You're at your favorite diner, you're there regularly, semi- regularly. Eventually your server will address you by some shorthand term of endearment, which will let you know you're officially a regular. Which do you prefer?
Only bring it up because I've finally been upgraded to My Dear status at my Friday lunch spot today. Only took a few months. Reminded me that it took me a year and a half to get upgraded to Hon status by my old supermarket cashier.
Re: Service Industry Term of Endearment: Hon vs My Dear
2I love a good Hon. Always makes me smile a little.
My Dear seems too intimate, would kinda weird me out.
My Dear seems too intimate, would kinda weird me out.
Re: Service Industry Term of Endearment: Hon vs My Dear
3When I moved back to Texas from Arizona 20 years ago, I moved to Alvin, a smallish town South of Houston. I was weirded out by the way women servers called me baby. I eventually got used to it. Baby ftw.
Re: Service Industry Term of Endearment: Hon vs My Dear
5I feel like that would weird me out because I'd be into it.
Re: Service Industry Term of Endearment: Hon vs My Dear
6I’ll take either of those over any dude (always a dude) calling me “big guy” or “chief”.
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Old band: www.burnpermits.bandcamp.com
Older band: www.policeteeth.bandcamp.com
Re: Service Industry Term of Endearment: Hon vs My Dear
8Yes.
Prefer "Love" (with English accent if possible) myself. Of the two options, I'll take "Hon."
Re: Service Industry Term of Endearment: Hon vs My Dear
9"Slugger" is the best.tallchris wrote: Fri Mar 29, 2024 2:55 pm I’ll take either of those over any dude (always a dude) calling me “big guy” or “chief”.
Re: Service Industry Term of Endearment: Hon vs My Dear
10Voted for “hon”. Very quick. Doesn’t really imply anything deeper. It works.
jason (he/him/his) from volo (illinois)