American Tipping Culture

tipping culture

Some of the most interesting videos that I’ve seen on YouTube are the ones talking about American culture. The reactions from people who aren’t American, when they learn about our tipping culture in restaurants is quite interesting.

Often it’s hard to see what is American culture, until we step out of it through travel or have it reflected back to us by someone who is not part of the culture. Many cultural practices we don’t think of as such, because they are so obvious and mundane. Like American breakfast culture.

I never thought of it as a thing until someone mentioned to me that Americans are the only ones who have specific breakfast foods. People in other countries will often eat any type of food for breakfast. For instance, I would never think of eating soup for breakfast. Or a salad. Weekend brunch is a different thing, because anything goes there.

But on a random Wednesday morning, I wouldn’t be eating chicken and rice with vegetables. To me that is clearly lunch or dinner food. Breakfast is hot or cold cereal, fruit, coffee, toast, eggs, pancakes, etc. But now I see that’s American breakfast. The more I think about culture, it seems that it’s those things you do, clothes you wear, music you listen to, words you use, and foods you cook, just because. That unspoken “just because” is culture.

There are reasons for it, but it takes some historical and sociological digging to figure out how that custom or practice developed over time. Like how Italian American food was created and is something very different from Italian food in Italy.

There is a long history of how tipping culture developed in the United States, which I won’t go into. But tipping is a very American thing and people from other countries tend to be shocked by it. Most Americans do expect to tip at a restaurant. But more recently Americans are becoming shocked that tipping keeps expanding to include everything.

One thing that surprises me is the amounts that people think are okay for tipping. I was brought up to believe that 20% is the minimum tip at a restaurant. If it’s bad in some way, then it’s okay to give less. But if it’s very good, then give more. As much as you can.

When my father was in college, he worked as a waiter, I think at a place on Beacon Hill, to pay for his expenses and to help his family. So tipping was very important to him personally. From when I was a kid, when we went out to eat, he always made a point of thanking everyone who waited on us and giving the tip personally. Shook their hand, looked them in the eye. He never just left it on the table.

I always thought that most everyone believed the same things, until I started reading comments where people thought that a 15% tip was okay, good even. That was and is still so shocking to me!

It took me until recently to realize that my family had a particular tipping culture. When going out in a group, often we don’t know what other people leave for a tip. Even if we do, we tend to not know their personal experience growing up with tipping and I don’t think that most people talk about it. Or do they? What do you think?

Eye Drops Recalled

This wasn’t even the post I planned to write tonight, but I just heard rather upsetting news about recalled eye drops.

I remember a few months ago hearing that several people went blind, some needed their eyeballs removed and others died due to infections. It was really shocking and scary. I use lubricant eye drops and so does my mom. None of the brands that I heard about were ones that we used. I later heard about the recall expanding and wondered if it would end up impacting me at some point.

When I checked the list of eye drops mentioned in the report tonight, some are ones that I use. This picture is the bottle that I’ve been using and just threw away. On the label, I only see a Lot number and expiration date. The list provides NDC numbers and I couldn’t tell from a quick search if it was the same as the Lot number. It’s getting ready to expire next month anyway and I have a new bottle from a brand not on the list.

If you use these types of drops, definitely check the list right away before continuing to use them. We do so much to protect our health and well-being, but there is only so much we can control.

Persistence

persistence in climbing

It’s November 15th! That means I’m halfway there to my goal of posting everyday this month. Persistence prevails!

I’m certainly not wishing time away though. This month, like every other month seems to go by so quickly.  However, documenting each day adds something. Not that the time feels slower, but somehow it has more weight to it. Persistence requires paying more attention.

Today, I’m feeling better than yesterday, but still not feeling great. I ran out of cough medicine earlier and could feel a stunning reversal, but was able to get some more. Apparently the cough medicine does more to help than the tea and everything else.

Also, it’s better if I don’t speak. Once I start talking, the cough returns and I start losing my voice. So as someone was advised on The Golden Bachelor, I will zip my lip!

Anyway, I plan to get back to working tomorrow. Unfortunately, all my paid sick time is gone. I’ll make up as much time as possible without wearing myself out.

Language Learning – Update 1

language learning with Coursera

Back in early October, I decided to study Korean and French. I studied French in high school and freshman year of college. For Korean, I’m studying from the ground up. Since I’d like to track my language learning progress, I’ll update here on the blog, like a series. Because there are so many aspects to learning languages, it’s a lot to cover.

So how is it going? Ça va bien!

Obviously, I have a head start with French. So that is where I’m devoting most of my time. I’m using the Duolingo app and love it! It’s very convenient using it on my phone and I usually end up “studying” for longer than planned, because it doesn’t feel like studying. It’s set up like a game. But I can tell that I’m learning. It allows me to listen to French, speak it, read it and write it. Which is quite an amazing tool. The first week when I tried speaking, I was fumbling over my words and felt my mouth contorting. I forgot how physical speaking is when the sounds are unfamiliar. I hadn’t spoken any French in so long!

A friend, who is using Duolingo to study Portuguese, was the one who recommended it. I don’t think of myself as a particularly competitive person, but I find that I am motivated by seeing how well that I’m doing and what’s needed to perform better.

The first month or so most of the words were familiar, but I definitely still needed and need a lot of help with grammar. Now I’m learning many new words. Some just because I never learned them before. Other words didn’t exist back when I was studying. Technology changed everything!

Oh and I’m using the free version if you’re wondering. There are options to buy, but I haven’t used them and don’t plan to. My goal for using this right now is to brush up my skills. Early to mid next year, I may possibly take an online course in advanced French and/or hire a tutor.

language learning with Duolingo

For Korean, I am taking baby steps and my progress is so very slow. I’m using Coursera to learn Hangeul.

When I started the course, I thought that it was free. But when I went to submit a quiz today, it wouldn’t let me without upgrading to paid. And I couldn’t move forward with the lessons either. I was able to do all that before in this course, so I’m not sure what changed. I would not be surprised if in around five years or so, I receive a notification that I’m eligible to participate in a class action lawsuit of people who felt they were pressured and/or misled into paying for a “free course.”

It’s not that much, so I paid. Also, since I took a rather in depth marketing course several years ago for free.

That’s the first update for now. Stay tuned for more on my language learning journey!

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Images: Screenshots of Coursera and Duolingo

Sunset Behind Oxalis

oxalis

The oxalis is happy and drama free today. I watered it a lot recently and that keeps it perked up. If it’s not watered several times a week, it wilts. But within a half an hour of watering, it will be happy again!

It really does take a few months to get used to a new plant and the oxalis is a plant species that’s very new to me. Speaking of which, my African violet has lost all it’s flowers and I don’t see any new buds. It needs repotting and maybe some fertilizer too. I hope this is not a short-lived experiment.

I still love my balcony sunsets, although the windows need cleaning. Not today! I cleaned the freezer and fridge, but realized that I need more bins and soup freezer molds. I ordered them and should have them next week.

Right now I’m doing meal prep for the week. I cooked some salmon, onions and asparagus and am getting ready to cook some farro. Any baking will have to wait until tomorrow. I’m thinking of making some chocolate scones and using the pumpkin spice latte in place of the milk. I can’t drink it plain, so I’ll cook with it. It could be good for some French toast too!