Customers II

14 03 2011

I’m always amazed at how parents deal with their children, especially in public places.  It seems as though people who have children somehow automatically develop a muffler for their ears, designed to take out the sound of their children.  Unfortunately, the rest of us (who don’t have any kids) do not have this evolutionary ability–and the level of noise seems to stress us out.

The other day, a large family came in and herded themselves around the counter as they all tried to place their order together.  The smallest member of the family (about 4 years old) kept saying, “I want a coffee!”

The mom ignored her, as she was trying to get the rest of the family’s drinks ordered.  As she kept fielding requests from the other members of the family, the child kept trying to get her attention.

At first, she kept repeating her request.  “I want a coffee too!” She must have repeated this four or five times.  To no avail, her mother kept ordering drinks for the rest of the family.

I could already see what the next phase of the child’s plan was–if at first you don’t succeed, try again.  And if you try and fail again, try harder–or at least in her case, try louder.

The child became impatient that her mother didn’t acknowledge her, so she got louder.  “Mom!  I WANT A COFFEE!”  “COFFEE!”  “COFFEE MOM!”  “I WANT A COFFEE!”

Her mother looked at me and quietly said, “She wants a hot chocolate that comes in the cup that looks like the rest of ours.  She thinks that is coffee.”

As the mother tells me this, I notice that she never directly lets her child know that she heard her.

“COFFEE!”  “COFFEE! MOM I WANT A COFFEE!”

My coworker looked at me when the mother (and family) were distracted and asked if I heard that sound.

“What sound?” I asked.

“The sound of my tubes being tied.” she responded.

Although I didn’t get it at first, it was quite a funny line.

I repeated the order to the mother and tried to give her a total, the child shouted at her mother, “DON”T FORGET ME!  I WANT A COFFEE TOO!  WITH WHIPPED CREAM!”

That was it.  I couldn’t take it any more.  So, I simply stopped, and looked directly at the child and said, “I heard you.”

This of course shocked the child, so I followed up with “We’ll make sure your coffee comes with whipped cream.” At this point, the chaotic and frantic request of noise ceased.

The mother looked at me incredulously, and then said “Thank you.”

As I got all the drinks together, I pulled the hot chocolate and handed it directly to the child.  I said, “Here’s your coffee–with whipped cream.”

She took the drink, looked at me and said, “Thank you.”

Sometimes, I wonder if all of us just want to feel like we’ve been heard.  I also wonder what would happen if the rest of us just took the time to truly listen.





Anticipation

8 03 2011

You know what this means!





TV Expert

3 03 2011

I’m not much of a television watcher.  My roommates over the years will attest to that.  Despite the fact that I absolutely adore watching television outside, I rarely find myself on the couch killing an evening in front of the tube.  I’d rather be engaged in some combination of reading, drinking, tinkering, gaming, drinking.  Oddly enough, though, my wife and I got to thinking about the various tv series where we have seen nearly every episode, and my list was pretty high, or at least, higher than I thought it would be.  So here, in no particular order, are the series where I have seen every episode:

The Office (OMG, like 10 times each!)

30 Rock

Parks and Recreation

Glee

The Cosby Show

Cheers

Moonlighting (the above three courtesy of Nick at Night)

Night Court

Scrubs (yes, even the last season at the medical school)

Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip (I know it was only one season, but it was great, I’ve got it downloaded and I’ve watched it multiple times)

Seinfeld

House

The Big Bang Theory

Modern Family

Frasier

The Wonder Years (From Candace Cameron to Drew Barrymore to Natalie Portman to the counselor chick on Glee now that Natalie is preggers and thus unattractive, none will ever top Winnie Cooper)

NewsRadio

Roseanne

Entourage

Maybe that doesn’t seem like a lot to you, but it does to me, and I’m probably leaving off one or two.  Thanks to Hulu and some “friends” of mine who lend me stuff over the internets, I’ve been able to obsess about a show without it really interfering much with my desire to not sit on the couch.  Because I’m an obsessive person.  So the weird thing is that if I were to expand that list to include all tv series where I’ve seen at least 10 episodes, the list wouldn’t grow by a whole lot.  Sure, I’d be able to add Always Sunny (the best show ever created in my opinion), but most things I obsessively DON’T watch.  Never saw a single full episode of Friends, ER, The Amazing Race, Sex in the City, Grey’s, PP, Desperate Housewives, Survivor, LOST, or any number of shows that some people casually watch.

I’m not a casual person, I guess.  In for a dime, in for a dollar.








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