What Working at Restaurants Can Teach Writers

When I was nine, I decided I was going to start my own restaurant. I made a sign that said “Gourmet Platay” (yes, platay isn’t a word, but the rhyme rolled off the tongue) and taped it in our front window. I added OPEN right below it. I placed a table in the middle of the living room with a fake floral arrangement my grandmother had given us, and I figured it would be moments before an interesting customer came through the door. I didn’t know what I’d offer on the menu, as our house wasn’t stocked with the type of food I imagined Gourmet Platay serving, but I knew I’d figure it out. I set out two water glasses and found a pen and notepad and waited. I waited and waited until one of my older brothers saw the sign and took it down. He said, “You can’t just start a restaurant like that.” I didn’t know then that one day I’d create another restaurant—in book form this time. But I had to figure out the business first. When I was fifteen, I begged my parents to let me take a job as a busser at a seafood restaurant. I wanted my own money, and The Galley was a seemingly-fancy place where a lot of teenagers worked. It had a nautical theme with porthole windows, fake lobsters on the wall, and a captain’s wheel; baskets of dinner rolls and a giant salad bar. Businesses held their holiday parties there, and it was the spot for graduation lunches. On New Year’s Eve, reservations were impossible to get. When I applied for a job, they told me I needed a tuxedo shirt and black pants and that I would start that weekend. I didn’t know then that one day I’d create another restaurant—in book form this time. But I had to figure out the business first. I remember my first shift—spilling water down a woman’s blouse and dropping a tray. I remember the hostess told me the tablecloth was crooked, so I had to redo a whole setting. I remember […]

Click here to view original page at What Working at Restaurants Can Teach Writers

© 2024, wcadmin. All rights reserved, Writers Critique, LLC Unless otherwise noted, all posts remain copyright of their respective authors.

0 Reviews ( 0 out of 0 )

Share the Post:

Related Posts

A note to our visitors

This website has updated its privacy policy in compliance with changes to European Union data protection law, for all members globally. We’ve also updated our Privacy Policy to give you more information about your rights and responsibilities with respect to your privacy and personal information. Please read this to review the updates about which cookies we use and what information we collect on our site. By continuing to use this site, you are agreeing to our updated privacy policy.

small c popup

Let's have a chat

Get in touch.

Help us Grow.

Join today – $0 Free

Days :
Hours :
Minutes :
Seconds