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- Original-From: Ken Wolman <mhwpa!ktw>
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- Message-ID: <WORDS-L%92122316360837@UGA.CC.UGA.EDU>
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- Date: Wed, 23 Dec 1992 16:34:23 EST
- Sender: English Language Discussion Group <WORDS-L@uga.cc.uga.edu>
- From: ktw@MHWPA.ATT.COM
- Subject: A Christmas memory....
- Comments: To: WORDS-L <WORDS-L@UGA.CC.UGA.EDU>
- Lines: 104
-
- During my drive to work this morning, I listened to some guy on NPR
- talking about his hideous job as a Santa's elf in a mall Christmas
- display, and it reminded me of my first "real"--i.e., on the
- books--job, working during the Christmas season in Macy's Herald
- Square in New York, back in 1962.
-
- I don't remember why I decided to get a night and weekend job: maybe I
- wanted the money, or maybe I was trying extra-special-hard to flunk
- out of Hunter College. I succeeded in both areas. In any event, one
- Sunday the _Times_ had a notice soliciting seasonal floor sales
- help/good pay [yeah, right]/will train/employee discounts, to work in
- The World's Largest Store in the middle of exciting Herald Square. So
- on the Monday before Thanksgiving, after my last class, I took the
- subway down from the Bronx to 34th Street, and lined up with a bunch
- of other people of all ages and races in a cramped hallway and
- stairwell off the 35th Street personnel entrance. After an hour, we
- were admitted in groups to a large room broken into tiny cubicles with
- a partition and a writing surface you really couldn't call a "desk."
- We were given an exam that involved addition, subtraction, and
- multiplication. After 20 minutes I was called in with another group
- and was told I had myself a job, three nights a week plus all day
- Saturday. I was to report with my "class" the following Monday for a
- night of intensive training.
-
- In those precomputer days, training involved learning how to work a
- big, bells & whistles mechanical cash register, and how to write
- various kinds of sales order forms for cash, charge, take, and send.
- It also involved some security secrets. We have these guard dogs, the
- trainer told us: German Shepherds, Dobermans, and Alsatians. There's
- no reason for the shopping public to see them because they're never
- around during business hours. If you ever get stuck in the store
- after closing, and while you're heading for the employee exit, you may
- come face to face with one of these animals. There is only one rule
- to remember: Do Not Move. The dog will growl and act unpleasant but
- it not attack unless you move. The dog's handler is about 30 seconds
- behind, and will call the dog off.
-
- Then they assigned me to a department. I was hoping for something
- relatively pleasant, but I was kidding myself. I was told where to
- report the next night: Bulk Toys. Kiddie furniture, rocking horses,
- little ride-in pedal cars, bicycles. I felt like I'd put in for
- Special Services duty in a USO show in Hawaii, and instead got sent to
- Iwo Jima in the first wave....
-
- It turned out that I only saw the kids on the Saturdays I worked
- there. On weekday evenings, I saw the assorted parents, grandparents,
- uncles and aunts. Most of them probably were perfectly nice in the
- Real World: but turned loose inside a toy department during Christmas
- season, I could not imagine having most of these people in _my_
- family, which had enough of its own semi-dysfunctional maniacs to
- populate Yocknaptawpha County, Mississippi. The customers
- assumed--rightfully, perhaps--that because we Worked For Macy's, we
- had some sort of special product knowledge. We did not. We wrote up
- orders and wrapped stuff and ordered stuff to be sent, "Cash or
- charge, ma'am, take it or UPS, ma'am, have a nice day, you're kinda
- cute, lose your husband and come sit on my face...."
-
- Saturdays were their own kind of madness. The store opened at 10 AM
- sharp, we had to be at our stations by 9:45, so you got in by 9:15,
- went to the lockers, got rid of your coat, had some coffee, and made
- sure your sales book was neat and ready to go.
-
- At 10 AM the doors were open. We were on the fifth floor, about 100
- feet from the west bank of elevators, but we knew.... And at about
- 10:02, the elevators would open and you would brace yourself like a
- Polish pikeman on the battlements of a castle, waiting for the
- Cossacks to climb over the walls. From that point on it was nonstop
- pressure until closing: kids climbing on the toys, breaking the
- demonstrators, pulling at you, the parents and other ostensible adults
- asking six questions at once, and you prayed for a full bladder so you
- could excuse yourself and go to the bathroom, take a relaxed leak, and
- smoke.
-
- The pressure even got to the career guys, the department supervisors
- and managers, called Red Flowers or White Flowers for the color of the
- paper blossoms they sported in their lapels, and which really DIDN'T
- give the whole enterprise any overtones of Lancaster and York. One
- Saturday, after a long day of fending off kids and foaming-mouthed
- parents, a woman customer examined a playroom kiddie table and asked
- me if the surface was scratchproof. It could have been a formica top,
- for all I knew, but I wasn't sure. I don't know, ma'am, but I'll
- check. And I went into the back room where the managers were
- chainsmoking and swearing.
-
- Lady out front wants to know if Model 328B'll scratch.
-
- One of the managers--I still remember him--a disreputable-looking guy
- with a blond mustache that made him look like Martin Mull's father
- (maybe he was...) shouted "SCRATCH!? Sonofabitch! It's a fuckin'
- piece a' wood! She wants wood?? Hey, go out there and tell her we
- got six guys back her with big logs, we'll give her WOOD!" It took me
- about two minutes to stop laughing before I could go out and tell the
- woman the table she was buying for her grandkids probably would
- scratch...and I didn't repeat my boss's offer.
-
- On the last night, after I got paid, I went down to the book
- department and bought a copy of T. S. Eliot's Complete Poems with my
- employee discount. There's no significance to it being Eliot's poetry
- unless you want to read something into it: it's just what happened.
- --
- Kenneth Wolman | To die of fear of revealing yourself
- AT&T Bell Laboratories | to the person who loves you is murder.
- (908)582-4815 |
- Kenneth.Wolman@att.com | --Stan Rice, "Anne's Curls"
-