Susan's Scribblings the Blog

A writer from the Philadelphia area shares the week online.
Susan's Scribblings the Blog
  • Who the Heck is Kayewer?
  • Monthly Archives: July 2012

    • From Behind the Counter

      Posted at 1:56 am by kayewer, on July 29, 2012

      I’ve had enough bad experiences with cashiers and sales clerks to know that, as a country, we are going to heck in a handcart when it comes to face-to-face customer service.

      Recently I was shopping at a Rite-Aid and encountered a malcontent clerk who likes to gripe about his job in rapid-fire speech that fueled my inner thoughts about whether or not I actually did hear him correctly?  I don’t think he said anything fireable, but why should I listen to him complaining about his job?  At least he has a job.  He ought to shut up and ring up my purchase.

      The other day I was snookered into taking a mall survey.  At the local mall sits a senior citizen hunched over a clipboard; she tries to solicit participants from a table at the head of the food court, and my friend and I have seen her for quite some time and felt for her situation.  We sat down and took her survey.  It turned out my friend was allergic to the food item she was touting, so I wound up participating alone.  You know how these things go:  we had to walk down a back entrance corridor lined with unlit cinder block walls, to a dimly lit office manned by a pleasant enough clerk who welcomed us to her little survey haven as if we had come to Shangri-La.

      Her assistant, however, was not of the same ilk.  He was a disinterested young fellow probably on the demographic fence between 18 and a basket-weaving Associate’s degree, whose tone of voice and behavior did not spur our interest in the product at all.  He even commented that he needed to double-check the entries the lady had written on her clipboard because he had trouble reading it.  I was tempted to remind him that, someday, he would probably have arthritis so bad he wouldn’t be able to text anymore, but I kept that to myself.

      It seemed I would have to take a product home and test it (that is eat it and survive), so he went to the back room to fetch it.  The product had two or three varieties, but the one he told me I would try didn’t match the one he brought out; he seemlessly took it away and came back with another one without batting an eye or betraying his mistake, but I was dumbfounded.  The fellow couldn’t read the difference in the labels on three products?

      I’m sitting here now to tell you that I survived eating the product, which I managed to get home from the mall in nothing more than a plastic bag and a salvaged freezer tote in my friend’s car.  It made it through a half hour of shopping in the mall and another half hour or so at Target, then the trip home.  I just wish the follow-up survey would include a part on how the survey staff treated us.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged customer service, mall surveys, Rite-Aid
    • On Vacation This Week

      Posted at 2:13 am by kayewer, on July 22, 2012

      I’m taking a day off.  See you next week in time for the end of July and the start of the Olympics.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments
    • In a Fog

      Posted at 1:44 am by kayewer, on July 15, 2012

      I was walking through the mall with a friend the other day, and I was amazed at how little attention people paid to where they were walking.  We were cut off at the entrances to three stores by shoppers who couldn’t wait a second to blow their money inside until we passed by, several groups blocked the walkways, parents let their kids run amok, and some moron left a  full cup of soda by a store entrance, risking a kick-over and a slip-and-fall lawsuit.

      The issue of when a food container becomes trash has been a bone I have picked for years.  My mother has told me that, back in the good old days before fast food, people were at a loss when disposable cups and plates were introduced.  Back then, everything was a permanent wash and reuse item.  Now, people can’t get rid of empty cups or plates fast enough.  In fact, it seems there is an unwritten rule that states any empty carrier of food or drink, upon becoming empty, must leave the hands at once.  This means that there are not enough trash containers in the world to meet the need for instant relief from that–wait for it–empty food wrapper.  Oh my!  One more second in your hand and you could lose your street cred for life!  Public shunning!  The ducking stool or the stocks, or flaming remarks on Facebook!  Board a spaceship and hope you can land on Mars and stay there until the shame goes away!

      Of course, we’ve all seen footage of distracted tablet users walking into open manhole covers or mall fountains, but these people didn’t appear to be texting or using Bluetooth devices.  They were just ignorant zombies.  Worse, they weren’t getting paid to shamble onto the set of The Walking Dead.  What is with people?  I sure hope they don’t drive cars like that.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments
    • The Star Mangled Banner

      Posted at 1:49 am by kayewer, on July 8, 2012

      The national anthem of the United States doesn’t get any respect.  I don’t think it would be right to launch into a spleen-venting rant about the status of our patriotism (though a survey might reveal much disappointment).  But I think that, in light of the fact that it is summer, we just celebrated Independence Day (in which the anthem is sung most often), and folks are confused about it, it might be worthwhile to take a look at the song we love to botch.  Sure there is a high note passage that stumps singers (“rockets red glare”), but even the most appalling warbler on a baseball field in Podunk should at least know what they are singing about, and that is probably the main reason for singers of the anthem forgetting where they are in the song.

      Think of it as a very long question.  That might help.  The poet/narrator is asking if, as the sun rises, the flag of our country was still flying over Fort McHenry.  Maybe a more “street” translation may help:

      Hey, the sun is coming up.
      Do you still see it?
      At sunset last night, we were proud to see the flag.
      Those stars and stripes really stood out over the fort wall, didn’t they?
      With all the light from the guns and cannon fire, they lit up the flag all night,
      But is it still there to prove we are a free country?

      At a recent July 4th Minnesota Twins/Detroit Tigers game,the singer of “God Bless America” really cracked his voice when he tried to go for the upscale note on “my home sweet home.”    ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4l34dTL3Xik).  At least he was going for a straight run-through, and that song seems to get more respect than “Star Spangled Banner.”  I never did forgive then top celebrity Rosanne for a rendition that mixed Michael Jackson style crotch grabbing with a smart aleck style that just didn’t seem like she tried to sing at all.  Who thought up that idea?  The late Whitney Houston gave one of the most honorable performances I’ve witnessed in years.  Proof through night or day that our flag is still here.  I just wish more folks would try to understand it and sing it properly.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments
    • Don’t Sugar Coat the Diet

      Posted at 3:07 am by kayewer, on July 1, 2012

      I saw a blurb recently, featuring one of the two most famous television doctors–Dr. Oz  was the speaker in this case (Dr. Phil is the other one whom we see quite a bit)–who mentioned that the liver takes sugar and just converts it into fat.  I stopped to think about the amount of sugar in the average daily diet, and I realized that I’m a big offender.  It also validated something I’ve suspected for a long time.

      Maybe you are a reader old enough to remember a time before artificial sweeteners hit the market.  I seem to remember when a sample pink packet arrived in the mail inviting my family to try saccharin.  Eventually we moved on to Nutrasweet (R).  Now there is sucralose and stevia and enough other types of sweetener to stock a new store chain.  Sodas started using artificial sweeteners in sodas, cereals, and even our ketchup.  Didn’t the obesity epidemic start just about the time we began consuming these products?

      Not only do we use one type of fake yummy stuff at home:  we likely use two or more versions in various foods daily.  HFCS (high fructose corn syrup) in ketchup, Splenda(R) (sucralose) in the fruit drinks, and aspartame (marketed under Equal(R) and other names) in the diet something else.  Boy are we confusing our livers.

      This morning at breakfast, I tried putting just one Equal(R) into my tea.  I didn’t taste any sweetness at all.  That can’t be good.  If it takes two or three servings to taste it, the taster has to be kind of numb, don’t you think?

      I managed to cut out my salt intake a long time ago by going cold turkey; it took a day or two before food started tasting salty without my breaking out the salt shaker.  I wonder how hard it might be to curtail sugar consumption?  We’ll see.  I’ll follow-up as I find out.

      Share this:

      • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
      Like Loading...
      Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments
    • Feedback

      Eden's avatarEden on Getting the Message
      Eden's avatarEden on The Unasked Questions
      Eden's avatarEden on And Her Shoes Were #9
      Eden's avatarEden on The Poison Field
      Eden's avatarEden on Final Tally

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Susan's Scribblings the Blog
    • Join 32 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Susan's Scribblings the Blog
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
%d