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I hesitate to post this youtube video only because I fear spreading ignorance farther, but it’s such a lovely look into self-involvement, I had to do it.  She’s like a breath of fresh hot air.

To tip, or not to tip?

My mom and dad had no idea of the concept. I remember my mom leaving a few quarters and waving happily to the waiter at Sizzler as we left, our purses secretly stuffed with extra cheese toast and extra fruit from the salad bar. She’d say, “Thank you! It was wonderful!” as we walked out, also stealing more fruit as we walk past the salad bar.  ”By the way, waiter?  Can we have just a few more pieces of cheese toast?  For the road? (Bat eyelashes.)”

Tipping. It’s the bane of being Asian-American, our forefathers have tipped so badly that people think that we, as a collective, are cheap sons-of-bitches.  I had a Chinese ex-boyfriend who would leave insanely huge amounts of money as a tip because he wanted America to know that “not all Chinese people are cheap!”  (He was a lovely guy btw.)

Trust me, I’ve fought many times with my mother. “Here in America, we tip the service if we liked how they treated us…” “Why? It’s their job!” “I know mom, but they make less so they’re expected to make up their wages in tips.” “That’s not my fault they decided to take that job!”

That’s basically the fight. -”In America we tip, ” -”That’s their fault.”

I have opinions on tipping. They’re completely biased because I spent many years working hard as a waiter (or as a ‘server’ as they are now called).  I have endured people telling me that what I did was work a monkey could do (and implying that I must have the intelligence of Mr. Chips).  I have had people treat me like moving furniture… until they met me at a party of a mutual friend’s.  (There is a now-famous actor who once spoke to me as if I was someone who only understood the barest of English.  Imagine his surprise when he started dating my best friend!  Boy, did he try to win points with me…) I still judge people by the way they treat hired help… after being ‘hired help’ for so long, I can see where someone’s perception of another person’s humanity stops.

What it comes down to is: I didn’t make the system. I just bought into the system. The system, as it stands in America, is “when you go out to eat at a sit-down restaurant and the service is good, you tip 15% or higher.” So when I go out, if I can’t afford to tip, I eat fast-food. Period. No questions.

Now I know a lot of people who think that system should be changed.  Sure!  I agree.  But take that up with the owner, not the waiter who is frantically running back and forth trying to talk to you and to a surly kitchen staff at the same time.

What do you think about tipping?