun
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Yep, since I don't drink alcohol anymore,, I'm very sensitive about sitting anywhere too long. I mean...i only once sat at a bar by myself and only had a club soda. I told the bar tender straight up that I don't drink and just needed to to sit there 20 minutes. I tipped him 5$ when he charged me nothing for the drink. (It wasn't a busy or empty bar)

However, other than that, I never go sit at bars having only soda. I'll either be with someone else who drinks and then I'll ask for mocktails. Or, if I'm somewhere that doesn't make those, I'll get a soda but food, too. I tell them straight up that I don't drink alcohol.

But, I am mostly home alone, so it doesn't come up much.

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(edited)

Okay, this is petty, and it has NOTHING to do with the posters here (I believe this thread is for complaining about shit that bugs one, not about this site, which I f'in love), but I've been seeing "per say" in comments on other sites (mostly CNN...why do I read that crap?...and some Denton sites) and it takes all the self restraint in me to not to reply "If you don't know how to spell it correctly, just STFU and your opinion doesn't matter".  Same thing with "phased" instead of "fazed".  I just wonder if basic education in grade school is now out of fashion.

Edited by Lizzing
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How do you feel about "as per usual"?

 

Not to mention what I call Middle Management Myself (because having two syllables makes you more important):   "Please call myself"  "She met with Bob and myself."  Makes me stabby.

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"Per say" (or "persay") drives me batty, too, but I suspect it's often a matter of people having heard it spoken, but never seen it written.  The one that bugs me even more is "should of" (or "could of"), and I think it would be harder to go through life without seeing the real thing written.

 

I am annoyed - to what is probably an irrational degree - by mixing up inter/intra, imply/infer, immigrate/emigrate, and sarcastic/sardonic.

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I always over tip and rarely drink. Waitstaff seems to be believe non drinkers do not tip. The seem to get annoyed if you don't order alcohol and good luck getting a refill.

While I am on the subject I have zero problem with people drinking so why do I have to explain not drinking? And yes I can have a good time without alcohol.

Thank you for letting me get that off my chest.

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Is it that waitstaff think non-drinkers don't tip or that they know the tip will in likelihood be smaller since nonalcoholic drinks are cheaper?  Anyway, I don't drink and I haven't noticed poorer service.  But I have noticed that some drinkers seem to think I feel I have something to prove by not drinking, or that I don't drink because I look down my nose at drinkers.  Actually, I simply don't like the flavor and have no desire to become intoxicated.  Others can do what they please.

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I'll be honest. I black out and become nuts every 1/9 times I drink. I haven't been drinking in a year and now I'm pregnant. I do feel sad because I no longer have many/hardly any friends. But, they weren't good influences one way or another. And, other people I never become close to in the first place probably because I freaked them out.

It sucked big time

But, I have more important things to worry about now. I don't like explaining that I don't drink because sometimes it seems people want an explicit explanation of why. That bothers me, but like I said, as time goes by, I care less and less about it.

And, I do have regrets in my life. I hope I learned lessons from these things, but I still deeply regret they ever happened. I get confused when people say they have no regrets. I guess I should be happy for them, but I don't understand. That's another one of my million pet peeves.

I mean, I regret honking out of annoyance when I went to Target one time last month. I routinely regret that I'm not being productive. I regret not eating better. I regret not being forgiving enough. I regret judging people and thinking rude things. Not to mention the big stuff.

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