the sunshine state
Give me the big city with all its diversity & problems. I’d live in a city slum before I’d move to the Floridian suburbia my family considers paradise on earth.
Don’t get me wrong, please. I love my family. They are good people who treat me with loving kindness & respect & are entitled to love what they love. They took me in, fed me 3 meals a day & looked after me. I was happy to use the clubhouse swimming pool each day. In fact, while they are too polite to say it, I know they think living in
To celebrate my mother’s birthday, my sisters & I took her – and her 95 year old boyfriend – to a restaurant in
All but 2 of us arrived at
The hostess informed us that was against restaurant policy & refused to seat us. We asked to speak to the manager. Joe, the manager, came out of the kitchen & said he was very sorry but that was restaurant policy & it was his job to enforce it. We had to wait until the whole party was here. We explained our point of view again in a more forceful manner but Joe was adamant. The owners of the restaurant had given him strict orders: no one was to sit down without the entire table being present.
I wanted to punch Joe right in the kisser. My sister fumed; she wanted to leave & go somewhere else for dinner. My brother-in-law pointed out that we’d never find seats in another restaurant at this late hour without reservations, and by the time we got there….
My mother was shifting from one leg to another & her boyfriend looked like he would soon topple over. I asked Joe what was more important: to blindly obey rules or make his customers happy so they will return again & again & send their friends. He chose the former & offered to bring out two chairs for our elderly to sit in the entranceway of the restaurant amid the coming & going traffic of other patrons.
My sister demanded to speak to the owners, Joe took her card; he’d convey the message & ask them to call her, then he returned to the kitchen. The hostess looked down at her shoes.
My other sister & brother-in-law arrived soon after; we all sat down together, ordered & ate a fine meal that was well served. Yet we resolved never to return to this restaurant & to tell all our friends this story so they would not go either. How else can you inform a restaurant that you don’t like their service?
Two days later the owner of the restaurant called my sister & repeated that they held to their policy, insisted that the hostess & manager did the right thing -- and that was that. Then they asked if there was something they could offer to my sister & brother-in-law. “Certainly not,” said my sister, rightly refusing to be bought off, & adding, “you’ll never see us again.”
So, please don’t go to DaVinci’s restaurant in Boynton Beach
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