2/5 David I. 1 year ago on Google
I
will
not
be
coming
back
here,
which
is
a
shame
because
I
really
like
this
place
and
want
to
recommend
it,
I
was
thinking
of
trying
a
bunch
of
their
different
pastries
this
month,
now
that
I
recently
reinstated
my
Spending
budget.
As
cozy
as
the
atmosphere
is,
unfortunately,
they
are
“only
open
to
paying
customers.”
My
roommate
and
I
have
visited
this
place
on
a
near-weekly
basis
and
have
always
bought
at
least
one
item
each
time
—
until
today,
when
we
were
confronted.
That
is
understandable,
but
speaking
for
myself,
that
did
make
me
feel
disrespected.
I
wasn’t
hurting
anyone,
and
we
were
the
only
guests
there
at
the
time,
so
it’s
not
like
we
were
taking
space
at
a
fancy
restaurant.
I’ve
test-driven
Audis,
Teslas,
and
Dodges.
I’ve
worn
Rolex
watches.
I
was
never
met
with
unwelcome
dialogue
for
not
buying
anything.
Penny-pinching
like
that
is
simply
not
good
business;
that’s
how
you
lose
friends
and
not
influence
people,
in
my
opinion,
and
in
the
opinions
of
the
debt-free
cash-flow
millionaires
I’m
connected
to.
What
if
I
can
be
a
referral
source?
What
if
I
meet
someone
and
recommend
to
them
your
business?
What
if
I
chose
to
use
that
location
for
meet-and-greets
for
professional
networking,
whether
with
potential
business
partners
or
building
relationship
with
the
ones
I’m
already
working
with,
who
in
turn
have
their
own
colossal
spheres
of
influence?
The
people
I’m
meeting
with
would
have
an
extremely
high
chance
to
buy
something
out
of
urge!
As
much
as
it
pains
me
to
say
it,
that
one
confrontation
cost
them
a
fortune
in
revenue
down
the
line.
Let
this
be
a
lesson
in
how
you
run
your
business,
and
how
you
treat
people,
whether
they’re
giving
you
money
or
not.