design_mom
probably more like my dad than I care to admit
- Joined
- Feb 1, 2007
- Messages
- 6,223
I wonder if you realize how insulting these assumptions are. I've never welshed on a bill...if I have more than others I throw in much more than the difference in cost plus tax plus tip and it's taken off the top....and then we divide the bill evenly. I dine with friends, family, and co-workers. We all like each other and take care of each other. We don't scrounge around trying to take advantage of each other. Who in their right minds would dine with people (and I truly hesitate to call them friends) trying to take advantage of their dining companions?
I do realize that assumptions are insulting... but so are the assumptions that people who prefer separate checks are "cheap."
It sounds like you are also mentally calculating (and paying for) what you ordered -- and I think that's great. I don't see a big difference between mentally calculating what you owe when you order on the expensive side, and mentally calculating what you owe when you order on the inexpensive side. In both cases, you're paying for what you ordered. But people on this thread (not directed at you in particular) want to paint anyone who pays more than their per-person allotment of the check as "very generous" and anyone who pays less as "cheap." Everyone *should* pay for what they order. Separate checks (where available) make it SO much easier and prevent people from taking advantage (again, not directed at you).
I have been in situations where people have taken advantage (or "made a mistake" or whatever). No, these people are not my "friends" but sometimes dining with them cannot be avoided -- either because someone else invited them, or because the situation calls for dining together. And sometimes I'm not really sure who "shorted" everybody else because all the money's on the table and nobody's claiming to put in less than they owe. I just know it wasn't me who put in less.
When we go out with friends we usually get separate checks (not a problem here), everyone orders what they want and pays for what they order, nobody accuses anyone else of being cheap, and there are no hard feelings.

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As has been mentioned, I don't think most people will bother over a couple dollars, but adding $10, $20, or even $50 onto your bill to cover someone else's "mistake" isn't exactly nice.