This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.
Waitress reveals how she busted friend’s boyfriend cheating at restaurant
Suspect your significant other may be playing away? Go and quiz the staff at his favourite bar or restaurant, one waitress advises – revealing why wait staff are likely to know all the details.
According to The Sun, a waitress has claimed that restaurant staff may well be the best placed to know details of a cheating partner or spouse, and revealed how she busted her own friend’s boyfriend cheating on her.
“If you want to find out if your man is cheating on you, ask the server at his favourite restaurant.” The woman, who wished to remain anonymous, said.
The reasoning behind this bold claim is, apparently, the idea that cheaters take their dates to the same restaurant or bar, meaning the wait staff might have an unusually detailed insight into their cheating habits.
She even revealed that after she got a job waitressing at her best friend and her boyfriend’s favourite restaurant, she caught the man seemingly cheating – sat at a table there with another woman.
It is certainly true that hospitality staff are forced to contend with a lot during the course of their time at work.
We recently reported the stories of bartenders who revealed the strangest things that had ever happened to them while they were at work. You can read about their experiences here.
Meanwhile, if you are in a hospitality venue and someone is feeling uncomfortable, one bartender shared a commonly used phrase patrons can use to subtly ask for help at the bar.
And if you are concerned about whether you or your friends’ drink has been spiked, Student Beans released an infographic to help spot the signs. You can see it below:
View this post on Instagram
Related news
Bourgogne wine see global growth despite difficult market conditions