Friday, September 21, 2012

The Tale of the Squeaky Escalator--A True Story

The escalator was in dire need of some WD-40, and no one had the insight to press the 'stop' button.
"If we stop the escalator, everyone will have to use the elevator," said Unnamed Coworker.
"Or go home," I said.
Since my word had no gravitas whatsoever, I was forced to trudge through my three-hour closing shift accompanied by the soothing sounds of a squeaky escalator, which sounds something like a sea lion if one is unfamiliar with the noise.
Due to the famine of fleshy, absorbent humans lurking around my department, the sound waves had nothing better to do than bounce off the walls and echo loudly on the tile floors.
My night began as follows.
Hang up swim suits from fitting room. Put them back on 9.99 rack. Pick up swim off floor and hang it up.
"What's that noise?" said Woman Who Throws Bathing Suits.
"The escalator is broken," came my reply.
"They should fix that," Woman Who Throws Bathing suits tells me.
I nod and walk away.
Circle department. Put coats back where they belong. Button and zip coats on front lines. Squish the down coats and watch them spring back into shape.
"What's that noise?" asked Lady Who Drapes Coats Over Racks Instead of Hanging Them.
"The escalator is broken."
"Can't they fix it?"
I stared at her for a few seconds before I said, "Not until we figure out its wants and needs."
And by the fifth customer, I started to get really creative with my answers.
"It's singing you the song of its people."
"It craves human sacrifice."
"It's the spirits communicating by way of the haunted escalator."
Until, finally, Lady Who Is Rude To Sales Associates demanded, "What's that noise? Why don't you fix it?"
"What noise?" I asked, puzzled, swiveling my head this way and that.

I realized that night, after I watched Lady Who Is Rude To Sales Associates ask five other innocent bystanders if they heard a constant squeaking noise, that working with stupid people entitles you to mess with them. That makes me a sociopath, I think.

The End.

Friday, September 7, 2012

Watermelon


“Wow, baby, that had to be at least five feet!”
            “How big is that, Daddy?”
            “Bigger than you!”
            Jeremy, Rosie, and I are sitting in the backyard eating watermelon and spitting the seeds everywhere.
            “I heard that if you swallow the seeds, a watermelon will grow inside you,” Rosie tells us in between sputtering the seeds out of her mouth. “Did you swallow a watermelon seed, Mommy?” She fixes her eyes in wonder at my protruding belly, watermelon seeds still stuck on her cheeks and lips.
            “There’s something much more special growing in Mommy’s tummy,” Jeremy tells her mysteriously.
            “Gummy bears?” she asks me, in wide-eyed awe like I’m Willy Wonka or something.
            Jeremy frowns. “It’s not edible, baby,” he tells her.
            “Oh,” she says, and spits another seed.
            He meets my eyes and finally catches sight of my cheeks.
            “Laurie, what are you doing?” he asks.
            “You look like a squirrel,” Rosie giggles.
            I wink at her and start spitting the seeds I have stored up.
            There are a few things a husband shouldn’t know about his wife. How loud she can burp, how much she spent on this season’s Louis Vuitton handbag, how much she weighs, for instance. Jeremy knows all of these things about me. He does not, however, know how far I can spit watermelon seeds. This is also something he could do without knowing. But I figured if he knew the other facts, he could deal with this one as well.
            His mouth is agape as I hock the last seed. This is the norm when he finds out things he probably shouldn’t about me. Except for when he heard me belch for the first time. Most people don’t want to hang around with their mouths open when someone burps. Especially when that someone happens to be me.
            Rosie, on the other hand, is clapping and giggling wildly.
“Again!” she shrieks. “Again!”
I take another bite of watermelon and shoot a seed at Jeremy’s nose.
He shakes out of his stupor and frowns at me.
“Were you impressed?” I ask.
“Because you spit seeds like a machine gun? Yes,” he replies. “Because, aside from your monster burp, that was the most un-ladylike thing you’ve ever done? No.”
Great. So he still remembers.
On the other side of Jeremy, Rosie is attempting to recreate my fantastic spitting spree. She ends up choking on a seed.
“Nice,” Jeremy grumbles, while shooting me a dirty look and handing Rosie a glass of water.
I shrug. “Well, at least someone appreciates my talents.”
“Nice to know it’s someone who doesn’t know the meaning of dignity yet,” he shoots back under his breath.
“What’s ‘dignity’?” Rosie interrupts, looking up at her father, a strand of drool dangling from her mouth.
*          *          *
“Mommy look,” Rosie breathes. “It’s perfect.”
She pops out from behind a rounder filled with baby clothes and shows me a white romper embroidered with watermelons.
“I think it would look very beautiful in this thing,” she says admiringly, patting my tummy.
“Sweetheart, it’s not a watermelon,” I tell her.
“I know,” she says, hands on her hips, rolling her eyes. “It’s two baby boys who will be my younger brothers, and I will love them,” she recites. “But what if it’s a false alarm?” she adds hopefully.
“You would rather me give birth to a watermelon than two baby boys?”
“Watermelons are delicious,” she informs me.
I think about it. A watermelon just might be easier to give birth to than twin boys. Certainly more easy to take care of. We’d just have to leave enough room for it in the fridge. Although, that would put Jeremy out a little. I mean less space for food and—no. Stop. I am having two baby boys. Not a delicious, juicy watermelon.
“You’ve seen the ultrasounds,” I remind her. “They clearly look like two babies, not a watermelon.”
Rosie wrinkles her nose. “They do? And besides, they could be wrong.”
“Who, the doctors?”
She nods, matter-of-factly.
I’m silent for a while, letting the absurdity of this claim sink in.
She stands there and stares right back at me, like a director watching an actor forget his lines.
It’s not sinking in.
“You think the doctors are wrong,” I repeat. “The doctors. Who went to medical school. For eight years. Those doctors?”
She nods again.
“They’re not,” I say simply, and continue my walk through the department store.
“But how do you know? It could be anything in the world!”
I exhale sharply. “Based on everything I know about biology and what your father and I did last Valentine’s Day, I’m pretty certain there’s a baby growing inside me.”
She blinks a few times. “What does Valentine’s Day have to do—”
“Never mind,” I cut her off and continue moving onward.
Rosie trails dutifully behind me, and eventually, we’ve gathered enough clothes to make any associate’s sales goal.
“Do we have enough yet, Mommy?” Rosie groans. “They have more clothes than me, and they’re not even people yet.”
I smile at her. “We just need one more thing.”
“Okay.”
I kneel down next to her with some effort. “Okay, love. I want you to find something for yourself.”
She looks at me. “Seriously?” she asks.
“Seriously,” I laugh. “You’ve been a good shopper for Mommy today, so you deserve something special for all your hard work.”
“But all I did was grab the same exact thing you did,” she admits.
“And you saved Mommy half the work. Now go find something!”
And off she runs.
I sit down at the couch in front of the fitting room and wait for her to come back. This pregnancy is a lot harder than Rosie’s was. Everything from my knees down is swollen from the weight of these two boys. Plus the process of going through childbirth twice in a row is a bit daunting, especially since it took me seven years to get the courage to even think about having another child. Jeremy says I was overdue, and that’s why I’m stuck with twins now. I think he devised some maniacal plot to make me have twins. He was really adamant after Rosie was born about having another baby. But I was more adamant about taking a break. Childbirth creates ugly people. I have learned to control that ugly person and use her to my advantage when needed. Together we make the perfect partners in crime, fighting for abstinence for new mothers everywhere.
“I’ve found it!” Rosie races back to me, brandishing something above her head.
“What did you find, baby?”
She proudly holds the prize out in front of her. It is a bra. A gigantic bra.
“Is that really your size?” I ask.
She nods. “I asked the saleslady to help me,” she reports proudly.
“And she gave you a 42 DDD nursing bra?” I ask, snatching a glance at the tag.
“Yeah. I told her I wanted a bra and then I pointed at you and said you told me to get it. Then she gave me this one. Look, it has goldfishies on it!” she says, lovingly stroking one of the cups.
I glare at the lingerie saleslady. I want to tell her I’m a 34 C, when I remember that I’m pregnant. I look back at Rosie, who is excitedly hopping from foot to foot, waiting for the moment to try on her new garment.
“That’s really what you want?” I ask.
Yes, Mommy!” she says impatiently.
“Alright,” I accede. “Go and try it on, then.”
She races into the fitting room.
“Are you doing alright?” the bra woman asks, approaching me.
“Just fine,” I tell her.
“What did you come in for today? Did you find what you’re looking for?”
I blink a few times, look down at my heavily pregnant stomach and then at the mountain of infant clothes keeping me company on the fitting room couch. “Wine glasses,” I respond.
“Should you really be drinking in your—er—state?”
“No need to worry,” I say, patting my tummy. “I’m drinking for three these days."
She quickly changes the subject. “How’s that nursing bra I picked out for you?”
“It’s for my daughter,” I reply.
“Your daughter?” asks the lady. “Is—is she pregnant too?”
“Oh, no. She’s seven.”
“That’s a little young to be getting her first bra, don’t you think?” she asks, feigning her judgment poorly.
“First?”
“Alright, then,” she says quickly. “My name is Marilynn. Let me know if there’s anything else I can help you with.”
I tell her “thank you,” and she walks away.
“Finished!” Rosie says as she prances out of the dressing room.
“Alright,” I say, heaving myself onto my feet. “Let’s go pay.”
We walk to the register together. Out of the corner of my eye, I see Marilynn speed-walking over to meet us.
“How’d everything work out?” she asks.
“They fit like a glove,” I reply, as she folds a set of white onesies.
She gives a forced laugh and begins to ring up our items without further attempts at conversation.
“One more thing,” Rosie says, as Marilynn bags the last item. She places the nursing bra on the counter. Marilynn can’t help smiling.
“Ah, so you’re getting the nursing bra too,” she says to me. “It fit correctly?”
“It fit like a glove!” Rosie interjects.
*          *          *
 “Laurie?”
“Yes?”
“What’s this Rosie has on?”
I assume it’s the bra. “It’s a bra.”
“I see that. But why did you buy one for her?”
“Because she wanted it.”
“She wanted a 42 DDD nursing—”
“I already went over this with her,” I call.
From upstairs in the nursery, I hear Jeremy and Rosie exchange whispers. Then I hear the fridge open. Then I hear Rosie’s giggles and her clomping footsteps up the stairs.
“Mommy, look!” she says from the doorway. Her goldfish bra is cradling two small watermelons. “I swallowed a seed and now I have twins too,” she giggles.

Sunday, September 2, 2012

There Should Be a Universal Size

So, I'm at work folding pants. (Yeah, this is going to be another post about work.) The manager suggests, "Why don't you size them?" Because I have nothing better to do with my time than put pants into size order. And because all of our customers will innately know that once the display is folded, the jeans are in size order, and they won't have to fling jeans left and right to find their size.
In case it's not apparent, I am being sarcastic. Putting pants/cardigans/anything is size order does nothing, because department store customers are brainless and don't know how to count. No, that's unfair. Most associates (like me) don't size them in the first place, so they don't expect the displays to be in size order. But they're still stupid.
This is why there should be a universal size.
Imagine: you're having a bad day because some disgusting person vomited all over your area of employment, your coworkers undermine your authority in front of customers, and the customers undermine your authority by thinking they know more about your job even though they're dumb and you've held that position for over a fucking year--I digress. So you think to yourself, Gee, I bet new clothes and being rude to a sales associate would really make me feel better. Now imagine walking into a store, seeing something cute, and not needing to try it one because...it's your size! Everything is your size! No longer do you have to wait in long lines to get into a sweltering dressing room that reeks of body odor and vomit (somebody vomited in my fitting room today; I apologize for the repeated mental images). No longer do you have to worry about something not looking right on you!
Of course, this would entail everyone needing to be the same body-type. So, we'd either all need to get thinner or get fatter. My guess is the latter, since there seem to be more fat people than skinny people. Which is okay with me. Honestly, skinny people, take one for the team.
Once we all had the exact same physique, there would be no more judgement about physical appearance. Except for facial features. But we don't want everyone to be the same. I'm not trying to create a science fiction nightmare here. I just want to get out of sizing clothes and doing item locating.
Now, imagine the benefits for your friendly neighborhood Macy's sales associate!
She would not have waste her time sizing shit. All of the displays would look beautiful because everything would stack so nicely. She would not have to get pulled from her department down to juniors, because even junior girls can't make that big of a mess when they don't need to search for shit. She wouldn't have to leaf through six clearance rounders, the fitting room, and the entire stockroom to find a $9.79 clearance t-shirt in a size medium, because there wouldn't be a size medium. She wouldn't have to call San Francisco, where they never pick up the goddamn phone. Everyone would buy more because everything would look good, and her sales would be fantastic. She wouldn't have to play maid and clean up for the pigs who use the fitting room to vomit. She wouldn't have to make sure the sizes on the hangers matched the sizes on the tags. And switch tickets would be so much easier to detect.
Of course, this benefits you too, Macy's customers, for imagine how much happier I would be if I didn't have to waste my time searching for your stupid size because you were too stubborn to purchase the shirt when it was regular price and in stock. Imagine how much happier I would be if I didn't have to clean up after grown women because they think they're good enough to leave all of their clothes in a pile on the floor on top of the pile that was there from the previous bitch, along with all of their trash, food wrappers, hangers, and tickets that they ripped off the clothes. I would be so much happier. I wouldn't feel like saying "fuck" or some derivation of that interjection every other word, and some of my smiles might actually be genuine.
So the time has come, Macy's shoppers, to attain equality--of size. Start by spending $25 on clothes and using the other $25 to buy the godiva chocolate located at every register. Then you can use your $20 off of a $50 purchase while still maintaining the calories. Coupons work on chocolate, but they do not work on everyday values. Doesn't that say something? Yes. It says, "Start eating." Unless you're the ideal size. (Which I haven't figured out...How about a 13? That's my lucky number. Yes. Let's go with 13.) Then, you are perfect just the way you are.
~ToriannaLamba