Every. Fucking. Morning.
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me

#extradirty
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@twomonthstogrumpy
Every. Fucking. Morning.
yall ever worked in retail
All the Ways Your Rich Friends Will Not âGet Itâ
Iâm a kid from a blue-collar, working-class background, doing my masterâs degree at an Ivy League school. Iâm incredibly grateful to be here, and I fully understand that this is an opportunity most people of my upbringing never get to have. Not everyone here is from a rich background - there are other working-class kids, getting by on loans, scholarships and part-time jobs. But for the most part, the people around me grew up very differently than I did, and although I love my friends, there are things about my life and my college experience that theyâre just never going to get. Things like:
Money can buy good grades. My wealthier friends arenât slipping the TAs a wink and a $100 bill on their way out of the midterm, but being wealthier does make it easier to earn better grades. I have to work a part-time job in order to afford my rent, while my rich friends are abstaining from work so they can focus on school. Thatâs 20 hours per week that they can spend on school, while Iâm at my job. Our school is in a neighborhood in Manhattan that I canât afford to live in - Iâm spending at least ten hours per week commuting, while they live steps from campus. Thatâs all extra time that they can spend studying, or just relaxing and getting the sleep they need to be mentally alert. Many of my friends pay to have a laundry service pick up their dirty laundry and bring it back clean and folded (which is common in NYC). I canât afford this, so instead I spend hours lugging laundry up and down five flights of stairs, because I canât afford to live in a building with an elevator. I cook and prepare my own meals, they eat mostly takeout. And so on, and so forth. My life is filled with hours of work, chores and annoyances that they donât have to deal with, and all of it cuts into my time. We may be taking the same classes and doing assignments that are the same difficulty, but Iâm going in with a 40-hour per week handicap that they can afford not to have.Â
âFollow your dreamsâ is a risk some of us canât afford to take. My old roommate spent long hours agonizing over whether she wanted to major in art history or creative writing. For me, that would be like asking if I preferred a pet dragon or a unicorn. My biggest passion in life is fiction writing, but I canât justify spending tens of thousands of dollars to study it - Iâm paying for my education by myself, and I had to choose a field that would let me make enough money to pay back my student loans and afford my own rent after graduating. My friends can focus on the things that really interest them, without worrying about future career prospects. A lot of them are using their college years to âfind themselvesâ and plan to take some time off to travel the world or work on their art after graduating. Many of them have parents with connections in hard-to-access industries like fashion, publishing, television, or the art world. They can take unpaid internships and go for their shot at a one-in-a-million dream job - if it doesnât work out, they can move on to something else, no harm done. If I put tens of thousands of dollars into being an author and it doesnât pan out for me right away, Iâm in deep shit. Iâm happy for people who are able to follow their true passions, and I wish more people were able to do so without fear, but Iâm tired of the pitying looks and condescending lectures I get when I tell my friends why Iâm not in school for my greatest passion. I didnât make that decision because Iâm boring, or because I donât believe in myself hard enough - I made that decision because my parents co-signed on all my student loans, and they could lose their house if I canât find a job.Â
Your âfunny mishapâ is my âlife-changing disasterâ. My friends talk about the time that they accidentally got drunk and spent all their rent money at a strip club, or the time that they slept through their final and had to re-take a class. For them, these are funny stories. For me, this would be a life-defining catastrophe that could change the course of my 20s and beyond. If I blow all my rent money, I canât call my parents to beg for more - I could get evicted, or ruin my credit score. Best-case scenario, Iâd probably have to take on so many extra hours at work that I could barely finish my schoolwork. If I sleep through a final and fail a class, I will lose my scholarship and be unable to complete my degree. To my friends, I come across as uptight and overcautious, but I donât have a choice. The same mistake carries much greater consequences for me than it does for them, and they have a hard time understanding that. I wish that I could be carefree about money, and laugh about accidentally getting drunk and spending $500 on Amazon, but I canât. It can be hard to tell the difference between âoh shit, this really sucksâ and âoh shit, Iâm going to be dealing with the consequences of this for yearsâ when youâve never been on the latter end of the spectrum. Again, I love my friends, and Iâm happy that they donât have to have these stresses in their lives, but itâs hard when they attribute my cautiousness to a personality flaw, and not to the financial reality of my life.Â
Having no safety net is more stressful than you can imagine. Many of my friends insist that they arenât really rich - rich people own private jets and private islands and party with celebrities, while their parents just own a modest condo in Manhattan and a sensible vacation home in Connecticut. Theyâve grown up around people who are much richer than they are, and theyâve come to think of themselves as middle-class, even though many of their parents easily make double or triple the federal upper boundary for the middle class. But they donât have unlimited money. They donât have their own 6-figure bank accounts or unrestricted use of Daddyâs black credit cards. If they run out of money, they will have to call home and ask for more, which will be awful for them - their parents will probably yell at them, and make them feel shitty, and give them a huge unwanted lecture about responsibility. It could have a huge toll on their mental health, and that really sucks. But if I run out of money, Iâm just kind of screwed. My parents cannot help me, even if they desperately want to. The best they can do is let me move into the guestroom of their home, in a desperately poor rural area where the best job available is cashier at the grocery store in town, because it pays $2 above minimum wage. I wouldnât be homeless, but I would almost definitely default on my student loans, launch my credit score straight into the sun, and waste months or years trying to get back on my feet in an area with no opportunities. If my friends screw up, they have to face their parentsâ scorn and disappointment. If I screw up, I have to face my entire life coming apart at the seams. Living with that constantly hanging over your head can affect your entire life, and it really does feel like youâre trying to walk across a tightrope dozens of feet up, with no net to catch you if you fall. Once again, I love my friends dearly, and I am grateful to have every single one of them in my life. They have made my life and my time at graduate school infinitely better with their humour, their wit, their friendship and their sympathetic ears. I am in no way blaming them for the way they grew up - they didnât choose their lives any more than I did, and many of them appreciate how lucky they are. But thereâs still a gulf between me and them, and itâs one that can be surprisingly difficult to cross. My rich friends love me, but they donât understand me. They donât understand that money isnât just an aspect of my life - it shapes my entire life, for better or for worse, and I donât have the luxury of forgetting that it exists for even a moment. My rich friends love me, and they try. But they just donât get it.Â
fff as someone who went from literal homelessness to an ivy league college to dropping out of school and never finishing my degree due to a mix of financial catastrophe and mental health breakdown (unsurprisingly, highly intertwined)
who had so many classmates try to well meaningly make completely nonsensical suggestions of âwhy donât you just [do X thing that presupposes you have a family with money/access to a wealthy support system]â
ugh i just feel this so hard
Every retail job ever.
Customer Service Wolf.
That wolf embodies the thoughts of most in customer service
I unno what meme this is, but Iâm here for this.
Itâs called the Millennial FalconÂ
Reblogginâ the Millennial Falcon
I ALWAYS reblog the falcon
This damn thread!
Letâs all take a moment of silence for anyone who has to work retail the next couple of months.. And please remember that as busy as the holiday seasons are, and you might be in a hurry, your cashier/other employees are working really hard to make you happy and also have feelings like you. đđ
An additional moment for those in packing, sorting, and shipping jobs, those who spend eight mind numbing, back breaking hours a day getting your holiday stuff to your house. The labor that goes into working at Amazon, UPS, FedEx, etc is miserable so please appreciate the work they do
Why do some customers exist only to ruin your day?
On one of the few days when I'm actually happy to be at work and the same I'm giving customers is genuine, at least five people came up to me asking why I'm so happy and it's "weirding them out."
The kicker?
One of the women actually said, "it's just so weird, 'cause I'm not used to seeing retail people so happy. You're freaking me out."
Like...?????
"I'm so used to you all being miserable. There must be something wrong with you."
I hate retail
I was at work today for Labour Day and on TV was Good Morning America. The theme was celebrating the American worker and their accomplishments. Iâll tell you how it went down.
Kelly put on her glasses, smile wide, and pulled out a piece of paper which she read from. The paper was from an article (which I have issues with, but I will leave alone for now) by ABC news. Kelly proceeded only to read the opening of it, which reads: âAmericans work more than anyone in the industrialized world. More than the English, more than the French, way more than the Germans or Norwegians. Even, recently, more than the Japanese. And Americans take less vacation, work longer days, and retire later, too.â
And everyone cheered.
And they kept cheering when Kelly put her paper down and smiled at everyone. (not continuing with the rest of the article which suggests that this may in fact be a problem).
And I just couldnât BELIEVE that anyone was cheering. America. AMERICA you work more than the French, who are entitled by law to have 5 weeks off a year for vacation and can not work more than 35 hours per week. You work more than Norway, who average 33 hours per week and 44,000 dollars a year. Germany, where AGAIN, we see a shorter work week and better pay! And all of these countries have health care and better pay and free/affordable education!
WHY ARE YOU CHEERING?
I have a different interpretation of this information: the American worker is the most taken advantage of worker in the industrialized world. Itâs plain and simple. You work long hours and get horrible pay. You take multiple jobs and work and work and work just to get by. Unions are disappearing, jobs are always looking for part timers and all you are doing is giving up your time for less money, less vacation, less safety and stability and less education than anyone else on the list.
Celebrate Labour day. Celebrate the accomplishments of the common worker, but donât let these people trick you into thinking you should celebrate the theft of your time and energy, or the fruits of your labour.
They are using you. Stop cheering.
My coworkers didnât believe me when I told them that the US is the only industrialized country that doesnât make its employers give employees some kind of paid leave (and this is in a job where you donât get any paid vacation time the first year, then one half day every quarter after then).
Itâs so normalized here that it is genuinely a shock that the ~greatest country on earth~ treats its workers like garbage.
Those first few weeks of a new job are exhausting, not because theyâre physically taxing (although maybe they are,) but because everything is brand new to my eyes. Clothing types, name brands, sizes, I never even knew there could be so much variety.
It doesnât help that the customers seem to know more than I do. Most of the time I just stare blankly at them and whisper into my microphone for help.
And unfortunately Iâm only working two days this week (at that particular job) so I canât even get that much training in.
The good news is that everyoneâs super understanding. They all just tell me everything comes with time.
Also, on that note, can managers just stop threatening to fire people for minor infractions or voicing any kind of discomfort.
Just found out that the same manager who was hostile with me today made the same kind of threat to another coworker. Basically the, âIf you donât like it, then get another job.â
She told me she was just uncomfortable with having to basically force people to get into our rewards program. She was talking abut kids, specifically a nine year old, that she basically had to manipulate to sign up.
Apparently two managers ganged up on her, telling her it was basically harmless and yada yada.
And then she got the standard, âThis is your job. If you donât want to do it, quit.â
That statement will always rub me the wrong way.
Firstly, in this particular case, except for the managers and cashiers, EVERYBODY is trying to get either a second job or another job. We are not paid enough to live off of just this one. Many of us are just trying to get enough to pay bills. No one needs the threat of losing our jobs looming over our heads (especially when weâre already forced to do something that makes us uncomfortable.)
Secondly, I get that managers have a lot of work to manage, but people like us at the bottom of the pole get the grunt work. Thatâs what weâre paid (and not very well) for. What that means is we do the most physical work, we spend the most time with customers, and most of the problems are on our heads. And, again (and I will stress this point until the day I die) we have all this stress with little compensation.
Thirdly, people arenât toys. If you donât like the one you have you canât just throw them away and purchase a new one. Actually, you can, and thatâs the problem. These are people. People whose entire livelihood depends on their job(s). In my specific case losing a couple of hours could mean the difference in rent and eviction, and based on conversations Iâve had with my coworkers it isnât too different from them.
I feel like a lot of managers have trouble comprehending this because (at least where I work) their pay is pretty fair. If I told them, âHey, I need two more hours this week or I wonât make rent,â I imagine most of them would look at me like I grew a second head. They donât understand the stress of a minimum wage job because, though they work in a place that pays minimum wage, they donât have a minimum wage job. They think finding and starting another job is easy, because their job security has made them ignorant to the reality.
Saying, âEven if youâre uncomfortable with something, do it or get another job,â is a matter of practicality to them. Itâs just business, and there is no humanity in business.
Guys, I legitimately just checked the calendar to see which day of the week Black Friday was on.