I could squeeze you until you popped like warm champagne, and you'd beg me to hurt you just a little bit more.

Fuffy ,'Storyteller'


The Great Write Way, Chapter Two: Twice upon a time...  

A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.


ChiKat - Mar 21, 2006 10:09:41 am PST #5770 of 10001
That man was going to shank me. Over an omelette. Two eggs and a slice of government cheese. Is that what my life is worth?

Temporary employment is the perfect job for college students. No real committment, jobs can be dropped on a whim for the lure of a day at the pool with a fruity drink. You also learn a lot about yourself, the types of jobs and work environments you like and what you just cannot stand. I worked as a clown for the grand opening of a drug store, I answered the barely ringing phone at a jewelry store, I put security tags on expensive handbags, I folded turtlenecks for a solid eight hours. I moved from place to place like a gypsy just doing my thing and getting a paycheck.

No real committment also meant that I had no real relationships with people. While I was working for the insurance department for a hotel chain, I got the call that my grandmother died. I sat in a ladies' room stall alone and lonely and listened to the hollow echoes of my quiet crying.


Zenkitty - Mar 21, 2006 10:51:10 am PST #5771 of 10001
Every now and then, I think I might actually be a little odd.

These are really good ones. ChiKat, yours made me tear up.


Strix - Mar 21, 2006 12:58:40 pm PST #5772 of 10001
A dress should be tight enough to show you're a woman but loose enough to flee from zombies. — Ginger

Summer of '93, and the river flooded. Earlier that summer, I'd been living in Omaha with my best friend, and had slunk home when another friend -- god, just 21 -- dropped down dead in my prof's house. She was housesitting while he was in Europe.

We still don't know why.

I was doing inventory in a Montgomery Ward's, and there was no water. The stench from the toilets was incredible. And after a day in the attic warehouse, sans AC, toting bales, lifiting bras, the stench emmanating from me was incredible.

I'd go home and bathe from the pickle barrel we stored water in.

That's what I remember from that summer. Death, shit, cheap bras and pickles.


SailAweigh - Mar 21, 2006 2:09:28 pm PST #5773 of 10001
Nana korobi, ya oki. (Fall down seven times, stand up eight.) ~Yuzuru Hanyu/Japanese proverb

Man, these are very good drabbles.

Help Wanted

I never had a "summer job." I loafed my way from June to September, spending days on the lawn prepping my tan with baby oil and iodine, rubbing lemon in my hair trying to encourage it to get streaks. Sometimes, Mom needed help watering the vegetable garden or pulling weeds out from between rows of carrots, onions and radishes. Rainy days were spent inside with a good book, curled up in Dad’s easy chair before he came home and kicked me out so he could watch the six o’clock news. I loved that summer job of just being a kid.


deborah grabien - Mar 21, 2006 2:47:24 pm PST #5774 of 10001
It really doesn't matter. It's just an opinion. Don't worry about it. Not worth the hassle.

Tour Time

A couple of summers, seemed he was always heading out on tour, or off into sessions somewhere.

The prep was always major. Arranging dialysis, no matter the city or country. Negotiating medicine, from Dallas to Berlin. Packing the flash wardrobe for a big tour, the casual stuff for something smaller. Dreading anything that took him back to London, because his wife was there, but hoping if he got sick, it would be in London, because the healthcare was free.

Packing, arranging, praying he'd come back sober and unaddicted, praying he'd come back at all. You could call that a job.


Karl - Mar 21, 2006 5:52:03 pm PST #5775 of 10001
I adore all you motherfuckers so much -- PMM.

Remember when the intern was under the desk? (100 words)

Christ, he sounds like an overprivileged Yalie lecturing inner-city kids in some sort of resume-padding summer job: If you work for the Man and never question the system, you'll get a slice of the pie.

Never mind that he can't even string together a coherent sentence, let alone convince anyone that he actually gives a damn. It's not like he needs this 'summer job,' with Poppy's connections. Try as he might, he could never screw up so badly that he would ever have to face the consequences, personally.

I get up in disgust before I throw something at the goddamnoisybox.


erikaj - Mar 21, 2006 6:18:24 pm PST #5776 of 10001
Always Anti-fascist!

Clever, babe. I wouldn't have guessed you had it in you to be so pointed...not that you could pick a more deserving target in a hundred years.


Cashmere - Mar 22, 2006 5:07:37 am PST #5777 of 10001
Now tagless for your comfort.

Too long, but here it is:

J.C. Penny Catalogs

End of May to August. Every day I walked up that platform in 100 degree heat to squat and lift stacks of pages and feed them into the machine. I could stop and lean on a half-empty pallet for a few seconds and watch the pages run up the line. But if my pages ran out, the machine would grind to a halt and the foreman would scream at you over the deafening machinery. Or if you fed the wrong pages into the wrong bin. Or if you fed too much scrap (ripped, folded pages). Or if you didn't fluff enough air into the signatures and the pages stuck together causing a paper jam.

A rude, exhausting awakening for an 18 year old girl. As my muscles screamed in agony every day when I got off work and I downed 800 mg. of Ibuprofen, I tried to ignore the smell of the Ben-gay I'd become addicted to. I winced when getting dressed--the pages left tiny paper cuts all along the inside of my forearms.

It was a means to an end. I only had to serve a 90 day sentence and got $9 an hour. My father started work in the very same bindery in 1965. He was paid $1.62 an hour and worked in that department for six years.

Six years.


Connie Neil - Mar 22, 2006 3:14:08 pm PST #5778 of 10001
brillig

I've suddenly remembered this

Daddy was an upholsterer, a damned good one. Every summer he got the contract for reupholstering the school bus seats that needed it. The key to every small businessman's competitive labor rates was his own children's indenturement.

It wasn't that bad, a way to make some extra money--a whole quarter for each seat and back whose covers we loosened, until inflation raised the price to fifty cents each. Plus a chance to be in Daddy's world without anybody else around. People would wander in to chat, and I realized Daddy had an existence I'd had no idea of. And I could wander in from the back garage where I'd been pulling staples out of bus seats and watch him reassemble people's couches and chairs and recliners. He hated recliners. I miss him.


SailAweigh - Mar 22, 2006 3:25:44 pm PST #5779 of 10001
Nana korobi, ya oki. (Fall down seven times, stand up eight.) ~Yuzuru Hanyu/Japanese proverb

That's a nice one, connie. Reminds me of my grandfather; his first job after high school was as a "tack spitter." I'm not sure when or how, but he ended up being a probation officer in Detroit during Prohibition. I was fascinated by both jobs and always tried to get him to tell stories about them.