Happy birthday,
weirdquark!
<3 Hope you have a great one. And I bet you thought mentioning that to me the other week wouldn't have any consequences. ;)
On a different topic entirely, because I'm too lazy to make another post, I'm going to tell a story. I was reminded of it earlier today and I don't think I ever told it here, so... why not.
I worked at a candy store for several months recently, and one of my co-workers was an old woman, late fifties/early sixties or thereabouts. I hated working with her, because she would inevitably take the time to give me the entire plot description, including summaries of commercials and the cast list's previous appearances, for whatever movie happened to be showing later that night on the Hallmark channel.
I don't think I even have the Hallmark channel.
Anyway, one day I was working with her, and an ad came on the radio for our local pediatrics hospital, which is called, appropriately enough, Children's. (I have a whole other story about her and the radio, actually, but I'll summarize thusly: "She's crazy" and move on.) "That's a wonderful place, you know," she said out of nowhere. "One of the best. It's got all sorts of amazing doctors and they can do just about anything. Really."
"I know," I said, mainly because I was annoyed with her treating me like I was a tourist to the city where'd I'd lived my entire life. A young, *stupid*, tourist. "I had to have five surgeries immediately after I was born and one of the few people in the world who specialized in what I needed happened to be working there."
"Oh."
Now normally, when someone mentions that they had multiple surgeries as an infant, polite people will inquire further. Or, you know, offer sympathy. But no, that was apparently the end of our conversation. I wasn't offended- in fact, the less I had to talk to this woman, the better- but it was different.
An hour passed. I don't mean that it seemed like an hour, or that some time passed, but literally at least an hour went by. Customers came in, bought stuff and left; we wrapped several sets of gift boxes; I answered the phone a few times. And then she suddenly turned to me and said, "Why did you have all those surgeries?"
I paused, looked up from where I was on the other side of the store, and resisted the urge to say huh? Once I remembered what she was talking about, I replied: "I'm blind in my right eye. They thought they could fix it."
She thought about this for a moment. Then she said: "I'm sorry! Could you use the calculator?"
Having talked to her before, I was used to needing my full attention to understand what was happening. But this was beyond me. Did you ever have one of those pauses in conversation where you just can not figure out what the other person has said, or why they said it, or how you should respond, and your mind goes completely blank? Yeah. "I- what? What calculator?"
"The one in the back that I asked you to use. I'm sorry. Could you use it?"
"Um... yeah?" She sounded so worried over this that for a moment I was worried, too. Maybe something had happened! Maybe the calculator was posioned! Maybe it was rigged to a bomb!
"Because the numbers on the buttons are really small," she said earnestly.
Or maybe she was just crazy. "Uh. I was okay."
She nodded, and was silent briefly. I, figuring that there was nothing left to say, started to do something else. But she turned back to me, and in the most you can do it, Johnny! You can hit that home run! voice I have ever heard, said: "You'll be fine, you know. As long as you get a job where you don't need both eyes."
I shouted, "What? Are you sure? Dammit! What about my dream of becoming a sniper assassin!?"
Okay, not really. But I should have. I think I actually muttered a thank you and tried not to laugh.
That's my story about weird coworkers. Tell me yours!
Also, my shirt today says "heroine". I thought you all should know that.
<3 Hope you have a great one. And I bet you thought mentioning that to me the other week wouldn't have any consequences. ;)
On a different topic entirely, because I'm too lazy to make another post, I'm going to tell a story. I was reminded of it earlier today and I don't think I ever told it here, so... why not.
I worked at a candy store for several months recently, and one of my co-workers was an old woman, late fifties/early sixties or thereabouts. I hated working with her, because she would inevitably take the time to give me the entire plot description, including summaries of commercials and the cast list's previous appearances, for whatever movie happened to be showing later that night on the Hallmark channel.
I don't think I even have the Hallmark channel.
Anyway, one day I was working with her, and an ad came on the radio for our local pediatrics hospital, which is called, appropriately enough, Children's. (I have a whole other story about her and the radio, actually, but I'll summarize thusly: "She's crazy" and move on.) "That's a wonderful place, you know," she said out of nowhere. "One of the best. It's got all sorts of amazing doctors and they can do just about anything. Really."
"I know," I said, mainly because I was annoyed with her treating me like I was a tourist to the city where'd I'd lived my entire life. A young, *stupid*, tourist. "I had to have five surgeries immediately after I was born and one of the few people in the world who specialized in what I needed happened to be working there."
"Oh."
Now normally, when someone mentions that they had multiple surgeries as an infant, polite people will inquire further. Or, you know, offer sympathy. But no, that was apparently the end of our conversation. I wasn't offended- in fact, the less I had to talk to this woman, the better- but it was different.
An hour passed. I don't mean that it seemed like an hour, or that some time passed, but literally at least an hour went by. Customers came in, bought stuff and left; we wrapped several sets of gift boxes; I answered the phone a few times. And then she suddenly turned to me and said, "Why did you have all those surgeries?"
I paused, looked up from where I was on the other side of the store, and resisted the urge to say huh? Once I remembered what she was talking about, I replied: "I'm blind in my right eye. They thought they could fix it."
She thought about this for a moment. Then she said: "I'm sorry! Could you use the calculator?"
Having talked to her before, I was used to needing my full attention to understand what was happening. But this was beyond me. Did you ever have one of those pauses in conversation where you just can not figure out what the other person has said, or why they said it, or how you should respond, and your mind goes completely blank? Yeah. "I- what? What calculator?"
"The one in the back that I asked you to use. I'm sorry. Could you use it?"
"Um... yeah?" She sounded so worried over this that for a moment I was worried, too. Maybe something had happened! Maybe the calculator was posioned! Maybe it was rigged to a bomb!
"Because the numbers on the buttons are really small," she said earnestly.
Or maybe she was just crazy. "Uh. I was okay."
She nodded, and was silent briefly. I, figuring that there was nothing left to say, started to do something else. But she turned back to me, and in the most you can do it, Johnny! You can hit that home run! voice I have ever heard, said: "You'll be fine, you know. As long as you get a job where you don't need both eyes."
I shouted, "What? Are you sure? Dammit! What about my dream of becoming a sniper assassin!?"
Okay, not really. But I should have. I think I actually muttered a thank you and tried not to laugh.
That's my story about weird coworkers. Tell me yours!
Also, my shirt today says "heroine". I thought you all should know that.
no subject
Date: 2005-04-20 12:08 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-20 02:27 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-20 12:23 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-20 02:28 am (UTC)Except for the girl I loved. Did you know she works across the street from campus now? I should stalk her.
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Date: 2005-04-20 02:35 am (UTC)Which store did you say? ^.~
no subject
Date: 2005-04-20 02:37 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-20 12:24 am (UTC)The most I have (today) that's happened was with a guy who needed his dead laptop back badly.
"What happened to it?"
*motions him over, showing the power adapter cable that is not just split open through black, but white as well, with WIRES POKING OUT* "You see this? It probably took just enough shock and fried the motherboard."
"Oh. I saw that, didn't think anything of it, it's always been like that."
O.O
I wanted to say, "WTF, old man?! You're an electrician for shit's sake! And HELLO, I had it for a week building it and IT WAS NOT ALWAYS LIKE THAT!"
Instead I said, "Um, okay, but that's what happened."
"Gee, I sure hope they be sendin' me a new one."
*smacks self* "Yeah, they will."
---
Oh, and let's not forget today at Sanitation with these guys in the scale house. We were cleaning out the cabinet to put the computer up and...
"What'er these thingies?" *pulls out magazines...three year old SMUT MAGS* "OMG! What the Hell'er these doin' in here! Don't look! Don't look!"
Me: "..." *resisting urge to say, "I've seen winkies, and doujinshi thicker than that."*
>.> *dies*
no subject
Date: 2005-04-20 02:29 am (UTC)Although dude, that same thing happened to my computer! Except that I noticed it long before it got anywhere that bad.
no subject
Date: 2005-04-20 03:01 am (UTC)<3 Hope you have a great one. And I bet you thought mentioning that to me the other week wouldn't have any consequences. ;)
Thanks! I thought if I mentioned my birthday a few times then I would remember it, and I did, so go me! *g* And I managed to post fic for Watari yesterday
although he would have preferred something fluffy with pornwhich was also yay.(Also you should be a sniper assassin. I've been watching too much Naruto lately, so my brain is muttering things about following your way of the ninja, but that's okay. All you need to do is become a cyborg, and then you'll have super improved infrared vision with magnification!)
I think I'm the weird co-worker at my job. I'm the one that brought in a scythe for Halloween one year. Although we did recently hire someone else that plays D&D and watches anime (I've been lending her YnM) and my boss once stayed in a hotel shaped like a train car and stood hanging off the end like Barbra Streisand does in Hello Dolly so he could have a picture of himself doing that.
I love my co-workers.
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Date: 2005-04-20 04:16 pm (UTC)Hee. Way too many people are supporting my sniper assassin dreams. It must be my destiny! I just need to find some corrupt government organization to train and support me, and I'm on my way.
I love my co-workers.
You do have cool co-workers- though I always dress up for Halloween too. It's far too fun of a holiday to let it pass without doing anything.
no subject
Date: 2005-04-20 01:02 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-20 04:20 pm (UTC)And coworkers are weird. I'm convinced that everyone has a few stories about that strange person you know who just makes no sense.
no subject
Date: 2005-04-20 04:59 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-04-21 12:40 am (UTC)But when I think about it, as superficially attractive as the idea that binocular vision is what gives you depth perception might be, experience suggests it has to be, if not wrong, at least not the full story. You can get all the visual information you need to render perspective -- that is, depth -- accurately with one eye, which suggests to me that the brain's got all the information it really needs right there. And you'd have learned to use that information efficiently from infancy, when the brain's plasticity is at its best and most responsive.
So I'm not surprised at your stunning okayness. And if you want to go in for sniper assassin training after all, I'll write you a nice recommendation saying so.
no subject
Date: 2005-04-21 04:23 am (UTC)And ha. After all this, I feel almost like I should go become a sniper assassin. I just have to find the sort of vaguely terrifying covert operation that would employ one.