Life as a Server Archives - Page 10 of 23 - I Hate Working In Retail

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Reasons You Shouldn’t Be An Asshole To The Hostess

image - Flickr / Cedric Leclere

A few weeks ago I had a takeout customer with a fairly large and complicated order look at the receipt and say, “Well you’re not really doing anything so…” and draw a big fat line through the tip write-in area.

Maybe it seems like all I do is stand there and bring people to tables, but that’s only in my dreams.

Yes, I do whack a *super-sincere* smile on my face and bring you to your table, after greeting you with a warm “Hi, how’s your evening going?” and getting a “There’s two of us,” in return.

But there’s a bit more to hostessing than you might imagine. (A small note, I believe every human being should be forced to work in a restaurant at some point in their lives, if only to walk a mile in customer service’s shoes.)

When it’s slow, I struggle to evenly seat all the server’s sections as they bellyache to me about needing tables.

When it’s busy (which, let’s face it, is almost 100% of the time where I work), I turn tables over as quickly as possible in order to keep your wait as short as possible. I lead you to a clean and set table (god willing there are enough roll ups to get us through the night so I don’t get yelled at for not giving a table silverware), and you ask me if you can have a booth instead and I struggle to keep that smile on my face as I calmly try to explain to you that that booth fits six adults and you are a party of two so would you just please sit at this two-top and make everyone’s lives easier so the next big group that comes in here doesn’t complain to me about having to wait an hour for a table that will fit their party? No? Okay fantastic, here’s your booth, enjoy camping out there for three hours and not noticing my death glares.)

So there’s a wait and you’d like to put your name in? Cool. I tell you it’ll be about 20 minutes so you say you’re going to wait outside. When your table comes up, I search the entire interior and exterior of the establishment for you and call your name and you seem to have disappeared completely, so after waiting for a bit I move on to the next table. Then you come back 45 minutes later asking where your table is, and when I say you’ll get the next table that frees up, you complain. Added b-b-b-bonus: You glare at me when you’re getting impatient, as though I can just push a button and create more space in the restaurant. Or would you like me to walk over to our already-dining customers and ask them to speed it the fuck up so you can get that spinach and artichoke dip you’re so impatient to mow down on? I get it, you’re hungry. Hungry makes people cranky. But please don’t take it out on me, I’m doing my very best to keep everyone on both sides satisfied.

What’s that? Oh, the phone is ringing in the middle of a rush? I’ll just walk-run over to the hostess stand and put on my most professional, delightful voice, answering your call as quickly as is humanly possible. I then proceed to attempt to give directions in a town I don’t know my way around without a GPS. I get to spend my precious time answering questions like, “Do you think we’ll have to wait for a table for ten people on a Friday night at 6:30?” Or, I get a break from questions I can’t answer, and I take and input takeout orders from people who don’t know how to speak at full volume on the phone when it’s a busy night in our acoustically-not-safe-for-life restaurant and I can’t hear a thing they’re saying so I have to repeatedly (and oh-so-politely) ask them to please speak up.

I bus tables when the servers don’t have time, (read: 100% of the time because customers are determined to leave the tables as messy as possible when they do finally get up, and the servers are just as busy as I am, with the added pressure of depending entirely on tips for their income). I have to touch people’s used forks, knives, spoons, glasses, plates and walk them back to the kitchen for the dishwasher without dropping anything while attempting to get as little leftover-food-nastiness on my nice sweater. I pick up your dirty napkins from the floor. When there’s disgusting food that you animals leave on the table itself, I’m the one who has to pick/wipe it up.

I get the blame when people walk in and seat themselves at a clearly dirty table. Because clearly when we’re in the middle of a dinner rush, it’s my fault that people say they’re just going to go to the bar and instead just go ahead and pick out a table, so then I get to clean the table (pretending not to resent their cheating the system and hopping themselves to the front of the wait while I get more death glares from the people who are actually waiting their turn) while the offenders stand there staring at me like I’ve wronged them.

When you walk in with three kids under the age of four, instead of punting them all out the door like I want to do because children are horrible, I smile even wider and offer crayons and coloring pages. You complain about not being allowed to bring your stroller in and even after I explain that it’s a fire code violation so we aren’t allowed to have them in the restaurant, you act like it’s my fault and that I’m really putting you out by asking you to leave it right outside or offering to store it for you. I make the tables bigger to accommodate your party, and carry two heavy oak high chairs all the way across the restaurant. I pray for no spills which either I or the servers will have to clean up in the middle of a rush, depending on who’s unluckiest and least slammed with work at that particular moment.

When your kid starts wailing at the top of their lungs and spitting out food because apparently you’re raising them in a barn, I give you a sympathetic look and (internally) curse you at the same time, because I know parenting is fucking HARD if not impossible, but I also know you’re not going to do anything to attempt to leave the table anything less than a disgusting crime scene of smushed up mac and cheese which I’ll have the pleasure of scrubbing off the table. I also curse our kids menu for having a brownie sundae on it because giving children anything with that potential for mess is straight up irresponsible.

I also get the pleasure of maintaining the bathrooms during my shift. Keep toilet paper and paper towels stocked, then sweep them up when you can’t manage to get them in the trash (Honestly, is this your first time peeing in an actual toilet? The used paper goes in the toilet, not on the floor beside it.) (Same goes for your urine.) When the toilet sticks fifteen times a night and customers don’t have the sense to just push a little harder on the handle, you just let me know and I go right in and flush whatever lovely thing you’ve left in there for me. I also do all this in the men’s room, while holding my breath because it somehow always reeks of urine no matter how clean it is.

A few weeks after my run-in with the most thoughtless takeout guest ever, I had another takeout customer come in during a rush, and though I did my best to take care of her as quickly as possible, that night was just not cutting me any slack–we were slammed. The woman, seeing my exasperated face (it sometimes peeks through, try as I might to always appear delighted to be there), gave me the payment for her order, and when I told her I’d be right back with her change, she made my night, saying “Just keep the rest.”
Stunned at the generosity (it was a fifteen percent tip on a fairly large order, and this never happens to me), I put on my first genuine smile of the night and thanked her.

That smile didn’t leave my face for the rest of the night.

The moral of the story, dear readers:

Try to be fucking considerate to the people who serve you. We work a lot harder than you might imagine, and we really are doing our very best to give you the best possible dining experience, because we want you to leave with a smile on your face, and hopefully even come back at some point.

Also,

Tip your hostess. You just might make her entire night.

Note: I know I don’t have the hardest job in the world. I’m not on the front lines or cutting into people’s’ brains. I have no illusions about the importance of my position; a monkey could probably do it. ** I’m just trying to get us all to try to be more mindful of the fact that the Verizon employee you’re yelling at because your WiFi bill is wrong or the server who brought you a Coke instead of a Diet Coke might actually be a human being with actual problems and feelings that matter. Let’s just try to apply the whole do-unto-others thing to customer service.

If you’ve ever worked in food service in any capacity, I hope you feel me on this.

 

Sourced from thoughtcatalog.com

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THE 10 GROSSEST THINGS PEOPLE FOUND IN FAST FOOD

You know what they say about fast food, right? They make it fast. And when you rush a job, chances are that things will go wrong. In the ten examples that follow, we’ll tell you about fast food customers who got some very unwelcome special orders added to their meals.

Editor’s Note: We may need to update this list after this news story recently broke – “Canadian Man Finds Dead Mouse in Cup of McDonald’s Coffee

Human Blood in Taco Bell
grossest things found in fast food, blood in taco bell
Once you read this story, you’ll make a run away from the border. Briana Ralston went to a Louisville combination KFC and Taco Bell to pick up an affordable meal for herself and her 1-year-old daughter. They got the food to go, but while they were eating at home Ralston noticed that there were odd red smears all over the taco wrappers and the bag they came in. She called the restaurant where a manager discovered that one of the employees had gashed their finger open and leaked blood all over Ralston’s food. Needless to say, her next two calls were to the Health Department and a lawyer.

Chicken Head in McDonald’s McNuggets
grossest things found in fast food, mcnuggets chicken head
Fast food restaurants don’t typically make anything from scratch-their meals are produced in massive factories that process ingredients as quickly as possible. While they use quality control methods to make sure those chicken nuggets are as uniform as possible, nobody’s perfect. But the screw-up that slipped through all the way to a McDonald’s in 2000 was one step beyond. Katherine Ortega bought a large order of nuggets from a Newport News McDonald’s and took them home to feed her kids, only to shake a deep-fried chicken head out of the box and onto the plate. That’s not white meat, obviously.

Bullets in Costco Hot Dogs
grossest things found in fast food, bullets in costco hot dog
Warehouse store Costco isn’t a fast food chain per se, but they do serve up large amounts of fast food at their snack bars, and this story is too warped to leave out. In 2004, a woman named Olivia Chanes was shopping at the Irvine, Calif., Costco when she started craving a snack. She settled on a hot dog and, after putting her condiments on the Hebrew National frank, started eating. A few bites in, she felt something hard in her teeth and pulled out a live 9mm bullet. She was freaked out, but things got worse when she began having abdominal pains and was taken to the hospital, where doctors discovered that she’d actually swallowed another live round from inside the hot dog!

Syringe in Burger King Breakfast Sandwich
grossest things found in fast food, syringe in burger king breakfast sandwich
When you’re in a hurry to get to work, sometimes a breakfast sandwich at a fast food place is the only option. But don’t eat too fast, or else you might find an unpleasant surprise. In 2001, Angelina Cruz went into a Burger King in Queens for a quick sausage and egg breakfast sandwich. As she chewed, she felt something hard inside her cheek and spit the bite out. Lodged in the half-eaten wad of food was a needle tip from a syringe that had pricked her cheek. She wrapped the foreign object in a napkin, but the damage was done and Cruz told the press that she was terrified of the prospect of catching a disease from the medical waste.

Human Skin in Arby’s Sandwich
grossest things found in fast food, skin in arby's sandwich
Arby’s is one of those fast food franchises that you rarely hear about people eating at, yet they seem to be everywhere. They’re famous for their roast beef, but you might want to stay away from the chicken. In 2005, David Scheiding headed into an Arby’s in Tipp City, Ohio, and got himself a chicken sandwich. After a few bites, he noticed the meat felt unusual, reached inside and pulled out a scrap of bloody human skin with a fingerprint on the end. He confronted the manager, who admitted that he’d cut himself shredding lettuce and didn’t notice that a chunk of his right thumb was in with the mixed greens. Unsurprisingly, Scheiding got himself a lawyer and sued.

Fried Mice in Popeye’s Chicken
grossest things found in fast food, fried mice in popeyes chicken
The kitchen at a fast food restaurant is a paradise for vermin. With so much fatty, salty, starchy food being served (and dropped), scavengers can do very well for themselves if they stay out of sight. But danger also abounds. The Popeye’s Chicken in Baltimore City had been closed down for health violations several times before 2003, but that didn’t stop Tony Hill from going in for a three-piece meal in September. While he ate his chicken, Hill discovered a little something extra-a mouse who had fallen into the fryer and been sizzled to a crisp. Thankfully, he didn’t bite down on the wayward rodent.

Painkillers in Burger King Sandwiches
grossest things found in fast food, painkillers in burger king sandwiches
The case of a Burger King employee named Woody Duclos is one of the weirdest things we’ve ever heard. Duclos got busted in 2010 when a customer felt something strange in her chicken sandwich, spat it out and discovered it was a small blue pill. She took it to a fire station where they identified it as the powerful painkiller hydrocodone. Another man found a pill in a fish sandwich, and the drug-laced food was traced back to Duclos. He was sentenced to five years in prison, but prosecutors couldn’t ever figure out exactly why he wanted to dope up his customers.

Nail in a McDonald’s Burger
grossest things found in fast food, nails in mcdonald's sandwich
Fast food franchising is a global enterprise, and you can get the familiar menu items at McDonalds restaurants all over the world. And that brings with it the same food safety issues, as Swedish man Yushuf Bercil discovered in 2010. Bercil went to a Golden Arches in Gothenburg for a burger, bit down and immediately felt a sharp pain in the roof of his mouth. Not realizing what was happening, he took a second bite and felt even more pain. Reaching into his mouth, Bercil pulled out a ¾-inch nail that had become lodged between his tooth and his gum. He threw up, told the manager and decided to boycott fast food from that point on.

Band-Aid on a Pizza Hut Slice
grossest things found in fast food, band-aid on pizza
The idea of eating a used Band-Aid is one of the most repulsive things we can think of, so our hearts go out to Ken Wieczerza of Ballston Lake, New York. Ken ordered a large supreme pizza from the Clifton Park Pizza Hut but couldn’t finish it, so he put the leftovers in the fridge for later. Feeling peckish the next day, he went in for a cold slice and bit down, only to notice a strange feeling on his teeth. Pulling the slice away, he discovered a bloody blue Band-Aid baked right into the crust. He stowed the disgusting piece of pizza in a plastic bag in the fridge and complained to the company.

Finger in Wendy’s Chili
grossest things found in fast food, wendy's chili finger
Most cases of gross objects in fast food can, as we’ve seen, be traced back to the kitchen. But sometimes it’s the diners themselves, as this tale illustrates. In 2005, a Las Vegas woman named Anna Ayala ordered a cup of chili at Wendy’s, which for some reason still serves chili. Sitting down to eat it, she freaked out the whole restaurant screaming when a spoonful came up with a severed human finger. Nobody in the kitchen was missing one, so it was quite the mystery for police and the health department. Six weeks later, they figured it out: it belonged to a man who lost it in an accident at work and gave the digit to Ayala’s husband. The couple cooked up a scam to sue Wendy’s for bank, but ended up charged with attempted grand larceny.

Sourced from Mandatory.com

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Snake Thrown At Tim Hortons Employee For Bad Breakfast

File photo.

When life gives you onions, throw a snake at it — just don’t do it in a Tim Hortons coffee shop.

Police say that’s exactly what a suspect in Saskatoon, Canada did Monday morning,according to The Star Phoenix. The enraged customer reportedly reached into his buddy’s pocket, pulled out a garter snake and threw it at a Tim Hortons employee because the onions on his breakfast sandwich weren’t diced.

“I’ve never heard of a snake being thrown at an employee by a customer … It was definitely a little chaotic,” Saskatoon Police Spokeswoman Alyson Edwards told the paper.

The staff told police that the two male suspects were arguing with employees about their breakfast order at 7:30 a.m. The argument reportedly got heated before the snake was thrown.

Police quickly determined that the garter snake — now named Outlaw — wasn’t poisonous, and found it a new home. The two suspects, both 20, face charges of mischief and causing a disturbance.

It’s unclear why the unidentified men would use a snake as a weapon, but we wonder if they saw the absolute letdown that was Discovery’s “Eaten Alive,” in which a man was in fact not eaten alive by an anaconda.

Deadspin notes that they could have done a lot better job if they wanted to spook employees:

Sourced from Huffingtonpost.com

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