By Holden Wright
In case you are
living in a box under an overpass, it’s now the holiday shopping season. This means that all the Christmas decorations
that went up back in August now fit the season.
But no matter what the weather is outside, the temperature of the hearts
of the workers in the stores is ice cold.
It’s a real shame that these people continue to earn a paycheck for such
Grinch attitudes. Honestly, I really
don’t owe them anything extra for their lack of service. Besides, not everyone gets to be president
when they grow up – some have to serve me fries and Big Macs®.
I’m not calling
anyone out and picking on any one store, because I don’t shop around enough to
say that all stores around here suck, but the lady with the nine-inch nails
(her actual fingernails, not the band) that tries to take my credit card every
morning (I’m still amazed that she can type, run my card, and work with claws
that long) while I ingest my number seven with an orange juice, and her twin
who just shoves the bag out the window as if the bag contained Ebola, really
need to work on their people skills. If
you really hate your job, then get a better one. If you can’t, go back to college. If that doesn’t work, pretty yourself up some
and marry someone who will give you money.
But for Pete’s sake, don’t sit there and sulk and take it out on the
people that are paying your salary because you decided long ago that that
reading, writing, and arithmetic thing was too much trouble for you to
learn. And the sad part is, it’s not the
just the crewmembers, but the managers, too.
The same goes
for the people that work in the stores that I purchase food from. The presence of a machine that I can run my
card though, to save you the time and effort it takes to be personable, doesn’t
mean you can just point at the total and grunt.
I know it’s the weekend and you are in a frock behind a counter, but the
big corporate giant isn’t paying you to be lethargic. If you want to be more
useless and lethargic, go home and watch TV.
At least not
everyone has that approach for work, and I applaud two places that can make me
smile and spend my money without feeling like I’m inconveniencing someone. Raising Cane’s® must slip
something into the water that it gives its employees, because they happen to be
way too chipper to be working fast food.
Not only are they mildly attractive for being barely 18, but they always
say hi and chitchat with you through the window. Just the other day, when we were ordering
our daily, big-ass sweet tea, some girl passed by the drive-thru window and
waved and said hi! This resulted in
several minutes of “I swear I don’t know who she is” and “I promise you she
isn’t an ex-girlfriend” to my girlfriend, and then I had to take her
shopping. Thanks, Raising Cane’s!
Another poor
soul that my heart goes out to, who keeps a smile on his face as he works, is
the guy at Cyclone Laundry. See, I’m way
too busy (read: really too lazy) to do my own laundry, so I drop it off for
others to do for me. I know I could just
tell my mom that my girlfriend is pregnant (she isn’t!!!) and drop off my
clothes, and they would be folded, ironed, and starched before the sun came up,
but it’s so much easier to dump it on some college kid behind a counter. The guy, however, knows my name and will ask
me if I want to dry-clean my suit pants.
All this from the guy that cleans and folds my underwear, even after
wearing them to the LSU-Arkansas game.
Now that is what I call service and a love for a paycheck.
As I get ready
to go spend my hard-earned cash that I earn from my cubicle, I never was that
depressed person at the drive-thru window.
I tried to look at each job as a building block to the next, better job,
not that each subsequent job was any better.
But to look at your job as work and not as an opportunity to better
yourself and to have fun at it will make your day and mine longer. Besides, Santa is watching you as you piss me
off, so get ready for that big lump of coal.
Unless, of course, you’re the guy cleaning my pants…again.
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December 07, 2007