Mike Filigenzi wrote:I have to come out and say that I would certainly be disappointed if my expensive and highly anticipated New Year's Eve celebration were to be prematurely ended by someone else having a heart attack. That would in no way lessen my compassion for the person suffering the medical emergency and for the restaurant staff
Exactly. A kind stranger in another seat and I once helped a sweet 93 year old woman to the bathroom on a flight from DC to Los Angeles where family members were waiting for her. At the start of the flight, we had volunteered to look after her during the flight. After awhile we noticed she hadn't come out. We summoned a stewardess--anyway, she died in there. Tragic, and I was so upset I cried the rest of the way to L.A., but in no way did I mistake what happened to HER and the poor family members waiting on the ground in L.A. with the police and the ambulance and all that for something that had happened to me. At no moment did I think, "this really ruined my flight." Stuff happens, and I was just a mildly involved bystander. I would never have imagined anyone else in that situation feeling any differently.
But I guess there are obviously people in this world with an outsized sense of entitlement--be it to things, attention, or a good time. And obviously this bitch be one of those. I doubt if she's learned a lesson. Someone who could write a critique like that can't take responsibility for her own actions, she'll just feel even more victimized. As for her job--she may not have her station rental get severed by the salon she works for, but she'll at least surely have the discomfiture and consequence of losing clients. And that's as it should be. If she can't look in the mirror and see herself for the lousy human being she is, maybe she'll see it in the faces of others.
And to Jo Ann--what a horrible experience for you! I love that you felt such compassion for the restaurant and the other diners.