So, the new job that I work at is a(n Irish-y) burger joint in the first floor of a historic hotel, and it really is something.
Because they had to retrofit the business into the available space, it has all these twisty corridors and rooms upon rooms of dining spaces, and there’s oddities, too, like different storage areas being in the basement next to our locker room and the several additional bathrooms that are there, too, although a basement social area is also down there for the elderly residents who live up on the upper floors of the building.
“This is the boom-boom room,” my one (eccentric) (blonde) (semi-manger) coworker was like, as she gave me the tour and gestured to one of the bathrooms down there.
Then, she spelled it out, that you can use the customer restrooms upstairs in the burger joint if you need to take like a pee, but anything heavier or more extended than that, you should really take the time and come downstairs and use the restrooms down there, because you don’t want to do anything upstairs that would bother the customers.
Overall, the burger joint is really a nice place, with split tips and a premium on a healthy respectful work culture, and plus they have specialty coffee and cocktails that I could maybe train into, to get like serious bartending and barista stuff on my resume in the long-term.
Plus, I have to take a bus to get there, and at night there’s like all this soft lighting that does wonders for me and takes like 5 years off of my face, and it feels like I’m somehow going into the big city to work.
The (big personality) (redheaded) (Irish-American) owner told me that she gets that a lot, that people come in there at night and they say that they feel like they just walked into somewhere in [one city] or [another city] or [a third city] (i.e., one of the 3 major cities that are a few hours drive from us).
It’s really crazy, too, because I first came in there during the afternoon to drop off my resume, and I simply didn’t expect that change in environment to occur from daytime-into-evening hours, in terms of how elegant and cool the space looks.