GhostlyHitchhiker
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2005
- Messages
- 652
lbgraves said:Along with logan's excellent post, this one is very true about how we feel. Yes, someone not adhering to the dress code/suggestions can impact your dining experience. On our last cruise this happened on formal night. Around 7 pm (during early seating so yes, they were unfashionably late to dinner) a family of four at the the table next to us decided to make a statement to the effect of "it's our vacation & we don't care what anyone else thinks." They were all "dressed" in tank tops / muscle shirts and shorts...like you would wear to work out. When approached by the dining room manager they loudly voiced their opinion of the dress code so that everyone could hear them. The funny thing about it was they had been sitting next to us in Palo the night before dressed to the nines. It wasn't a matter of them not having the appropriate clothes...they just wanted to make a scene. I felt so sorry for our servers...who were also handling their table.
Things like this will happen no matter what the dress code is. There will ALWAYS be people who want to "make a statement" or just not adhere to the rules at all. Why should those of us who follow the guidelines be made to adhere to stricter rules to "stop" this from happening?
If you have ever worked in retail or the service industry at all, you will know that there are people that can never be pleased no matter what you do. There will always be people who will think they are exempt from the rules no matter how strict or lax they are. There are always going to be those people who just ENJOY breaking the rules. And finally there are those that just don't CARE.
Making rules based on what those people *might* do is not the way to go. You base rules on what the majority will do, and the majority of people stick to DCL's Guidelines, no matter what they are. No one should ever be looked down upon or thought less of for following DCL's rules.