Saturday, December 8, 2012

The Safe Way to Safeway

So in this post, I’m going to tell you how I ended up working at Safeway for a couple of months after college, and some things I learned while I was there.

That's me!

So for me, leaving college was a shock which I think finds its closest point of comparison in birth: 

There you are, just developing along.  Everything about your environment (although you don’t realize it yet) is all warm and gooey and super conducive to growth.  You don’t cherish it as much as accept it as the normal state of things.  All systems are in place for a “natural” biological/intellectual development.  Feeding tube: check, academic advisor: check, amniotic fluid: splash, discussion-oriented peer group keeps you engaged even outside of class: totes good to go!

So then one day, just as you’ve reached this critical stage in your development, the walls contract and send you head first out of the vagina!  Wow.  What a ride.  You sit there all sticky and cold and cry for a second while your eyes adjust before you attempt to crawl back inside.  But, as it turns out, the administration has already deactivated your key card, denying you re-entry to their magnificent incubator of minds.  So, you cry a bit more in that sticky puddle of leftover academic afterbirth, and then gradually, by degrees, begin the process of adjusting to the fact that your well-developed facilities have just been rendered completely useless in the blinding light of the “real world.”  College had not prepared me for what came after, and yet, I’m not sure I necessarily think it should have...


IN ANY CASE, I moved to San Francisco and started the job search with some friends. Blah-di-blah. Recession, recession.  Two months of solid caffeine, cover letters, and crying before my bank account was just about tapped.  I stopped applying for jobs with titles like “PR Associate” or “Junior Analyst”, and started furiously churning out cover letters for ones more to the tune of “Data Entry Clerk” or “Night Cashier.”

After sending out 50 or so solicitations for employment and seriously bombing in the handful of first-round interviews I actually got, one cover letter finally captured the attention of recruiters at my friendly neighborhood Safeway store.  I got a call
they wanted me there later that day to fill out hiring paperwork.  And just like that, this man-foetus was on his way to kindergarten!



***


We sat in mismatched chairs, huddled in a second-story supply closet, which purposed also as the surveillance studio and administrative headquarters for the store.  We had all been instructed to arrive in uniform and, knowing this, I still received quite a jolt of existential Wattage from the abundance of too-big white dress shirts half-untucked from black thrift store Dungarees, and from the realization that my clothes matched theirs.  


This was the same room where I had been interviewed for the position a few days earlier.  The interview had consisted of a few rapid-fire questions followed by a drug screening:


“Describe any previous relevant work experience.”  

“I worked at a convenience store at my college.  I used a cash register to manage cash transactions and gained experience providing customer service.”
“How would you define good customer service?”
“When a customer leaves feeling better than they did when they walked in the door, that’s good customer service.”
“Great, open your mouth—I need to swab your cheek.”  

***


Our safety instructor entered the dank surveillance studio/supply closet a few minutes late for our 2:15 meeting.  She had driven down from corporate in Marin, she explained.  There had been traffic on the bridge.  The first thing she did after settling onto her sad metal stool (which put her a full head above the humble Dungarees) was to compliment us on how nice we looked in our old, newly-acquired clothing.  


“Well, don’t you look like a sharp bunch today!”




She had a warm, maternal manner, yet it was understood that we weren’t to respond unless explicitly asked a question.  There was an appealing familiarity about being talked to like this—a regression to grade school roles which was mandatory, yet not altogether unwanted.  We were down on our luck, needed work badly.  And she was going to usher us out of the bitter, electric frost of obsolescence with her sticky-sweet voice and familiar gradeschool paradigms.  It didn’t matter so much that we were, for the most part, adults.  We were relieved to have someone to obey.  


The safety training took the form of vaguely instructive anecdotes (packaged as confidential eye-witness accounts from her THREE DECADES (gasp) with Safeway grocery stores), each followed by series of leading follow-up questions, to which we obediently responded in unison.  The story I remember:




“Ok guys, another Ingredient For Life® here at Safeway stores is: following safety-related instructions and taking all necessary safety precautions.  Now, what does that mean?  That means that if we work in the stockroom and use a box cutter, we leave the blade on the shortest setting and retract it completely when we’re done.  It means we bend from the knees if we pick something up off the ground.  It means we use safety gloves when slicing meat in the deli and oven mitts when baking bread in the bakery.  Now, speaking of the bakery, let me just let you in on a little something that happened a few years back at a store near Seattle.  A woman had just started working as a baker.  She was a single mother of two children, and it was nearing the end of her shift.  She was in a rush to finish up so she could get home and be with those kids, but something had spilled in the oven that day, leaving a big, crusty mess.  Now, instead of following safety precautions and going at it with a scraping tool, she thought she'd save herself a little time by mixing together two cleaning agents to burn the thing off.  Big mistake.  Turns out, when those two chemicals are mixed together, they produce toxic fumes The oven exploded with said fumes, she inhaled them, and in a couple of seconds, they burned her face, chest, and 90% of her lungs.  Our insurance is still covering her medical bills, but to this day, she can’t talk, can’t see, can’t get up out of bed, and will never breath another breathe without the assistance of a machine." 

Her voice became more implicit and confidential, as if to say that this next part was intended just for us non-burn-victims who could follow the safety precautions.  


“Now, do you think she can very well care for those children now that she’s all burned like that?”


She gestured to prompt our unison response.


All Dungarees: “No.”


“No, that’s right, she can’t.”


I couldn’t decide which was more horrifying: the story, or finding myself among the ranks of a uniformed schoolchild army, affirming on cue that we were in fact much more responsible and able to follow instructions than the silly burn victim from the story.  Probably the story was more horrifying.  But still...


***


My first days as a checker were spent in a state of perpetual, scalding terror.  One facet of a grocery store checker’s role in society that you probably don’t really understand unless you’ve ever been lucky enough to spend some time actually doing it is their capacity as receptacles for angry people’s angriness, hurried people’s hurriedness, and nervous people’s nervousness.  And let me just stress the word receptacle.  You’re literally getting paid to ingest the worst in people.  And the thing is, they totally know it.  It’s part of the arrangement.  It’s part of the ritual of going to the grocery store in the United States.  If you’ve had a bad day, you can shit all over the poor asshole who’s bagging up your Haagen Dazs, especially if your coupon doesn’t go through the first time. Also, there should definitely always be this sort manic wave of anxiety that infects you and then every subsequent person in line if anything should interrupt the steady processing of transactions. If the receipt paper runs out, be sure to let out a deep sigh full of consternation and stress and cast significant looks in your neighbors’ directions as if to say, “What and idiot!  And you wonder why he’s working at Safeway.”  If the problem persists, the internal monologue continues (producing appropriate corresponding facial expressions and postures):





“I can’t believe this!  I just can’t.  How could this happen?  Will we ever be able to leave this place?  And what about my purchases?  What will happen to them if I’m not rung up?  Who will look after them?   I can’t possibly care for them in this environment with no kitchen or refrigerator.  How will I put them away if I haven’t left the store yet?  Who’s going to put them away if I’m here and they’re also still here and we haven’t left yet because we haven’t been rung up yet?!?  Ok good, it’s fixed.”


Two more things you might not understand:  


1) Checking groceries is a serious athletic endeavor.  Standing and lifting and shifting heavy objects all day is exhausting at best, assuming that you don’t get injured.  That pudgy older woman on the other side of the conveyer belt can probably bench press your weight.  


2) When you talk to hundreds of people per hour for days and days on end in these clipped little regimented interactions, you start to lose track not only of who you are in a conversational setting, but also of whom or what it is that you’re conversing with.  By the end of an hour or two, the people begin to run together into this meaningless sludge of faces and bagging preferences.  “Sure.”  “Absolutely.”  “No problem.”  “Nope, I’m not Russian.”  “Thank you.”  “Do you have your club card?”  Next time you think you’ve really brightened up a checker’s day, take a moment to realize that they probably can’t distinguish you from the thick smear of faces and insincere pleasantries that is perpetually churning past their field of vision and making them feel more and more confused about who or what they are.  Often, the nicest thing you can do for them is to pass through the line quietly.  


***


Ok, so there was all that stuffmaybe not the best experience in the world.  But for cereal, after getting past the uniform and being talked to like a first grader, after improving my core strength and learning to shoulder the strange responsibility of helping people quell the extraordinary terror they occasionally experience when held up in grocery store lines, there was some really interesting stuff to observe.  


In a modern society, the grocery store cuts across vast swaths of the population like few other venues do.  Coming straight from a comparatively small, homogeneous college population, working at Safeway granted me the opportunity to conduct a survey of people and grocery preferences with an enormous (granted, geographically-determined) sample.  Just a few customers stand out in particular from the above-referenced facial smear:




-The red-nosed alcoholic who would come at 11am on weekdays to buy a couple of handles of cheap vodka and a box of hot pockets.  He never looked me in the eyes.


-The insane (but somehow wealthy) heavyset younger woman who brought her own bags and would come through the checkout line always between two carts, both laden with expensive groceries.  I would have guessed she was always just about to throw an elaborate dinner party if it weren’t for her utter lack of social grace.  It was like talking to a hyperactive seven-year-old with a credit card.  (Maybe these were just incredibly awkward dinner parties?)

-The kind-seeming Russian woman in her mid-30s who, among other things, always bought a four-pack of wine juice boxes, and took her time paying.  



And then there were my co-workers.  Each of them embodied a unique strategy for coping with an unpleasant situation for prolonged periods of time.  Some of them reached out, became friends with their regulars, searched continually for yet-undiscovered permutations of small talk.  Others retracted, gave up, said “ok” a lot, avoided eye contact, wore dark sweatpants and ate directly out of cans of Chunky Cambell’s Soup.  Some of them treated checking groceries like a game, tried to rise to the top of the printout listing each checker's checking speed in Items Per Minute
.  The trick was to log out of your terminal between customers so you had less down time.  Results were posted weekly in the dank little staff lounge next to the refrigerated meat at the back of the store.  

These people were extremely kind to me as the newbie who was always furiously flipping through the laminated PLU code book trying to find the code for fucking persimmons (what the FUCK is a persimmons?), which they had all had memorized for years.  “4427.”  They had this sort of easy regard for each other that comes from years of being stuck together in the same place.  They were quick to accept me into this family.  I do the majority of my shopping elsewhere now, but do see them occasionally when I go back for alcohol or incidentals on the weekends.  Sometimes, in flashes from the opposite side of the check stand, when they ask me what I’m doing now, I think I understand just for a second what is meant by the word privilege.


***


Ok, saving the most surreal for last, I want to leave you with the time I got the night shift.  Now I don’t know how I came to be scheduled for what I later discovered was the most coveted timeslot on the checker schedule, but I’m glad it happened at least once while I was there.  I arrived at the store at 3am in my apron and tie.  The two sliding doors at the entryway were open just enough to let one person slip in or out.  I slipped in.  Most of the lights were off in the store and there was a deep, dull machine hum that I didn’t quite remember hearing during the daylight hours.  A cleaning crew was waiting at an empty checkout terminal, coffees in hand.  They spoke to each other softly in Spanish.  The head of the crew was talking to the new guy, explaining that the gig wasn’t so bad after his first day on the job.  (I think it was his first day.)  I walked up to them and starting ringing them up for their coffees.  Where had they gotten the coffee?  I didn’t ask.  They filed out into the dark.  It was just me and the hum.  The only considerable light source in the store seemed to be coming from directly above the checkstand I had just started using.  It wasn’t the regular fluorescent lighting but some sort of emergency backup lighting.  It glowed.  With the rest of the lights off and the dull hum everpresent, the store took on an almost cavernous quality.  The ceilings seemed vaulted, the place seemed to breathe and echo.  I probably saw 4 people between the hours of 3am and 5am.  Each one came out of the darkness holding a single item, paid for it, and vanished with no explanation.  These were spectres, I realized.  And I was holding vigil for them.  I understood later when my co-workers told me this was the “seniority shift.”  




-Jenkins

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

4 Relationship Lessons from The Joy Luck Club (1993)

Ok, so as many of you may already know, I’m sort of obsessed with Wayne Wang’s 1993 film adaptation of Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club.  I first saw the film on network television during the late 90s—I was probably about 10 at the time—and remember becoming instantly and inexplicably enthralled by Tan’s interlocking set modern parables told from the perspectives of 4 first generation Chinese-American immigrants and their daughters.  As I grew up and started dating, I began to realize that beyond offering a beautiful, almost mythical depiction of the Chinese-American immigrant experience during the second half of the 20th century, The Joy Luck Club was also a veritable encyclopedia of solid relationship/dating advice.

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Seriously, every bad relationship paradigm I’ve ever experienced is represented and explored in this film.  Ever felt ignored?  Undervalued?  Ever been too accommodating?  Ever married an accountant who makes you pay for his ice cream???  Yes, I thought so. 

After a long, unproductive search for curious new JLC inductees (seriously, none of my friends would watch it with me), I’ve decided to sift through the 139-minute masterpiece and pull out the 4 most precious gems of relationship wisdom for all to marvel at.  In this rendering, the drama is all but done away with and the story arch completely missing.  The soundtrack is gone and the artful cinematography reduced to a few choice GIFS.  However, if you really don’t have the time for the real thing (scoff), I’m hoping this, my inaugural Joy Luck Blog post, will at least partially fill you in on what’s been going on in your life.  Enjoy.

Some Background
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Four Chinese-American women play mahjong. Each
woman has a daughter.  Each mother/daughter pair
has a lesson for you...
June (voice over): My mother died four months ago.  I realized for the first time they wanted me to take my mother’s place.  So I sat down on the East, where things begin, with my mother’s best friends.  My mother started the Joy Luck Club having met all these women in church:  Auntie An Mei, Auntie Lindo, Auntie Ying Ying.  For 30 years, these women feasted, forgot past wrongs, laughed and played, lost and won, and told the best stories.  Each week, they hoped to be lucky, and that hope was their only joy.  Their connection with each other had more to do with hope than joy or luck. 


Pair 1: Waverly & Auntie Lindo
Ok, this is a good one to start with because I think we've all been in this situation—trying to get mom to fix that cheap dye job of hers so she won't embarrass us at our posh 90s wedding. Some background: Waverly is this ultra chic 90s business woman who is engaged to a hot Southern man named Rich.  Her mother is this extremely withholding, judgmental woman named Lindo.  It has been difficult for Waverly to get her mother to acknowledge her relationship with Rich since he is not Chinese.  At the salon, the pent up tension surrounding the wedding comes out in little jabs. Waverly insults her mother's poor haircare decisions.  Lindo insults her daughter's extravagant lifestyle and says she doesn't want to pay for the expensive dye job.  Waverly takes her mother's obstinacy as a sign of disapproval regarding the wedding.  Let's hear how this all culminates:
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Sad faishes :(

Waverly: Why don't you like Rich?

Lindo: It’s Rich you afraid I not like.  If I don’t liking Rich, I act polite, say nothing, let him have big cancer, let my daughter be a widow.  I like Rich, of course I do.  To allow him to marry such a daughter…

Waverly: You don’t know, you don’t know the power you have over me.  One word from you, one look, and I’m four years old again crying myself to sleep.  Because nothing I do can ever, EVER please you. 
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Happy faishes :)

Lindo: Now—now you make me happy. 

(Mutual laughter ensues.)

LESSON 1: Sometimes that nitpicky roommate, family member, or friend just wants to KNOW that he/she is making you feel bad.  They're not doing it because they don't love you.  In fact, they do it exactly because they do love you.  They just want to be sure that you also care about them, and the only way they've found to reassure themselves on this point is to exert a bit of control over your emotional state by being super rude and mean to you.  When you get upset, your anguish shows them that you care.  Don't let this get you down, though. You can both acknowledge how fucked up it is and have a good laugh about it! (Mom, you're such a bitch, lol!)


Pair 2: Lena & Auntie Ying Ying

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Hot Lady and Icky Man
Ok so pretty much, Lena is this really sweet, agreeable dish who marries this icky bald accountant man who keeps track of all of their expenses separately and makes her pay him back for things he buys that only she uses (like tampons). And can I just briefly say about this whole situation: gross.  Really icky and bad and gross.  He's really mean and condescending to her and she totally eats it up even though she deserves way better since she's a hot, capable young woman with a full head of hair and a chic 90s wardrobe.  Anyway, her mother, Ying Ying, comes over to the couple's new ultra modern apartment (made mostly of sad, gray metal) and starts wondering why her daughter puts up with all of this aggressive bull shit.  She sees the icy efficiency of the relationship reflected on the cold, crooked surfaces of the apartment.  Here's what she has to say: 

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Checking out the lopsided house...
Ying Ying (voice over): All around this house I see the signs.  My daughter looks but she does not see.  This is a house that will break into pieces.   It’s not too late.  All my pains, my regrets, I will gather them together.  My daughter will hear me calling even though I’ve said no words.  She will climb the stairs to find me.  She will be scared because at first her eyes will see nothing.  She will feel in her heart this place that she hides her fears.  She will know I am waiting like a tiger in the trees now ready to leap out and cut her spirit loose.
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"Mommy?"

Ying Ying: Do you know what you want, I mean from him?

Lena: Respect, tenderness.

Ying Ying: Then tell him now and leave this lopsided house.  Do not come back until he give you those things with both hands open. 

Lena: I can’t.

Ying Ying: Losing him does not matter.  It is you who will be found, and cherished. 

LESSON 2: You can’t negotiate fair terms in a relationship.  A relationship isn't a business contract; certain things like respect and tenderness should just be inherent and forthcoming.  The accounting example is an extreme one, but we've all been there more or less.  If you're at the point of trying to bargain for something really basic that you're not getting from a significant other, it's probably too late for your lopsided house and everyone in it.  You had best get out, girl, and take some of that metalic furniture with you.  That is, if you can get all of the ick off of it.  (Tide pen?)


Pair 3: Rose & Auntie An Mei
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-"What do you want for dinner?"
-"Oh, dear god."
Ok so Rose and Ted are getting a divorce after their marriage sort of falls into the shitter.  We see a flashback of them on their first date.  They're still in college and Rose gets all sassy and calls Ted out about his icky rich boy attitude.  He's clearly into it. As their relationship progress, however, Rose starts to ease up on the sass pedal. She becomes less and less opinionated and more and more eager to please until she can't even form an opinion about what she wants for dinner.  ("I want whatever you want.  I just want you to be happy!")  He's clearly no longer into it.  Now she's preparing to meet with him to finalize their divorce settlement, and decides to bake a chocolate peanut butter pie to take along as a gift.  Good thing mom's there to check that decision with a little wise sass of her own.

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"Sweety... how about no
pie gifts at the divorce proceedings?"
An Mei: What you going to do with leftovers after he eat one slice? 

Rose: Throw it away I guess.

An Mei: You ask yourself why you make this.  Because I know even if you don’t.

Rose: I like being tragic, ma. I learned it from you. 

An Mei: You think he sees this pie, now he so sorry take you for granted?  You think this?  You the foolish one.  Every time you give him gift, like begging.  Take this.  I’m sorry.  Please forgive me.  I’m not worth as much as you.  So he only take you more for granted.  You’re just like my mother.  Never know what you’re worth.

LESSON 3: You can’t make someone appreciate you by being accommodating or giving gifts.  In fact, these selfless acts and prostrations may actually cause a partner to appreciate you less as your needs and priorities become lost beneath theirs.  You've gotta give a little push back, girl; make your needs known.  No one's going to read your mind, yet almost anyone (given enough persuasion) will eventually treat you like a doormat (and doormats are no fun to date). There should be some friction in a relationship—it's a sign that you've maintained two independent sets of needs.  Your husband will appreciate you more if you occasionally put your own needs first.  So next time you find yourself in doormat mode, do yourself a favor—throw that peanut butter pie in the trash, dust that shoe dirt off of your face, and tell him exactly what it is that YOU want for dinner!  (My guess is crab.)


Pair 4: June & Auntie Suyuan 
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"It's just not... well... sophisticated."
And now the moment you've all been waiting for: the epic and much-quoted crab quality speech!!!  It is the best part of this or any movie.  I'm considering getting it tattooed across my neck for safekeeping.  Anyway, the story goes that Waverly and June have been friends and rivals since early childhood.  Growing up, their mothers were in the habit of comparing the two girls' accomplishments in ruthless public bragging competitions, so the daughters were constantly under pressure to measure up to one another.  Now they're grown up and Waverly's become some sort of sexy 90s business professional while June is this chirpy, turtleneck-wearing freelance writer with side bangs.  The two moms and their daughters have just sat down to a nice crab dinner when Waverly insults some freelance work that June did for her company, saying it lacks sophistication and style.  The girls argue until June's mom steps in and just completely stabs the shit out of her daughter's back:

     Suyuan: True, cannot teach style.  June not like Waverly.  Must be born this way.  

Later, while June and Suyuan are cleaning up from the dinner party, June confronts her mother about her lofty expectations and perpetual disappointment.  Mom fires back with one glorious doozy of a monologue, referred to in film circles as the "crab quality speech."  Let's listen in:

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"Its hurts me, mommy."
June: Every time you hope for something I can’t deliver, it hurts.  And no matter what you hope for, I’ll never be more than what I am.  And you never see that—what I really am. 

Suyuan: June, since your baby time, I wear this next to my heart.   Now you wear next to yours.  <Places locket in hand.> It will help you know I see you.  I see you.  That bad crab, only you tried to take it.  Everybody else want best quality.  You, you thinking different.  Waverly took best quality crab, you took worst, because you have best quality heart.  You have style no one can teach.  Must be born this way.  I see you.

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"I see you!"
LESSON 4: Everyone seeks out a primitive sense of existential validity from their parents and close friends, and it can really fuck a sister up when this gets withheld. But every so often, circumstances and bitches conspire to make you feel like a total joke, and that's why it's important to have some strategies in place to sidestep the approval wagon with its heavy load of value-specific success measurements before it runs your insecure ass over. Especially when times are tough and you feel like a failure, it's important to remember that you are made valid merely by virtue of your existence, the "what I really am" that June refers to.  It's enough to just be a human, and you're a human before you are anything else.  With the crab speech, Suyuan recognizes the inherent human worth of her daughter.  June is a good person, and that's good enough.  Through the act of "seeing" her, she provides June with a preliminary basis for existential security and self worth.  And June's just all like, "Coolawesomethanks, Mom."  Seriously though, even if mommy and daddy didn't provide you with the most secure existential footing, you can adjust the way you see yourself.  Get in touch with your inalienable human worth and then shame Waverly into paying you back for that freelance work that is good enough and will definitely work just fine for her firm.  Also don't invite her over to dinner again. She can make her own damn seafood if she's that obsessed with crab quality.

-Jenkins