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|    MEMORIES    |    Nostalgia for the past... today sucks    |    24,715 messages    |
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|    Message 22,728 of 24,715    |
|    George Pope to Daryl Stout    |
|    Re: Cyberpope' back again    |
|    10 Oct 21 14:06:38    |
      TZUTC: -0700       MSGID: 1526.fido-memories@1:153/757.2 25c891d4       REPLY: 107.fidonet-memories@1:2320/33 25b187b1       PID: Synchronet 3.19a-Linux master/ccc0e4019 Oct 8 2021 GCC 11.2.0       TID: SBBSecho 3.14-Linux master/ccc0e4019 Oct 8 2021 GCC 11.2.0       BBSID: TRMB       CHRS: ASCII 1        > Now, I'm craving a root beer float. :P              At my A&W, we didn't have separate ice crean for tge floats, we just poured in       a half cup of unflavored milkshake mix (semi-liquid ice crean, essentially.)              Now they have frozemn pre-cut oblong portions of hard ice cream. Umm, no. .       it's suposed to be a ball so the root beer hits all sides of it, crteating a       milky root beer-y foam that makes it so good!               > If you're wondering why I'm up at this hour, I was having leg        > cramps (not to mention nature called). So, I figured I'd take an        > Ibuprofen, and worked at the computer until I could feel it kicking        > in.              I do t hat when my kidney stones act up & Nature hollers (she never merely       calls any more *sigh*)               > When I worked at Burger King for 5 years over 40 years ago (I had        > done every position, including in management for a time), my favorite        > one was cashier...and the managers trusted me. One time, there was a        > stretch of a lot of cash shortages, and the franchise owner thought        > there might be some embezzlement going on. So, he set up a polygraph        > test for the employees...but they had to sign a statement saying they        > weren't being forced to take it. Yet, if they refused, they were fired;        > sounds like coercion (sp?) to me.              It's along the linmes of all 3 siblings being locked in a room together until       one admits to breaking the lamp. (typically it's a bully fest on forcing one to       admit to it, to get all free)              In my family, it was all 3 of us denying it to eaxchy other & demanding the       guilty person fess up (even the guilty one was saying the same demands to all);       listening to us talk would not identify the perp.              My bosds would charge us the cost ofg overages & underages.              I complained wshen he took $1 out of my tipos because I was over $1; he said,       "if there's more in the drawer than we sold, you stole $1 from one of my       custyomers, & I need it handy in case they ask for it back."              I accepted that, knowing it was likely a $1 tip I forgot to separate out.              Now this is illegal here in BC.               > If they let me count the drawer at the start of the shift, and do        > every transaction, then I'd take responsibility for it. But, it never        > occured to me that one of the managers was possibly dipping into the        > till. Several cash shortages resulted, and I got put on a 2 week        > suspension without pay. Well, several days in, I showed up to get        > what paycheck I had, and the franchise owner asked where I had been.        > I replied "2 week suspension for cash shortages...your directive".        > He replied "Consider it cancelled -- I need you". That spoke volumes        > to me, as he thought so highly of my character.              Yup, I'm not takling flak for a shared money drawer. Because I love       numbers/math & I make them do their job accurately, always. I set new standards       & records for accuracy.              I learned a lot from a retired bank teller (had done it 40 years) whom I worked       with at the casino, in t he cash cage. We were the first one in many years to       cash out 100% balanced (not even one 50c chip unaccounted for); darn tootin' I       kept her teachings in mind ever after!              Always establish accuracy in counting systems & adhere to them 100% every time,       without slippage or failure of any kind.              I like to know where every penny is, because even a lousy 1c is indicative of       an error & one error could mean others.              OCSD is an asset; I don't have it, soi I have to fake ity, just when working       with money.              I makle my bank teklers count out my cash with all heads facing one way.              My ex-teller coworker said in the '50s if they had even one bill no aligned in       their drawer, it was a $5 fine (lots of money for a front line worker in the       '50s you mayt recall?)               > But, back to cashier, we'd get some "live ones"...who were "not        > the brightest light in the fixture", or "the sharpest knife in the        > drawer".              I called those "entertainment" :D                > 1) One guy wanted a Whopper Junior with cheese, just ketchup only.        > I told him "I'll sell you a cheeseburger with ketchup only instead.        > It's the same thing, but cheaper". He was adamant..."No, I want        > the Whopper Junior with cheese just ketchup only". So, I said "As        > you wish". Burger King has 2 sizes of their burgers...the Whopper,        > and the smaller version. I still remember one of their original        > commercials and slogans from 50 years ago.              I did that, too -- save them money. If they asked for a competotor's item, I       pointed out they were at the wrong place, but can I suggest some tghing similar       rtghatr'll be even better? (e.g. a Teen Burger always kills a Whopper for real       food taste & a thicker more flavorful meat patty(or 2 or 3)              Most of these came back again, asking for whatever I gave them last time. I'd       ask, "Want to try the double this time, if you're extra hungry from a busy       day?"; I usualluy got my upsale. Because I knew when to ask, whbn to pushj, &       when t o back off & not be annoying.              I refused to reply to a request for a soda with, "Will. that be a large?"       because that's stupid to assume most people want a large, or can be talked into       a bigger one just because you ask it that way."; I find it borderline offensive       when done to me (implying I'm stupid & gullible)              I might ask, "Will that be a small or medium?" on non-super hot days, on which       I'd include large as an option.              When people complained we don't have ice (we keep our syrup & soda water cold       enough) I explain this & say if they're unhappy with the temperature half way       through, I'll replace it with a free one.               > 2) We'd have folks who would order sexually oriented items, and         > I told them "the red light district is downtown". And, that had        > a double meaning...for all the stoplights, and where "the world's        > oldest profession" took place.              I had one guy who kept trying to order the one waitress; I'd repeat his tinged       requests to her cus she'd just laugh & rtespond in kind, which I'd relay.              I think they eventually got married.               > 3) We'd have folks who would order items from another restaurant.        > I'd say "this is Burger King". Then, I'd tell them that restaurant        > is located down the street.              I knew the town well & could direct people anywhere, but I'd make them order       some thing first! *LOL*               > GP> I was good at my job (all the jobs, as often I was the only one taking        > GP> orders, cookinfg, & serving, being as teej lasbour is so hit & miss        > GP> (brokenm fingernail on Monday -- off work for the week, at least! Don't        > GP> ell anybodyt you won't be there, of course -- let that be a surprise as        > GP> a rush comers in! *LOL*)               > Most folks nowadays want to work from 12 to 1, take an hour off for        > lunch, and get a full check. Never mind paying folks more to stay home,        > than to come to work...no wonder there's a labor shortage.              Yup, my buddy, a customer from the A&W, owned an excavation/backhome company, &       had a half dozen machines plus flatbed ofor transporting to a job, told m e of       the time the big city next door hireds him as outsourcing to help with a street       /pipe job; giving him several sheets of the part of the job he was to do       (excavate this wide this deep, at these locations on these streets. . .)              He arrived at 7:00 (due at 8) & found nobody there. He lkmew he was early, so       kicked bacxk waiting for 390 minutes, then decided the hell with it & started       the job, as he was bored; he had it all done by 9 or 10. Still none of the       city boys had arrived. They file in after noon somet ime anmd the gf orenman       lit right into my buddy for doing what they had planned on stretching out for 3       weeks of union weage work, in one morning. Told him they'd blackball him from       getting city contracts again. My buddy laughed, told them the direction in       which to F (that direction being 'off')              Our taxdollars at work, yup! *sigh*              My biddy had plent of work; he had to shuffle jobs to do this one, as a favour       to the city manager who requested him.              Union or not, I don't care, but do the job you agreed to do at the agreed upon       wage for the agreed upon hours(schedule).              I do t his, normally for non-union comp[anies. One year the city workers were       on stri8ke for many weeks, ending up with a 5% raise soplit overt he next 3       years. At the same time, I'd been at my job for 2 months & my boss offered me a       20% raise all at once (wasn't my last spontaneously offered raise either)              I've never had to ask for a raise in my life because I give good value, & my       bosses, not wanting me to be headhunted, offer me regular raises.               > This may be "a borderline no-no", but one Bible verse notes "if a man        > will not work, he shall not eat". Now, for those who have a physical        > disability that prevents them from working a regular job (especially at        > 40 hours per week), that does not apply. It applies to the lazy, who are        > fully able to work, but choose not to.              Yup it's not worded, "If you do not work, you shall not eat"; it means if you       can, but refuse, then suffer the natural result. Nade perfect sense to the       agrian culture he was addressing, as if you don't go out & pick some potatoes &       wheat, you'll not have spuds & bread for dinner.               > I was born and raised that "the man is the breadwinner, to provide        > for the family". But, one day, my body basically said "you're not going        > to do this anymore". And, they keep finding stuff wrong with me...most        > recently, atrial flutter. The medication, and cutting out caffeine with        > iced tea, candy, chocolate, etc., has stabilized the heart rate and the        > blood pressure...but it has aggravated the migraines.              That was my example, too, but in the above example Iu'd say the man & wife were       partners -- he went out to work9or hunt), bringing home some meat & paying for       the hometyhey lived in, & she prepared the spuds, bread, & cooked meat for them       both & their kids.              Mariage was never top-down -- it's a partnership of equals, with God above       both.              People have long misunderstood the teaching of Paul: Wives submit to your       husbands. . . by ignoring the second half (& husbands love your wives as Christ       loved the church); the original Greek uses "advice tone" for the first half,       but the secoind is a hard commandment.              Women, it is good that you vote on issues with your husband, & good when you       grant him the tiebreaker vote when needed.              Men, you MUST sacrifice your entire life (time, energy, even life itself, if       required) for your wife.              Big difference in meaning from how tradition only quotes that first half.               > There was even a pinball machine with that. However, my favorite pinball        > machines were Paragon, Space Invaders, Silverball Mania, The Black Knight,        > Xenon, Fire Power, and others I can't recall. The main brands were Bally,        > Williams, and Gottlieb (those are the only ones I can remember). No telling        > how many quarters I dropped in the college game room 40 years ago. I was        > never much for video games, though. I even played one called "Lost World        > Pinball" on the comnputer awhile back. I used to have Train Simulators on        > the computer...first Microsoft Train Simulator, then Auran Trainz. But, I        > would run them in "Silver Streak Mode"...just using it to "explore the        > route", and if I got bored, move it up to notch 8, and ram it into the        > dead-end bumper at the station. |
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