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He Tried to Quietly Correct a Coworker’s Table Manners, Then HR Got Involved

by Sunny Nguyen
May 15, 2026
in Social Issues

A senior salesperson thought he was doing a younger colleague a favor after an awkward client dinner. Instead, he found himself sitting in front of HR trying to explain why a conversation about steak knives had somehow turned into an accusation of discrimination.

The man, who said he has spent years working internationally in both the US and Asia, explained that client dinners are a regular part of his job. In his industry, those dinners are not casual social outings.

They are extensions of the sales process, where clients quietly form opinions about professionalism, confidence, and attention to detail.

He Tried to Quietly Correct a Coworker’s Table Manners, Then HR Got Involved
Not the actual photo

That is why one particular dinner stuck with him so strongly.

'AITA for telling my coworker they have poor table manners?'

Throwaway account here. I also want to preface before getting into it that I am European, but I have lived in the US and in Asia.

I am aware that different cultures have different ways of using utensils and etiquette when it comes to eating. I have eaten with a knife and fork, chopsticks and my...

Here’s the situation: I work in sales in a big city in the USA. I travel a lot for work and go to many client dinners.

A few weeks ago, I was at a client dinner with a junior salesperson on my team, and the way they were using their utensils and overall behavior at the...

They would hold their fork in their hand like a fist and could not cut their steak properly using a knife.

I understand that it comes from privilege to learn how to eat in a nice restaurant, but this person comes from a wealthy suburb and went to private school, as...

I observed multiple people at the table, including our clients, looking at my colleague with strange looks and making slide glances. It was awkward.

The next day, I had coffee with this colleague before we were supposed to go a meeting at our clients’ office.

At the coffee shop, I decided to bring up how my colleague was using their knife and fork at dinner. I said something along the lines of, “hey, I noticed...

I would be happy to show you the way that I use my knife and fork, or I could send you a YouTube video”.

They were extremely embarrassed and offended by my comment. I dropped it. We went to the client meeting, and they didn’t really interact with me much after.

Now, last week, I got a message by someone in our HR group to speak to me. My colleague had reported me to HR for “discriminating” against them, and i...

I am the type of person that would want to know if I had food stuck in my teeth, or if I had sat in something that stained my pants.

I told my colleague this feedback in a private setting, not in front of other people. I cannot believe this has created an issue at work now.. AITA for bringing...

EDIT: I didn’t expect my post to get this much traction! Thank you for the feedback here. Some people have asked questions and I’ll add more context here:

Firstly, when my colleague told HR that I was being “discriminatory”, it was in a sense that they felt that I had embarrassed them about their behavior, not related to...

If it was, I would never have posted this in a public forum on the internet. HR said to me that this person came to them because they felt that...

Second, I am not this persons boss. We are peers. We are on the same sales team but I am more senior to them. They joined the company 6 months...

Based on the feedback here, I’m going to apologize to my colleague and explain my side of the story to HR.

I absolutely meant my feedback as a way to guide a young person on my team as in m

y company, senior salespeople are expected to be mentoring to younger people. In my profession, there is a lot of etiquette and expectations around working with clients.

I have lived in the US for 10+ years and have found that corporate America also has specific standards, for better or for worse.

I appreciate the people in this thread saying that I had good intentions but that it’s best not to make comments on people’s behavior, especially in American culture.

SECOND EDIT: I wanted to add a further comment here, as there has been a great deal of thoughtful discussion in this thread about invisible disabilities and how people may...

I have replied to various comments clarifying that my colleague does not have a disability or mobility issues, and that this was not the reason they reported me to HR...

My colleague comes from a privileged background and has never been told “no” in their life, having coasted along with poor manners going largely unchecked.

At the dinner, they used their cutlery in a manner that was poor etiquette, alongside other behaviors such as speaking with their mouth full and gesticulating with their cutlery.

I appreciate now that singling out the cutlery usage in my original post is what prompted so much commentary around disability.

I should also provide some more context: junior salespeople do not typically attend client dinners of this nature within their first few months.

I arranged for this person to be invited specifically because they are shadowing me on this deal.

As part of that arrangement, we have had debrief meetings and they have sat in on three external calls with this client prior to the dinner.

I suspect this context was necessary to add, given that several people have suggested it was not my place to mentor them.

Shadowing a senior salesperson is entirely standard practice in sales organisations.

I also understand that HR is legally prohibited from disclosing whether someone has a disability, and that there are workplace protections in place for people with disabilities.

Had I been formally written up or reprimanded, I would have been entitled to know the grounds for that action, which would need to constitute discrimination.

My colleague is, in my view, using “discrimination” as a means of weaponising HR and leveraging the system against me.

I think the conversation around disability is genuinely important, and I am grateful to those with disabilities who have shared their experiences in the comments, but that is simply not...

A junior coworker on his team had recently joined the company fresh out of university and was shadowing him on an important deal. During dinner with clients at an upscale restaurant, the younger employee’s table manners became impossible to ignore.

According to the poster, the coworker held utensils in a clenched fist, struggled to cut steak properly, spoke with food in their mouth, and gestured with cutlery while talking.

Worse, clients appeared to notice.

He said he caught multiple side glances and uncomfortable expressions around the table. Nobody said anything directly, but the tension was there.

The salesperson described the situation as quietly embarrassing, especially because client-facing etiquette is considered part of the job in his field.

So the next morning, before another meeting with the same client, he decided to address it privately over coffee.

That decision is what detonated the whole situation.

The salesperson said he approached the topic gently. He told his colleague that their utensil use came across as “a bit informal” and offered to either demonstrate how he personally handled formal dining or even send a YouTube video about business dining etiquette.

The younger employee did not take it well.

According to the post, they became visibly embarrassed and distant afterward. A week later, the senior salesperson was contacted by HR because the colleague had filed a complaint accusing him of being “discriminatory.”

At that point, what may have originally been an awkward mentoring conversation suddenly became a workplace issue with real consequences.

The internet, unsurprisingly, had a lot to say about it.

Unlike many workplace-related AITA threads that split sharply down the middle, this one leaned heavily in favor of the original poster.

A large number of commenters argued that etiquette matters in client-facing corporate environments whether people like it or not. In industries built around relationships, presentation often becomes part of professional performance.

Several users pointed out that this is especially true in international business settings, where dining customs can directly affect negotiations and client trust.

One commenter bluntly wrote, “People commenting clearly don’t work with clients.”

Still, even supporters admitted the topic sits in an uncomfortable gray area. Discussions about manners can quickly feel personal because they are often tied to class, upbringing, culture, or even disability.

A few commenters initially worried there might have been an undisclosed physical issue affecting how the younger employee used utensils.

The original poster later clarified multiple times that there was no disability involved and that HR never suggested otherwise. According to him, the complaint centered around embarrassment, not accessibility concerns.

That clarification changed the tone of the discussion for many readers.

What makes the story interesting is that both sides probably felt justified from their own perspective.

The senior salesperson believed he was protecting both the employee and the company from future embarrassment. He even chose a private setting specifically to avoid humiliating the coworker publicly.

But for the younger employee, the conversation may have felt deeply patronizing no matter how politely it was delivered.

There is also a generational layer underneath the conflict. Older corporate cultures often treat blunt professional correction as normal mentorship. Younger workers, especially in modern HR-driven environments, may interpret unsolicited personal feedback as intrusive or inappropriate.

Neither side necessarily entered the conversation looking for a fight. They were just operating with very different assumptions about workplace boundaries.

To the poster’s credit, he did eventually soften his stance. After reading responses online, he said he planned to apologize to the coworker while also calmly explaining the context to HR. He maintained that his intentions were genuinely professional, not malicious.

At the same time, he clearly remained frustrated by what he viewed as an overreaction and an abuse of HR procedures.

And honestly, that tension is probably why the story resonated with so many people. Almost everyone has experienced some version of this problem at work. One person thinks they are offering guidance. The other hears criticism and judgment.

Sometimes the gap between those two interpretations is enormous.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Most commenters sided with the salesperson and argued that etiquette absolutely matters in high-level client interactions.

Sal_Amanderr − NTA. These people commenting don’t work with clients. It’s absolutely okay to mentor a newer person on proper etiquette when interacting with key clients.

Reporting you to HR just further illustrates that they have a lot to learn. It seems like most people on this site work at f__king chipotle nowadays. The lack of...

unreliable_ibex − Fork and knife use doesn't read as privilege to me, just cultural knowledge. Either way NTA. You told him politely in private.

Dont_mind_if − NTA. First it is not discrimination to tell someone they are doing something wrong. Also is HR going to foster an environment where people run to HR when...

Many felt the coworker’s reaction to constructive criticism was more concerning than the manners issue itself.

whatisakafka − NTA I don’t know if people saying you are have worked in client facing positions that include things like meals with clients,

but a more senior colleague giving etiquette advice to a junior colleague is 100% within the norm when part of your job is meeting with clients. That’s how people learn...

Sure, but you have to be able to receive feedback at work on areas for improvement without throwing a tantrum about it

kurokomainu − NTA I would tell HR that you brought it up tactfully in private and you consider it a work issue because of how it is perceived by clients.

If they consider it not your place to bring up, no matter how tactfully, then you suggest that it at least be considered an issue for someone they judge appropriate...

At the last dinner you noticed clients giving him strange looks and side glances.

It's not a non-issue. You were hoping to give him a heads up in a way that would let him deal with the issue in private, without involving others, in...

You are willing to never speak of it again and to leave the issue in their hands. ETA: when you have to eat dinner with clients as part of your...

If you don't have them, to the point you are acting in a manner that is embarrassing to yourself and to your company by extension, you should be able to...

There is the matter of from whom, when, and how, but OP trying to give a junior colleague a gentle heads up on improving said skills is not "discriminatory"

and someone needed to do it unless eating like a pig the way it's fine to do in your own living room in front of the TV has to considered...

Perhaps scratching your ass is fine too. Obviously that's not true. The issue had to be brought up by someone.

Others pointed out that business dining is basically a performance, fair or unfair. Clients notice everything.

PurpleEmotional1401 − NTA. If clients were giving the fork-abuser the side eye then he was damaging your company's reputation.

You could have raised this with his line manager or HR but you chose to handle it privately and discreetly.

The fact that he got b__t hurt speaks badly of him, not of you. I don't have high expectations for his future in a sales environment.

G-reeper66 − Let HR know that this person is likely to lead to lost clients as it was brought up by one at a meal!

Leavemeal0nedude − NTA. Especially because it affected your clients' impression of the dinner

wes0103 − INFO: does your company do a lot of international work and meetings? If so, proper etiquette is essential for work in Asia and many places of Europe.

ArthurRoan − How embarrassing for the company to have such an insecure and boorish person representing them.

How can you trust somebody with your business if they cant even be bothered to learn to eat in a polite manner NTA

In some industries, etiquette is treated like a real professional skill. In others, bringing it up at all feels elitist and unnecessary. The problem is that people rarely agree on where that line is until somebody ends up in an HR meeting.

The salesperson may have genuinely wanted to help. The coworker may have genuinely felt humiliated.

And somewhere in between those two realities sits modern office culture, quietly wondering whether anyone can give honest feedback anymore without triggering a formal complaint.

 

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/0 votes | 0%

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen writes for DailyHighlight.com, focusing on social issues and the stories that matter most to everyday people. She’s passionate about uncovering voices and experiences that often go unheard, blending empathy with insight in every article. Outside of work, Sunny can be found wandering galleries, sipping coffee while people-watching, or snapping photos of everyday life - always chasing moments that reveal the world in a new light.

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