Why do people keep restaurant menus as souvenirs?
A menu sometimes remembers the evening better than the people who shared it.
People keep restaurant menus as souvenirs because menus often survive as witnesses to moments people do not want to lose. A dinner on a honeymoon, a café discovered during a difficult year, or a favorite neighborhood restaurant that later closed can remain alive through something as ordinary as a folded menu.
At first glance, keeping menus seems irrational. They are easy to replace and rarely expensive. Yet their value rarely comes from the paper itself. The menu remembers where people sat, what they ordered, who they were with, and sometimes who they were becoming.
Over time, the menu stops representing food and starts representing a period of life. The visible object stays the same, but the emotional meaning grows. This is where Emotional Anchoring quietly appears. The object becomes a bridge to a memory that might otherwise fade.
Donald Norman has noted that objects can carry emotional meaning far beyond their practical use. Restaurant menus illustrate this beautifully because they often remain meaningful long after the meal has been forgotten.
People think they keep menus to remember what they ate. More often, they keep them to remember who they were while choosing from them.
