Close Menu
Friar Street KitchenFriar Street Kitchen
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Friar Street KitchenFriar Street Kitchen
    Subscribe
    • Home
    • Food
    • Menu
    • Health
    • Restaurants
    • Lifestyle
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
    • Terms of Service
    • Disclaimer
    • About Us
    Friar Street KitchenFriar Street Kitchen
    Home » The Worst Habit Diners Have That’s Making Servers Quit
    Lifestyle

    The Worst Habit Diners Have That’s Making Servers Quit

    Jawdah Hannad BasaraBy Jawdah Hannad BasaraJuly 15, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Most diners never consider this particular moment. You gesture for additional napkins from your server. A lemon wedge after five minutes. Next, additional dressing. Then another spoon, almost apologetically. Every request takes a few seconds. They all seem innocuous. One-timing is what servers call it, and it turns out that they detest it more than practically anything else you can do at a table.

    In the summer of 2025, waitstaff started speaking candidly about how these piecemeal requests cause a shift, which led to the habit’s moment of public reckoning. Early in her career, a server at a chain restaurant in Utah acknowledged that the frequent back-and-forth caused her stress and slowed things down when she could least afford it. Another, who works on an Asian-fusion floor in Florida, put it more bluntly: she hated people during a peak dinner rush. Shockingly, someone in the hospitality industry would say that aloud, and the fact that she said it at all shows how little tolerance there is in this field.

    The Worst Habit Diners Have That's Making Servers Quit
    The Worst Habit Diners Have That’s Making Servers Quit

    Diners seldom notice that timing is important. An additional trip to the kitchen is insignificant on a slow Tuesday afternoon. One needless lap across the dining room can throw a server’s entire rhythm off course on a busy Saturday night when twelve tables are vying for customers’ attention, and food is spoiling under the heat lamps. It’s a logistical issue disguised as a civility issue. It also compounds.

    The context in which this habit now exists is more difficult to ignore. Workers at restaurants have been quitting, sometimes abruptly, mid-shift, or by throwing their aprons in the trash. Early in 2026, stories gathered from former employees read more like breaking points than grievances: a manager ordering an employee to retrieve his phone from a toilet, a twenty-year veteran printing blank receipt paper to write her resignation on, and a customer handing over a plate of bagged dog waste and calling it trash. People don’t leave the industry because of one-timing alone. However, it’s the kind of low-grade, persistent friction that prevents the larger humiliations from being absorbed.

    Speaking with those who have held these positions gives the impression that servers and diners are subtly assigning blame. Customers forget to ask for everything they need, and servers don’t anticipate it, according to one Texas server. Most likely, she is correct. A competent server brings extra napkins before anyone asks and reads a table full of young children. Before flagging someone down, a good table polls itself for thirty seconds. When everyone contributes, the issue largely goes away.

    It remains to be seen if diners will truly change. The appetizer course has a tendency to read, nod at, and forget etiquette advice. Nevertheless, there is no cost associated with this fix. Consider the future. Make one inquiry. Before you raise your hand, check with your table. It’s difficult to ignore the fact that even the tiniest amenities in a restaurant prevent the staff from leaving, and more of them are doing so these days than the business can afford.

    Diners Worst Habit
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Jawdah Hannad Basara
    • Website

    Jawdah Hannad Basara is a food and lifestyle writer who covers the narratives, trends, and discussions influencing our eating habits. She writes with the kind of curiosity that transforms a straightforward meal into a larger narrative, covering everything from restaurant culture and viral kitchen experiments to the health science behind common ingredients at Friar Street Kitchen.Her work encompasses dining, wellness, recipes, and the cultural influences that shape what is served to us. Jawdah contributes astute observation and a readable voice to the whole range of food journalism, whether she's dissecting a TikTok culinary trend, exploring what your comfort food says about you, or wondering why the Sunday roast might be in danger.

    Related Posts

    I Tried Phone-Free Sundays for a Month — It Changed My Brain

    July 14, 2026

    The Restaurant Trend Killing Off Tipping Culture in the UK

    July 14, 2026

    Nicola Sturgeon Weight Gain Rumours vs. The Truth: What Actually Happened to Scotland’s Former First Minister

    July 13, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    You must be logged in to post a comment.

    Weight Gain

    The Best High-Calorie Weight Gain Recipes You Can Make With a Single Pan and Basic Ingredients

    By Jawdah Hannad BasaraJuly 15, 20260

    Everyone believes that gaining weight is a simple issue. Eat more—done. However, anyone who has…

    The Worst Habit Diners Have That’s Making Servers Quit

    July 15, 2026

    Why Dark Kitchens Are Quietly Taking Over Your Food Delivery Apps

    July 15, 2026

    5 UK Restaurants With the Best Sunday Roast (According to Locals, Not Tourists)

    July 15, 2026

    The Gimmicky Restaurant Trends That Need to Die in 2026

    July 14, 2026

    The Underground Supper Clubs Replacing Traditional Restaurants Across Europe

    July 14, 2026

    5 Subtle Signs You’re Emotionally Exhausted (And Don’t Even Know It)

    July 14, 2026

    The 90-Second Rule That Stops Anxiety Attacks Before They Start

    July 14, 2026

    I Tried Phone-Free Sundays for a Month — It Changed My Brain

    July 14, 2026

    The Ancient Meditation Practice Doctors Are Now Prescribing for Depression

    July 14, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    © 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.