We were busy last night. Not crazy busy that I forgot my name, but busy enough that I was moving. I had my head down. I know people need things and I’ll look up when I’m ready to help them.
Marrying up
I have a big mouth and I’m over enthusiastic. Not a great combo plenty of times. It is now safe to blog this considering we have a new GM.
So the former GM… After much talk about her fiancé, he finally shows up at the bar. He seems like a good-looking, really nice guy. I enjoy chatting with him. My former GM comes over and asks me,
“Is he what you imagined?”
“BETTER!”
She stares at me.
Shoot. That flew out of my mouth and I was thinking it was a compliment, but it’s not a compliment. I rush and report what I did to a co-worker. I was not trying to piss off my boss. My co-worker reassures me,
“He is better than what I imagined.”
Just another day on the boat Buffy
I’m learning to sail. Everyone keeps saying,
“But I thought you worked on a boat.”
Yes I worked on a motor-yacht and I specialized in setting the table, making beds, laundry and some line handling. I forget every knot I learned how to make. Although I can still fold toilet paper into really pretty shapes.
Captain’s dad just got a new sailboat. It’s big. It has two berths and two heads. Captain’s dad needs help to sail it and that does not mean folding the two rolls of toilet paper. I’m running around the boat trying to learn how to sail. Captain is off crutches, but he is still not an able-bodied seaman. He’s very good at holding the snacks.
Captain’s dad is now also being referred to as Captain, which makes everything that much more confusing. My Captain is not happy about the nickname. I offer,
“I can think of another name for you.”
“No. It was mine first.”
Okay.
My Captain says that his dad should be amenable to Admiral. It is a promotion.
So I’m running around the boat learning to sail. Meanwhile Captain’s mom is on the lookout for anything we might be about to run over. She shouts,
“Lobster pot!”
“Where?”
“Over there!”
“Starboard?”
“Which one is starboard?”
“The right.”
“And which one is the left?”
The lobster pot is forgotten as we descend into a boating terminology discussion.
Every time we tack, I’m in charge of feeding the lines out. Sometimes it goes smoother than others. Captain’s dad shouts,
“That was great tack!”
I give myself an imaginary pat on the back. The next time, Captain’s dad declares,
“Oh that was a bad tack.”
I’m pretty sure there was a lull in the wind.
At the end of the day we head up to the yacht club for a drink. We sit down just in time to catch the horse race. Is this really happening? I turn to Captain,
“The only way this day could be any preppier is if we had played tennis this morning.”
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| My Captain 😉 |
Sometimes I do like people
There was some sort of conference in town that drew people from all over the world. They came to my bar. Some were tipping, some weren’t. It’s been a learning curve. Five nights later, most are tipping.
Last night a guy was running a tab. The total was $47. I put the credit card slip down in front of him. He asks me,
“Now what’s the tipping percentage again?”
“Twenty percent if the service was great.”
“Ok, $10, that’s good?”
“Perfect, thank you.”
“You know I learned to tip in Canada.”
“That’s good.”
“At first I thought all the bartenders and servers were flirting with me because they liked me.”
“Then you learned they just wanted your money?”
“Yes.”
Defining cheap
We got dessert and at least one of us is having a growth spurt
Big Sister threw a Celebrity Chef Dinner to raise money and my little sister and I got to speak at the event. Before we spoke they treated us to dinner across the street. It was all-you-can-eat plus a make-your-own ice cream sundae, I was stuffed and I thought my little sister was too.
Donkeys are stubborn and have a strong sense of self-preservation, i.e. they’re really good at saving money
I love to read and I’ve got a good thing going with a regular who brings me books. Last week she came into the bar with another woman, an author who is on the verge of being famous.
The almost famous author watches me hand a book back to the regular. She is not pleased. She asks me,
“Are you going to read my book?”
“Yes, if I can borrow it from my bar manager.”
Her face clenches with disapproval. A little while later, I’m laughing at something. The almost famous author tells me,
“You have this regal beauty, but then you have that donkey laugh.”
She tries again,
“Are you going to buy my book?”
I assume I can’t get it used on Amazon yet.
On her way out, she declares,
“You make enough money to buy books.”
We can pretend it’s a big game of dress up
Captain said some magic words to me: ‘Will you shop for me?’
We were chatting, he hung his head and sighed,
“I need some new summer clothes.”
I reassure him,
“I can help you.”
“Really?! You’d like to do that?”
Yes! If shopping with my credit card is fun, then shopping with someone else’s will be even better.
I head online. Free shipping, free returns, I order way too much. I report back to my bar manager,
“It was free shipping, free returns, so I bought a bunch of stuff, he can try it all and then just keep what he likes.”
“You did this all wrong.”
“What?”
“He wants you to shop for him because he doesn’t like shopping. You’re just taking the shopping to his house.
He’ll have to tell me what it’s like to be in your forties
If anyone has any grand ideas that do not involve a surprise party or any kind of party, let me know. I was thinking more dance lessons, but he still has the good excuse of a bad knee.
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| This looks promising. |
I can see!
After a couple years of squinting at everything, I got glasses. I still squint at everything because I don’t wear my glasses. People keep saying: what about contact lenses? What about them? They sound annoying. Finally the annoyance of contacts has been outweighed by the annoyance of not being able to see.
I’ll tell you when I’m talking about you
I have two very good regulars. One of them reads this blog. They happened to be in the same night as two other guys I blogged about. The guys I wrote about were obnoxious. My good regular asks,
At this rate how will I ever get to 900 friends?
Facebook. Not my favorite thing. I enjoy seeing the posts from my 17 real-life friends, but the other 852? What are their names again?
Is there any other way to define a bike?
The bike was a hit. My little sister is in love. She exclaims,
“It’s just like your bike, we’re twinsies!”
Yes, the bikes are very similar, probably because I have a bike that is a twelve-year-old girl’s dream come true.
We head to a Big Sister meeting. She tells everyone,
“I got a bike for my birthday!”
“What kind?”
“A pink and purple one.”
Who said you shouldn’t talk to strangers?
My little sister outgrew her kiddie bike, so I bought her a big bike for her birthday. After much online shopping, I decided on a bike at Sears because it was pink, purple and all put together. There was another decent bike for $60 less, but it was going to come in a box. I’m not sure what to do with a bike in a box, besides hand it over to a bike shop.
Yesterday I plan to go to Sears to pick it up. I can take the T or a zip car. I debate my options. If I take the T, it’s going to be a big pain. I decide on a zip car. There’s a hatchback available nearby. I ask Captain,
“Do you think it’ll fit?”
“Why don’t you go look at the car before you reserve it?”
I head outside. The hatchback looks great. I go online to reserve it. In the past 10 minutes someone else reserved it. Sigh. I look at the zip car next to it. It’s small. Will the bike fit? I have my doubts. I go ahead and get the small zip car. Don’t ask me what I was thinking. I wasn’t.
I park in the mall garage and return in a minute with a big ol’ pink, purple bike all put together. I try to put it in the back seat. No way. I stand there staring at the big bike and the small car. A man with his wife and baby are sitting in a car across from me, watching. He gets out,
“Do you need help?”
“Yes.”
“Do the back seats come down?”
“I don’t know, it’s a zip car.”
“Can you pop the trunk?”
I pop the hood. He sighs, comes over to the driver door and pops the trunk. The seats do fold down. We try to get the bike in. It fits, but just enough of the handlebars won’t go in, so the trunk won’t close. He asks me,
“Do you have rope?”
“No.”
He goes back to his car and comes back with rope. He ties the trunk down. I am so thankful and amazed at how much he has helped me. I tell him,
“I don’t know how I would’ve done this without you.”
“You wouldn’t have.”
I love it when you talk hockey to me baby
The Bruins lost last night. I’m sorry. And I’m sorry I don’t care. What they needed was a triple D, dirty dangle, top cheddar, light the lamp and get the biscuit in the basket kid.
Yeah that’s right, I know how to talk hockey. All thanks to my fellow bartender who cares a lot more than I do.
In the middle of the hockey, two wasted guys manage to watch the game and hit on me at the same time. One says something obnoxious. A favorite regular of mine is a few seats over. He cringes. I deliver his cocktail with a heart on top of the foam. He tells me,
“You do this for all the girls.”
“No, just for you.”
The two obnoxious guys continue louder, now that I’m bestowing hearts on others. The beloved regular turns on the two guys. Uhoh. I see the makings of a tiff. The regular starts hitting on them and he doesn’t stop. I’ve never seen two men who wanted to drink leave so quickly. The regular turns to me,
“Someone had to go, them or me and I didn’t want to leave you alone with them.”
Flaming cabbage for dinner tomorrow
Before my little sister and Captain, me cooking dinner involved opening a container of cottage cheese. In the past few years I’ve had more successful cooking experiences than not.
Did I ever tell you I was a cheerleader?
Sports. It’s the thing that’s on TV while I’m working. We have the sound on once a year for the Super Bowl, maybe. Other than that it’s a non-event. I forget we even have TVs unless someone points to it and asks me to change the channel. That may happen once a week.
Indian lunch buffet on crack
At 7:30 I started eyeing the buffet table. I ask an Indian guy,
“How late does this go?”
“At least midnight if not later.”
“Whoa.” I do the math. He tells me,
“Your wedding parties are long.”
“Yes.” But not 8 hours long. I’m hungry. At 8:30 I ask the woman clearing glasses,
“Do you know what time dinner is?”
“8:30.”
“It’s 8:30.”
She looks at me like she’d feed me if she could, shrugs her shoulders and walks away. Captain shouts,
“The buffet is open.”
The 100 people closest to me bumrush the food. I made a conscious decision to wear flats to this party. Even so, I’m still taller than almost every single person in line. I wave to Captain over the sea of hungry heads. Someone’s mom is shoving in front of me. I don’t want to knock down any small Indian women, but I will if I need to.
The food is great. 9:00 time for dancing or sitting next to one’s crutches. 9:15 we call it a night. Good news is we were there for the engagement part of the party and we’ll be going to Atlanta for the 3 day wedding in July. They rented a tiger. Everyone please sit down.
Party time tomorrow
I went to an Indian wedding party and you need to hear about it. Tomorrow. Today is too beautiful. I’m outside and my patience for blogging on my phone is maxed out. Now back to texting.
Someday I’ll read a good book
I love to read. I may not have read everything that a degree in Literature might require, but in twenty-five years I’ve covered a lot. I’m not counting the five years when I “read” by describing the pictures.
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| I don’t read much non-fiction, but if I did… |


















