Meet Rebecca

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Amateur blogger (yes, there are professionals) who started with a travel blog that quickly degenerated into blabbering. Along with a life goal of surfing with Eddie Vedder, attending BlogHer is now on my list.

Friday, December 21, 2012

Drowning in Christmas, Help m-argkkk!


In the last week I have listened to a lifetime's worth of Christmas carols. Not just any old carols though, oh no. The people I work for seem to have a penchant for the Jackson 5 Holiday Hits!. Or as I have deemed them, Reoccurring thoughts trailing into the eventual controversy surrounding Michael Jackson and his death or, more simply, the Please turn it off cd.

Daily eight-hour shifts with nothing but pre-pubescent Jackon children lamenting away about their letters to Santa Claus mess with your psyche, man. Which is why, whenever I can, the music is switched up for the close shift. Because, and let me tell something you probably already know, people can be jerks. And it is my observation in the service industry that people's jerk-dom increases exponentially in correlation to the approach of Christmas.

For instance, the company we buy our foil from to wrap seasonal chocolate in, red-foiled individual milk chocolate bells and stars being the best-sellers, had a minor mishap earlier this year causing a disruption of their production. Maybe you've heard of it? Tiny little thing called Hurricane Sandy? Yeah, well that Sandy wench was in a bad mood and leveled the foil company so we are in the unfortunate situation of being unable to have foiled chocolates. We've made up for it by making more in-store products, a bonus, I think because "Think local, shop local" and all, but some people are a bit irked to say the least.

Way too often is the case that people will come into the store and ask for those items. We give them the run down, how the company is rebuilding and hopes to be back up and running in eight months, we apologize, direct them to the same product just not wrapped up individually in a foil and like clock work, we watch the meltdowns.

The most common hissy fit thrown is by far the, "My children MUST HAVE these chocolates." One man tacked on, "They have had those bells in their stockings for thirty-two years." Which I had two responses for, both of which were inappropriate for employee behavior.

The first: cut the cord, man. If they are that old and still getting a stocking from you, maybe you ought to consider charging them rent for your basement and Cheeto's.

 The second response was that I can't imagine full-grown human beings, better known as adults, to get too emotional over a missing chocolate bell the size of my thumb. Most likely they'll thank you for the reason to begin their New Year's resolution to diet a bit earlier.

However, the absolute best reaction to hearing that the foil company is sitting pretty under seven feet of water goes to a woman who exclaimed, "Eight months before they can get you foil? But, that means there will be no chocolate foiled eggs for Easter! What am I supposed to do now for both Christmas and Easter?"

Ding, ding, ding, we have a winner.

Yes, ma'am, please continue to whine over your loss of a luxury item while someones ENTIRE BUSINESS is literally sunk. That is eight months of lost revenue for not just one, but many families, along with the fact that people were injured during the hurricane that had the audacity to steal away your holiday chocolate. No, please, you were completely justified in your outrage against the store I work for because you, as a consumer in the United States of America, are at any time allowed to demand and in that very respect receive, without regard to human suffering, your sweet chocolaty goodness. Never mind that people lost their loved ones, homes, and businesses to a natural disaster that they could not control, YOU are the one wronged. You will not get your brand of chocolate.

Whew, that just deflated a big ol' amount of sass I had been swallowing down the past few weeks. 

Before you paint me as the holiday grinch, in my defense, it's been a long week. I was warned about the weeks approaching Christmas and the pressures it would bring at work. People take their gift giving very seriously, it's tradition that can be summarized in one picture:

Bazinga.
And at my job, I'm part of alleviating that burden for people, not adding to it. Little by little and piece by piece I take a bit of someones stress ball and just add it to my own. My own little minimum wage beach ball. Some people get that, others don't. The ones that do really get it though.

A co-worker of mine took a customer under her wing a few nights ago, helping him choose seven custom boxes for his family. He was lost and just looking for good gifts and she helped him out, working for over forty minutes, picking and choosing and matching flavors for particular people. His bill was large, but he was okay with that. We all joked that he must be the most-loved member in the family, bringing everyone such nice gifts and he replied, quite softly, that no, he was not even close to be liked in his family. We hadn't realized we'd prodded something in him. He went on to say that these gifts were chosen so carefully for that exact reason. He wanted his family to like the chocolates, even if they didn't him.

Now I don't know this guys name, where he's from, what he's done, or what he will do, but in those moments while we wrapped his purchase up, no one needed to say anything. We all just nodded slowly, getting it. We've all been there, felt that.

 He asked how he could add a tip to his credit purchase. That was nice of him, we don't get tipped often even though it's supposed to make up a bit of our wage. On a credit purchase like his, we'd run the card the tip amount and take it out of the register at the end of the shift.

He asked if fifteen dollars was enough, he didn't want to offend us on our work.

Instinctively, and in retrospect, rather stupidly, I threw my hands high into the air. "Fifteen dollars? Offended? You win customer of the year!"
My co-worker barked a laugh out and said, "We would be happy with fifty cents, are you sure?"

He nodded.

I hope your family reads this, sir.

Friday, December 14, 2012

I have no words...

Michigan, let's get our act together because this mockery of a political system is shaming all of us who live here. And normally I would take this news as all else, with a grain of salt, and carry on and continue to vote to the best of my morals. Occasionally I write a letter to some politician or another, but this is an open cry to whoever will listen.

Last night Michigan's congress was in session until the early morning passing laws. Which is generally how that works, drafts are presented, debated, and they either become a law or get reworked. Now though, in a massive move, Michigan has passed the strictest anti-abortion law in the United States, a new emergency manager law which which strips the rights of voters to recall politicians and rather grants that right to replace elected officials by emergency managers, eliminated a tax that funds school districts, and oh, one more thing, it gave approval to expand the carrying of concealed weapons inside of schools, churches, child care centers, and stadiums.

To carry a concealed weapon inside of a school, church, child care center, and stadiums.

Inside of a school, church, child care center, and stadiums.

SCHOOLS, CHURCHES, CHILD CARE CENTERS, AND STADIUMS.

I'm sorry one more time? Oh yeah, I can totally get behind that because honestly, I've never felt safe in my child's daycare anyway.

...

See what I did there? It's a joke because I don't have a child. And as of 9:14 this morning eighteen parents don't have children either.

There is a God of Irony and she is mocking all of us right now with the passing of these outlandish laws just compounded by the massive school shooting.

A massive school shooting in a grade school. With nearly twenty elementary students having been killed by an armed shooter, don't we all just feel so much more safe? Because it's now legal to carry our concealed weapons in schools.

Technically, that man, if he were in Michigan, would have been fully protected by Michigan law up until the point in which he brutally murdered twenty-seven people. Eighteen of them kids carrying lunch boxes and looking forward to recess. Looking forward to Christmas. To the rest of their lives.

I don't care, truly do not care, if you are pro-life, if you give a damn or not about the abrupt and legal take over of our local-level political systems, or if you have any investment in Michigan's educational system. But if anyone who reads this feels what happened today in Connecticut was in ANY WAY justified, please feel free to walk off a cliff. I'll be there to give you a little supportive shove.

This should not be possible, so much violence, brutality. The pain, the sorrow of the parents. I have no other words today. They have all drained out of me in a puddle of disgust and pity. I'm too tired to scoop them back up.

My thoughts are with the families of the victims today and into the future.

Thursday, December 6, 2012

Student Motivation

If you or your loved ones are in college, then you know this is the time of year when students either call home crying over the slightest instance or go into hermit-mode, eating, sleeping, and speaking with their laptops. Or worse, both.

I just finished one of the longer assignments of my life and I had no words to describe it. I kind of can't believe that I might actually have time to do things this evening. I feel like I might be stepping out into the world for the first time in weeks. I imagine it'll go something like this:


It wasn't really that life altering though. I honestly just sat back down, feeling a bit less stressed, and ate a bowl of dry Kix with frozen blueberries. Don't knock it until you've tried it. Or have run out of milk and discover a bag of blueberries in your freezer and you think, "yeah, I really probably do need to eat more fruit..."

Plus, it was kind of tasty. I think I might be on to something, Kellogg's. Watch out, next I'll be reintroducing the shapes to Trix cereal (The loss of which was the greatest breakfast tragedy since the Oatmeal scandal of 67'). "Dry Kix with Frozen Blueberries: The breakfast of haggled Champions". I think it might add to your visual if I let you know now that I am wearing a very worn-in Pearl Jam t-shirt under a fancy cardigan (because I am classy) wrapped in a blanket.

To all you students out there, Keep going!  The end is in sight and it could be worse; we could have real jobs.






Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Faith in Humanity...

Not going to lie to you all, this was going to be a rather angry account of what I feel to be the worst public influence of my generation (No, not Justin Bieber...), but instead of bringing you all down in my dour mood and worst, giving E.L James more publicity than she has ever, EVER deserved, I opted to direct you to someone who can actually put sentences together above the ability of a fifteen year old girl and is a native (Kalamazoo shout out!) Michigander. Ladies and Gentlemen, Jennifer Armintrout.

Be advised, she uses some explicit language and will make you laugh so hard milk shoots out of your nose. However, I would be lying to say that if I was doing what she is doing, I could keep the executive funcitoning to restrain my verbal outrage either.



Jen, if you ever read this, please be my homeboy.

Monday, November 19, 2012

Rent is Too Damn High



This post is inspired by Jimmy McMillan. I always believed in you, buddy.

(For references, please direct yourself here.)
 
So, let's talk about Ann Arbor, land of a thousand students. All of which who are currently searching for limited living spaces for the coming year. It's a bit of a mess. Like, black Friday shopping at Wal-mart messy with middle-aged moms decking out grandmothers for the last Tickle Me Elmo (Those are still a thing, right?)

The way housing works in Ann Arbor is literally first-come-first-serve and by 'first-come' I mean those who are months ahead of you on the wait list and by 'first-serve' I am distinguishing between those who can afford to bribe off the realtors and those who squabble over what is left.

...But the night life is amazing!

I am in what you might call a bit of a pickle. You see, I am graduating in the near future and must decide if I want to re-rent in Ann Arbor and enjoy the fabulous life that I have here, at an insane price, or if I move somewhere else with my tail and diploma between my legs. Proverbially, of course. I plan on hanging that stupid piece of paper somewhere on my next rinky-dink apartment, not letting it get crinkled between my thighs. Plus, you know, I don't, like, have an actual tail. ..Besides the point! I went apartment searching this afternoon and after explicitly stating to the realtor that I can't go above a certain price point, he walks me into a beautiful place way above anything I can afford.

And I'll be damned if it wasn't beautiful.

Stained glass windows over a breakfast nook. Full kitchen, including a rare amenity in any Ann Arbor apartment: a dishwasher. Hardwood and new tile flooring. Private entrance, free WiFi and, so help me, a parking space.

A parking space! That is worth the square footage in GOLD in a city where I have received parking tickets just by thinking about parking in an unattended spot. For the uninformed I have been illegally parking all around this town for the past, oh I don't know, three months. It's incredibly straining to move your car on a weekly, if not daily, basis.

I might have let it slip that it was perfect, and he showed me one other open apartment in the house, which was drab and unfortunate compared to the first. I looked around and realized this man had pulled a Randy on me. You know, Randy from Say Yes to the Dress? Well, it's not like I do either... but I've heard... he gives the bride the perfect (overpriced) gown and she's all, "I'm in love with it!" so nothing else compares and then they evilly gouge her for the sentimental value of her wedding day.

I've been evilly gouged for sentimental value. And floor-to-ceiling windows with crown molding. Don't forget those.

So, you'll see me in a cardboard box next year because I can't afford anything in this blasted town... but I found a dime and a penny on the ground on my way back from work tonight, so that's eleven cents down, nine hundred ninety-nine dollars and eighty-nine cents to go...plus utilities.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Feline Fatale. Or why are cats such awesome serial killers?

There exists such a creature, one so vile, so unimaginable, so disgusting, grotesque, and horrifying that I've only ever seen it in Ann Arbor. Why is it that I have never seen a house centipede anywhere but down here at school?
"What's a house centipede?" You might ask, dear Reader. If you've read my blog before you might remember them as the treacherous insects that overtook my bathroom as their stomping grounds last semester.

Still not getting there for you?

Shall I give you a little reminder?
Just one more?
     
Hello. 

 Hey there, little fella.
 So who is suddenly much more aware of all the tingling hairs on their body? Anyone else feeling itchy but don't know why.

No, because I know exactly why. These little mo-fo's have invaded my newest place of residence and tonight was the first sighting.

THIS time however, I was prepared. No, that's a lie. I wasn't prepared at all. I just pointed to it and looked at my cat in panic and said, "Kitty. Kitty. GET it!" I swear she read my mind. Stalker-mode ensued.

 First she just batted at it, and then it made the stupid decision to try and out run her. So she crouched and pounced until she was tired with it's pathetic attempt at survival and she killed him. No, kill is too kind a word. She tortured him, no doubt, ripped off a few of its legs and while they were twitching she killed the rest and then came back to them to dole out the final blow.

I will encourage this behavior with whatever it takes. Treats, petting, baby talk.
Whatever. it. takes.
After reading this article, I wasn't even deterred. More in fact, I was encouraged. I will have the most bug-free home here. All will fear the wrath of Kitty.

Just so long as she doesn't get any funny ideas when I'm sleeping helpless and alone in my bed...

Monday, November 5, 2012

Day 1, 2, Skip a Few...7?


In my attempt to blog everyday I realized that I might possibly have a social circle. So while it became a massive fail in my ten day, ten minute challenge I did indeed succeed in going out a few nights this week.

It's a win-lose-win then, right? Right.

It's especially hard for people like me, who live in very tiny social groups, to expand their friend circles so I'm kind of proud of myself for having a group of friends now at university. It only took four years, but seriously, who's counting?

 First moving here, felt like I was cut off from the people I knew and got along with and making new acquaintances was foreign. I spent a good chunk of my life getting to know the people I went to school with and still debated time and time again about who I wanted as a friend. And that was only in a class of fifty kids. 40,000 students at the University of Michigan has sort of stepped it up a notch.

From that pool of unwitting victims I have aligned myself with some curious folks. All of whom I hold dear. Mostly because they love me so much.

They let me know by giving me things like this:


You know who you are...


But I'm not only on the receiving end of this love train, I do nice things for my friends, too. For example, I would totally turn in their absentee ballots if they won't be in town. Not that I have ever done this. Ever. Not ever in my life.

So here's a bit of trivia for you all. Did you know that being in possession of a ballot that is not your own or that of a family member is a felony?!? Huh. Learn something new every day.

That's a bit steep, wouldn't you say? Because it is crazy hard to vote as a student in the United States.
Especially if you reside a few good hours away from your polling location.

But sorry, that was completely tangential. I just wanted to let you all know how much my friends mean to me. Especially those same friends who would bring me gifts. Like cakes filled with nail files if I were ever to be incarcerated in federal prison...

*cough cough*

So the real take-away from tonight's post is: Get out there and vote!