I, for one, wasn't looking forward to starting my day with a slaughter. Which, really, just goes to show how much I've grown

Anya ,'Sleeper'


Natter .38 Special  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Kalshane - Sep 12, 2005 10:25:07 am PDT #6741 of 10002
GS: If you had to choose between kicking evil in the head or the behind, which would you choose, and why? Minsc: I'm not sure I understand the question. I have two feet, do I not? You do not take a small plate when the feast of evil welcomes seconds.

I also have mild phone fear. I hate any time I have to make call to someone I don't know. Incoming calls don't bother me so much.

In the crappy job department, my first real job (not counting summers spent helping my grandfather on his orchard) was at BK. It sucked royally and being my first job I didn't realize just how much they were screwing us over.

1) Schedules were only made a day in advance (unless the regional manager was coming in for an inspection, in which case they'd be made two weeks in advance as required, but said schedules were generally meaningless) which meant good luck making any sort of social plans. When I did have a day off, I'd have to call in to find out when I was working the next day because of the whole day before thing.

2) When things were slow, we were required to punch out and go on break, but we couldn't leave before the end of our scheduled shift and would have to punch back in when things got busy again. People sometimes had to just sit in the break room for up to an hour at a time.

3) If you were on closing crew, you had to punch out at your scheduled time, regardless of whether you had finished closing out the store. However, you could not leave until you finished closing procedures and cleaning.

This was above and beyond the normal crappiness that comes from working in fastfood.

My second job was working as a ride operator for Six Flags (which I repeated the next summer)

Third job was working at Toys R Us as a floor stocker (and eventually cashier, which I hated). I started about 2 weeks before Christmas.

Fourth job was working in the Men's Department at Montgomery Ward. After my second Christmas there, I vowed I would never work another Christmas in retail again. I quit there to work for my current company shortly before Wards went belly-up.


Dana - Sep 12, 2005 10:26:09 am PDT #6742 of 10002
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

Well, I finally found pictures of my parents' neighborhood by going to a forum set up by my old grade school.

I keep clinging to the hope that my parents won't have to completely tear down their house.


erikaj - Sep 12, 2005 10:27:13 am PDT #6743 of 10002
Always Anti-fascist!

Work a campaign and that will kill your phone fear dead. Well, it did mine.


Jesse - Sep 12, 2005 10:29:58 am PDT #6744 of 10002
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

You know, erika, you make me realize that I really should do more phonebanking for candidates. I'll put it into my "giving platelets" category -- I don't mind doing it, and other people do mind (or aren't allowed), so I really should.

Of course, after a kind of crappy stick last week, I'm still looking like a junky, but whatev.


erikaj - Sep 12, 2005 10:36:06 am PDT #6745 of 10002
Always Anti-fascist!

After being called"out my name" by pissed-off Repubs interrupted during their dinner hours, I fear no phone call. Seriously. Some of them are claiming character points they don't deserve, I might add. Unless that language is in the Bible somewhere hidden.


Jessica - Sep 12, 2005 10:37:42 am PDT #6746 of 10002
And then Ortus came and said "It's Ortin' time" and they all Orted off into the sunset

Didn't work for me -- if anything, working as a telemarketer (for Clinton's GELAC fund, for a week before I quit) made me hate the phone even more. (It didn't help that, as the new girl, I was assigned to the lowest gift bracket, which meant cold-calling senior citizens and asking them for money. And when I took "Oh, I'd love to help, but I'm living off of my Social Security check and can't afford it" as a reasonable "no," I got lectured by my boss on the Rules, which meant I had to ask at least 3 times before I could end a call. Did I mention I only lasted a week?)

My WORST ever temp job was the time I ended up doing document coding for a PR firm whose big client at the time was the maker of Accutane. After a half-day of coding hundreds of testimonies and case studies all of which CLEARLY showed a link between Accutane and teen depression/suicide, I decided I needed my dignity more than I needed the paycheck. I left early and called in sick the next day.


erikaj - Sep 12, 2005 10:39:55 am PDT #6747 of 10002
Always Anti-fascist!

Wow, those are some awful things.


Rick - Sep 12, 2005 10:40:39 am PDT #6748 of 10002

I keep trying to give my work phone away, but no one will take it because it's the phone random people in Brazil call for miracles.

Shrift is the Holy Virgin of IT.


sarameg - Sep 12, 2005 10:42:22 am PDT #6749 of 10002

Oh, Dana.

So you know how it is usually nosy adults telling/asking you when you are going to have kids? I got a twist on that. One of a coworker's daughters got along well with me and felt there were far too few kids her age at the picnic. So "Sara should have some kids."


shrift - Sep 12, 2005 10:43:08 am PDT #6750 of 10002
"You can't put a price on the joy of not giving a shit." -Zenkitty

I refuse to use our PA system at work. Coworkers look at me funny because I'll get up and walk that ten feet to deliver a message, but then, they also look at me funny for taking the stairs instead of the elevator. Maybe they think someone in IT should be a technophile about everything?

Well, I finally found pictures of my parents' neighborhood by going to a forum set up by my old grade school.

t boggles