Early in my career I went to Atlanta on business. I didn’t know anyone in town so I was on my own for dinner. I could have grabbed a burger but hey, the company was paying. So I treated myself to a nice dinner, or rather, I had the company treat me to a nice dinner. It was at a quaint little restaurant that served peanut soup. I’d never tasted peanut soup and had to have it.

I told the hostess, "just one," and followed her upstairs. The dining room was crowded. Ugh. I felt all eyes on me. I imagined them staring in pity. Pariah in the room! Let’s all stare at the pariah!Who_says_eating_with_others_is_alwa

Of course, no one was judging. They were busy eating and talking to their companions. Or maybe they were judging. But so what? What were they saying? "She’s all by herself?" I knew that.

Why is it so hard to dine alone? It’s the mystery of the ages.

Let’s flip the tables. When I’m eating out with
friends and see solo diners I hardly give it a second thought.  Maybe I wonder
if they’re in town on business. Maybe I’m glad it’s not me. But I don’t
think, "How pathetic," or, "He must have been the kid who ate paste
in kindergarten." And in short order, I stop paying any attention at all.

Funny how easy it is to walk into a bar if I know
someone’s going to join me in a sec. Yet, if I had to go in alone I’d feel that curtain of self-consciousness descend. Clearly, it’s all about my own attitude.

Some people I know are so uncomfortable eating out alone that they’ll get
room service. I find that depressing. I don’t eat in my
bedroom at home. Why should I do so when I’m away? Besides, if I’m
in a new town, I like to see and do as much as I can before heading out of Dodge. 

These days I don’t have any qualms about solo dining. Okay, you caught me. I
have some qualms. But I’m much better at it than I used to be. I bring something to read so I
don’t feel antsy while waiting for my food. Often it’s too dark
inside or there’s no room on the table for a book. So I look around and daydream.

At least I get to eat wherever I want. Last week, while vacationing with friends, I really wanted to try a place called Chimayo’s, in Park City, Utah. Several people had raved about it. But a friend
nixed it because Southwestern food doesn’t appeal to her. Ah, well. Compromise time.

Now, when dining alone, I try to remember not to ask for
"just one." Couples don’t say, "just two." Families don’t say, "just five." Instead, I ask for "a table for one, please."

Oh, and I also stay away from peanut soup. It’s way too rich for me.

Photo: Ellen Perlman. "Who says eating with family is always so great?"

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10 responses to “Table for one, and I don’t care who’s looking”

  1. Steve Avatar

    Hi Ellen,
    Medill ’90 here… I sent you a note after you posted this site on the listserv. Glad to see that you’re keeping up with the site.
    I spent 2 weeks alone in Yellowstone this summer researching 2008 Fodor’s Guide… Twice I went to fine restaurants (Old Faithful Inn & Lake Hotel) and let the host know that I was solo and wouldn’t mind being seated with another solo traveler if they were interested… in both cases, another solo traveler appeared and was offered company by the host, and in both cases they declined and preferred to sit alone. (Or they scanned the waiting area, saw me and decided I was an axe murderer.) Oh well… I was just trying to be friendly and get at least one more opinion for my research. C’est la vie. Happy Blogging!

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  2. Ellen Avatar

    Hi Steve,
    Thanks for checking in with your story, and for checking back on the site.
    That’s a bummer about those other solo people not wanting company at dinner.
    You’re NOT an ax murderer, are you? 😉

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  3. placeswegopeoplewesee Avatar

    I travel alone often, and although I don’t hate sitting at a table alone, I don’t like it either. I do what so many others do — eat at the bar. This, I love! I either chat with the bartender, strike up conversations with fellow bar diners, or just sit without drawing attention to myself.

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  4. Ellen Avatar

    Placeswegopeoplewesee makes an excellent point. I’m so used to sitting at tables for one these days that I forget how “homey” it is to sit at the bar. The job of bartenders is to make people feel at home and other solo diners or drinkers (and I mean “drinkers” in the nicest way) are often up for a chat. The last time I ended up at the bar it was because the wait for a table at a Baltimore restaurant was so long. I had a really nice, comfortable dinner there.

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  5. Pizza Diavola Avatar
    Pizza Diavola

    I saw your blog linked from Arthur Frommer’s, and as I travel alone most of the time, came over for a look see. I usually go out to eat by myself, too, and the thing is, I never felt self-conscious about it until I started to hear the “people look down on single diners” meme. So I think that it’s not actually hard to dine alone, we’re just shamed into thinking it is and so it becomes so.
    I’ve gotten over the self-consciousness again and although eating with other people is nice, I’m not a social diner anyway–when I go out for dinner I like to focus on the food.
    Another vote for bars–at some restaurants, you can also watch the cooks making antipasti there, which is fun.

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  6. Ellen Avatar

    Pizza,
    It’s great that you never felt self-conscious dining alone. I’m not sure whether people look down on single diners. The only important thing is whether the solo diner think they do. I, for one, no longer care. Other solo diners have to wrestle with those feelings for themselves. To me, it seems a shame that someone would miss having a lovely dinner out because they worry about what others think.

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  7. Pizza Diavola Avatar
    Pizza Diavola

    “I’m not sure whether people look down on single diners.”
    Yup. I don’t think they do (as you pointed out in your post, they’re generally thinking about their own dinners!), but I think there’s a perception/stereotype that people do, which ends up mattering.

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  8. Ellen Avatar

    If I can go all psychobabble on you, it only matters if people THINK it matters. My father once brought home a ceramic thing from the Netherlands which said, in Dutch of course, “no matter what you do, people will talk.” The point being, do what you want because you can’t prevent others from gossiping anyway. When solo dining, you have a choice to say, “I don’t care what anyone thinks of me,” or at least, “I’m not going to let it stop me. Not always easy, but the choice is there.

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  9. Ted Avatar

    Like many solo travelers, I find that treating myself to dinner at a nice restaurant is simply too daunting. But for some reason, eating lunch alone at the same nice restaurant doesn’t bother me very much. I don’t know why that is, but I’m grateful for it. So that’s what I do on solo trips.
    Maybe someday I’ll be able to pass the Ultimate Solo Travel Challenge of walking into a fancy restaurant on a Saturday night as if I owned the place, PROUDLY asking the host/ess for “A Table for One, Please!,” and then eating a nice dinner while happily watching the smooching couples at adjacent tables without the slightest bit of unease. But until that day (which may never arrive), I’ll just make lunch my main meal and enjoy a low-key picnic dinner.

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  10. Ellen Avatar

    Hi All,
    I see this is a compelling issue for lots of people, me included.
    I’ve got several more stories on successful dining alone experiences and I will focus on getting those up on boldlygosolo.
    But I’m also going to have to think of a challenge for all of you out there.
    As psychological as this issue clearly is (meaning, it’s mostly in our heads – as in you can do lunch but not dinner) I think if I made a challenge out of it, people would rise to the occasion.
    What do you think? As in, “I’m not all alone eating by myself, I’m here in this restaurant to win a mug (or something) from boldlygosolo…” 😉

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