Tuesday, June 2, 2026

More tidbits from the new job…

…at the one (Irish-y) burger joint in the first floor of a historic hotel, where I now work:

1) When some customers want to see all the different rooms in the restaurant, I’m showing them around, and then who comes up but another group of customers who I had also offered to show the different rooms to.

“My gosh, this is like [a relatively local historic site of national significance with tightly timed tours on every quarter hour]!”, I was like.

2) Someone wants to know if we salt and pepper the burgers before we grill them, because they don’t want that.

(We do do that, but we don’t for them.)

3) Since the business has been around for over 25 years and moved locations several times, a good number of customers like to say that they’ve been to all 3 locations, or that they remember the first one when we were just half a room and lines were out the door and you’d have to wind around this ramp that went down to the entrance since it was like a half-story basement location set in down beneath ground level, etc.

4) When I am assigned to be “floater” and hustle around all night to prebus, fill waters and get soda refills, take orders at tables where service is delayed, etc., people notice, and coworkers start saying that I am on top of the water, and the (quiet) (introverted) (tatted) (white) manager is like, “Good job tonight,” and I tell her that I’m fine to do that role all the time, just assign me to it if it makes sense for them.

(Pay is the same as a waiter, by the way.)

5) On Valentine’s Day, we have a huge number of cancellations, and someone comments that that’s how people do that around town here, they make multiple reservations and then see where they feel like going that night, and then cancel out on the rest.

6) A(n Iranian?) couple come in and the guy looks strangely like (Bad Bunny), and when I tell him that, he says that he gets that all the time, even before the Super Bowl halftime show, though of course more since then.

7) Milkshakes and readying desserts fall on us, and when I have to prepare a milkshake, I follow instructions that are taped to the side of the fridge by the blender but scoop too much ice cream into it, and I have practically a whole second one left over, so that’s for me to eat, as I discover that all the staff do with milkshake extras, although in this case it was excessive, of course, and I won’t do that again in the future.

Monday, June 1, 2026

New job tidbits..

…from the (Irish-y) burger joint in the first floor of a historic hotel, where I now work:

1) A (late middle-aged) (black) lady has this cute little purse up on her table, and I compliment her on how cute it is.

“You’re the second person to say that today,” she’s like.

“Well, it must be something in the air!”, I was like.

“That’s okay,” she was like, “I’ll take it.”

2) Even though there’s managers on duty, you basically do your job all night and maybe at the end with clean-up and fills they’re like, “Okay, have you started bathrooms yet?”, otherwise it’s like you’re really there with no supervision and you just do what you need to do when you need to do it and everyone trusts you with everything…  

I like jobs like that.

3) When a veggie lasagna order that’s one of the specials comes in like a half hour before close, the one (straggly-bearded) (thin) (white) (stoner) cook with a gravelly voice is like, “Veggie lasagna, now?”, and then is all exasperated and is like, “The person who knows how to plate it is fucking gone!”

Sunday, May 31, 2026

A memory of an alleged attempt at human trafficking…

…from a (young) (heavyset) (blonde) artist who lives in the college town that I now live in:

During early high school when her parents' marriage was rough, her mother and her went to New York City for a long weekend for their major yearly vacation and there they stayed at an out-of-the-way hotel, and when they were in the empty restaurant dining room, this (middle-aged) woman was like one of the only other people there, and she ended up joining them and spilling her guts out to them, and when the (artist-to-be) tried acting mature and told her mom that she was going to go outside for a cigarette, her mom was like, “Wait, I’ll go with you,” but this lady laid her hand across her mom’s wrist and forcefully was like, “No, let her go, she’ll be fine,” and so she went out to the drive to smoke, and while she was doing that her mom needed to run up to their room to do something, and as she went past the front desk she told the desk-clerk to keep an eye on her daughter outside for a minute and the guy said that they don’t do that, and as the mom rushed up to the room, she was outside, and this guy had parked a car outside and was calling to the (artist-to-be) and as she came up to him, he grabbed her hair and tried to force her into the back of the car and all the time he was like, “Come on, get in, you called this cab, you’re just drunk!”, and then the mom looked out the window and saw something and ran down, and as she called out to her, the (artist-to-be) was like able to break free and walked to her, it was like a trance but now it had been broken, and the guy hopped in the car and drove off, and the woman from the restaurant was nowhere to be found, and later she realized that even though it seemed like she hadn’t walked that far from the entrance, when her mom called to her, she was like most of the way up the U-shaped drive that led to the front door of the hotel, and she must have walked that far while smoking or while going out to the man while he called to her, he was like practically parked on the street out there that ran in front of the hotel’s drive.

. . .

(She said that she read later that human traffickers always work in twos, and I said that the man’s lines sounded rehearsed like if someone saw them and overhead what he was saying they would just think she was drunk and not try to intervene, and she said that she hadn’t thought of that, though I also said that I thought most human trafficking was like within family units or with vulnerable people and wasn’t like off-the-street abductions or whatever, to which she had nothing to say, in response.)

Saturday, May 30, 2026

Other bought goods.

So, the one (worked-out) (STEM) (Brazilian) had an ab wheel and also resistance bands, and he SWORE by resistance bands as a method of working out, he had gotten into them over the past 3-4 months that he had been here, and he said that after like 6-7 weeks of a simple workout, people were noticing the difference and asking him if he had lost weight, was going to the gym, etc.

So, I bought them off him at price, and I have to admit that I was very surprised that a decent set of resistance bands only sets you back like somewhere just less than $40, including shipping, which is insanely cheap and which also makes you wonder again why nobody talks about them all that much.

Anyhow, I am now one of the biggest evangelists ever for resistance bands.

I started off slow – he was doing like 4 sets of 15 reps 3 times a week, whereas I started out with like 2 sets of 10 reps 2-3 times a week – and already after like a week-and-a-half, I could see the difference in all these little muscles all over my body.

I gradually upped reps and weights, too, and now when I’m up to like 3 sets of 15 reps and I can do it with good form, I just go to a higher weight and less reps and start all over again from there, which is also more time-effective on my life, when you’re back at those relatively low numbers of reps.

I mean, I was originally thinking that anything would be better than what I have now, so why go nuts with it like he does?

And, even with that little albeit regular effort, I still showed results mad quick.

I’m like an addict now.

People should really talk about resistance bands more… They’re just amazing.

I wish that I had known about them years ago!  If I had, imagine where I’d be now!

In comparison though with the abs wheel, he just did that like once or twice a week, and he says don’t worry about forcing yourself to go down low, you will get lower with time as your abs build their strength up.

Friday, May 29, 2026

After-effects of some inherited food etc.

Pumpkin coffee makes me woozy, and the frozen fruit gives me squirting diarrhea.

And, the ginger-and-pumpkin bathroom spray sits unused on the top of my toilet, since at no point do I want to try to deodorize the bathroom by creating a mixed smell in there of ginger and pumpkin and shit, somehow that seems like you’d make a bad situation worse, like, it would be way more unappealing than your standard unadulterated shit smell.

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Some inherited food etc. …

…from the one (worked out) (STEM) (Brazilian), when he gives me his groceries that he won’t use any more because he’s moving back home because his time here has finished:

An unopened can of pineapple, which he removes from his refrigerator and at which he shrugs when asked if canned pineapple needs to be refrigerated;

A container of vanilla frosting, and a container of chocolate frosting;

A bag of pumpkin spice coffee;

A ginger-and-pumpkin bathroom spray for deodorizing your bathroom;

Two cans of food pantry-brand cream-of-chicken soup;

Two small thick plastic bags of food pantry white rice; 

Two packs of heat-and-eat chicken chili;

Some dried garbanzo beans, and canned;

Several packs of spaghetti, one opened;

Some cocoa-and-coconut protein dessert balls, and some protein granola;

Frozen strawberry dessert cups; and

An opened bag of frozen blueberries, strawberries, and raspberries, that he had been using for smoothies with a small blender that he had boughten.

. . .

(He also had some various medications and toiletries like lotions and haircare; he seemed particularly attracted to grooming products branded at men.) 

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Two eggs in a recent egg carton:

1) One egg seems stuck in and so I work it out from the cardboard carton and crack it, revealing a mostly empty shell and a small pool of white, gummy candy-like substance sitting at the bottom of it.

. . . 

(Apparently, it had subtly cracked somewhere farther up the eggshell, and the rest had drained out some time ago.)

. . . 

2) With another egg from that same carton, the top comes off it when I go to remove it, revealing a single yolk settled at the bottom, and no white around it whatsover.

. . . 

(Apparently, a sort of similar phenomenon had also happened to this egg, although its bottom half was also firmly stuck into the carton to the point where I had to tear out that section of the cardboard carton so I could remove it and throw out what was left of the egg, thus also ruining my chance for carton-reuse, which I do by bringing old cartons in to the university butcher shop so people can repack larger flats of eggs into something more manageable, which those patrons have requested and which the butcher shop managers facilitate by accepting donations of old reusable egg-cartons.)

. . .

 

. . .