Monthly Archives: August 2010

“The Store” Tell-All– The Good, The Bad & The Ugly*

(via: http://www.projecthitchhiker.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/im-a-quitter.jpg)

I don’t usually like quitting things. I even have an apron that says “I’d give up chocolate, but I’m no quitter!”

(But actually I gave up chocolate three weeks ago. Shhh.)

However, being able to quit my last job was…. exhilarating. Wonderful. MAGICAL, even. I had been counting down the days for two months and my lovelies, it’s finally here: I quit.

Last Thursday evening was my last shift. I think I expected a hallelujah chorus as I walked out the door for the last time, but it was strangely… surreal. It didn’t feel real, like somehow “The Store” would suck me back in and make me keep working there. It’s taken me a few days to adjust to not having to screen my calls during store hours (to prevent being called in for someone faking being sick) and I still am not used to having my Saturdays free. But I think that that is going to be my favourite part. It’s really the only day of the week that the Hubster has completely free, and I have worked nearly every Saturday since I started this job. I am going to love Saturdays from here on out.

So, I promised I would dish out the dirty details of why I disliked working there (hate is just such a strong word…) and here you are. I just want to give a small disclaimer first:

I need to say that despite everything, I was and am extremely grateful for this job. I know I complained a lot, but trying to find work last summer was the most discouraging  experience of my life, and The Store gave me a job when no one else would. It certainly wasn’t the most glamorous job I’ve ever worked, but I’ll always be thankful that they took a chance on me. In some ways it was a perfect job for me–it was close enough that I could walk, I was able to work my hours around my volunteer schedule at the high school, and I really liked working with a few of the people there.

Unfortunately there was just so much other… crap that went on it just overshadowed all the good things. So, here we go… this is why I quit my job:

The Job

This was far and away the most physically exhausting job I’ve ever worked, and emerging from teacher’s college with my two degrees it was a big blow to my pride to work here. It was a very humbling experience to have worked so hard through university to come to a job where I found myself scrubbing toilets, cleaning out freezers, scrubbing walls on my hands and knees, lugging 20 – 30lb boxes around and stocking shelves when all I wanted to do was teach. For my first four months there I often spent hours working in a huge freezer in temperatures below -20°C (-4°F). It’s an extremely fast-paced job and I came home with sore legs and a sore back almost every day. There were days when the job was so hard that I wanted to quit on the spot–I vividly remember a night last January where I hurt my already tender back so badly that I found myself curled up in the fetal position on the backroom floor sobbing my eyes out, praying for my shift to end.

Thankfully this spring and summer I sort of became the “cash” person and my work in the backroom decreased significantly. My back has improved a bit and if I never set foot in a huge freezer again I’ll die a happy woman. :)

The Hours

When I was hired last September I was promised 10-15 hours a week. It wasn’t much, but compared the zero hours I had worked for the previous three months it was a total blessing. My manager also told me that if things worked out that the was definitely a possibility to increase my hours there. So, for my first two two months there I averaged anywhere between 10 – 15 hours a week, which was perfect for me. It allowed me the time to take my French courses and to volunteer at a high school two or three days a week, which helped me toward my real goal–a teaching job.

However, as it got closer to Christmas my hours increased to the point that I was working 30 – 40 hours a week. This might sound fabulous, and while I appreciated the money, I basically lived at The Store. It’s a very physically exhausting job, so I was tired all the time, I never saw the Hubster (our hours were often opposite) and it became very difficult for me to volunteer and manage my school schedule. This continued for two to three months before I had to ask my manager to cut my hours back so I could balance things a little better. I didn’t ever want to make this store my full-time job. Finding a real job needed to be my full-time job.

No Breaks

When I was working all those hours I lived for my breaks. Except there were many, many shifts where they never came. They have a policy where you need to work more than 5 hours to get a half hour break, and they always schedule five hour shifts over meal-times. My usual shifts were 2:30 – 7:30pm, or 9:30am – 2:30pm (if I was lucky to get a day shift). I’m sorry, but that was a really, really long time to go without sitting down or taking a breather. I was always STARVING by the time I left and it generally just made things more difficult.

When I was working crazy hours in the winter my shifts changed to 10 or 11 – 7:30pm, with the occasional 9am – 7:30pm thrown in for good measure. On most of those days I only got that one unpaid half hour break. Once I passed 8 or 9 hours I was allowed one more 15 minute break and that was it. They were long, long days.

Tasks

I mentioned earlier a little of what my job was, but there were so many other awful tasks thrown in there. They included (but are not limited to):

–Cleaning wax build-up off the front of all the chest freezers. This meant you had to crawl around the store between customers scrubbing crap off of these freezers using an incredibly strong cleaner. The best part?  The only gloves available to use were the little, cheap latex ones used for packaging food. I brought my own in or tripled layers of gloves on my hands.

–Organizing the Big Freezer. On the “Workplace Safety” sign in the backroom it recommends not being in the freezer for more than 20 minutes at a time because of the extreme temperature. When we organized and cleaned the freezer we were sometimes in there for over 1 – 2 hours.

–Emptying Chest Freezers. This sounds easy, but it is killer on your back. Imagine bending over into a freezer hauling heavy boxes of frozen food for 10 – 15 minutes at a time. This wouldn’t have been so bad if we hadn’t done 2 or 3 freezers every. single. night in order to defrost and clean them. I’m all about cleanliness, but oh sweet mother. My back hated this job.

The Manager

I actually had two managers in the 11 months I worked there. My first manager was very dedicated to the job. The Store was her store and she worked us hard to keep it up to shape. I was expected to be available at a moment’s notice to come in, and I was always to expect to extend my shift at the last minute if need be. She was a hard boss, but the store ran smoothly while she was there. She showed us hard work by example and even though I hated many of the tasks I had to preform, I took comfort in knowing that everyone else was doing it too.

In January she was offered a job as a manager in a location closer to her home. The owners decided to offer the open manager position at my store to a 22 year old coworker, who is very nice but has no managerial experience and has yet to complete her high school education. At first things were great–we were still running the routines of the previous manager, but slowly but surely things began to fall apart.

First it was small things–she was deliberately assign the tasks we hated to do on shifts when she was not working, or she would make excuses for why she couldn’t be involved. Where my last manager got right down and dirty with us, she side stepped everything. Then when she realized that she was controlling the schedule she began to enjoy many 4-day weekends while the rest of us covered the weekend shifts. In the mean time she changed the orders to make delivery day easier (so she could leave earlier) but this meant that we were constantly running out of everything making for very unhappy customers. Then there was the hiring–this store has the highest turnover of employees I’ve ever seen. Between January and now she has hired at least seven new employees and only one has stayed. She just has no experience and is too proud to ask for help with anything because she is confident that she knows best.

I could go on, but I don’t want to be cruel. As a person she’s a great girl, but she is more interested in her social life and isn’t ready for this type of responsibility. If it’s any testament to the truth of this, two other long-time coworkers quit around the same time I did. One had been at The Store for three years, and the other for two. They just couldn’t handle the environment anymore and it’s so hard to work for someone that you don’t respect.

The Owners

So, now you’re probably wondering why we never did anything about it if we were all so unhappy? Oh my lovelies, we tried. We tried first with the manager directly, talking to her one-to-one offering advice and assistance but that went no where. Next, we brought up issues of concern at staff meetings where we were promised things would change. When it became clear that she just couldn’t handle the position, we tried talking to the owners instead.

For example: One day a delivery truck was backing in and somehow completely destroyed our loading ramp (which attaches to the back of the truck) in the process. You can’t unload trucks without it. For weeks it went unfixed. We asked over and over for our manager to ask the owners to send someone to fix it, but after just one email she gave up trying. Instead she had us rig the ramp up with a pole that someone had to be out holding while the truck was backing in. Umm… holy unsafe, no? I flat out refused to have any part of it. After a while we all decided that enough was enough and after asking again we went over her head and contacted the district manager and owners about the issue.

We were completely shut down. We wrote a very nice email explaining the situation and received a prompt response that it was our manager’s responsibility to contact them and that we were under no circumstance to ever contact them directly again. It was a huge “We don’t give a crap about our workers” message.

It got the ramp fixed though. :)

Customers

I’ve been ranting about customers forever, so you already know how I feel about this issue. The thing that bothered me the most was constantly being talked down to. I have never felt so… small. With the exception of a few wonderful people and my work grandpas, I was basically invisible. I will be nice to cashiers for the rest of my life.

The Outfit

Last but not least, the most superficial aspect of this rant. You all know how I feel about shoes. I love pretty, fun, exciting shoes that warm my heart.

I had no love for my work shoes. I had to wear huge, clunky black steel-toes shoes that were the most unexciting things I have ever put on my feet. Combine that with a sexy black apron and I was one hot cashier. ;)

————-

And there you have it. The good, the bad and the ugly. It’s been a long year, and I’m glad that I no longer have to dump all my frustrations with this job on the Hubster, who has been so supportive through the entire ordeal.

So, thank you for the job… but good riddance.

The Anniversary: A Recap*

Just a bit of housekeeping first–I’ve been making the rounds through many of your lovely blogs. I’m going to be MUCH better at leaving comments and love now that I have two weeks off to enjoy a bit of relaxation and I can’t wait to catch up on all your news. I’ve just noticed something… when I switched my blog to WordPress in March the Hubster rigged it so that technically my blog address stayed the same (http://blog.iheartmyshoes.com). However I noticed that in some of your blog rolls it appears that I haven’t updated in 5 months and it shows that my last entry was the last entry I wrote in my blogger blog.

In order for it to get up-to-date, you just need to edit the link you currently have for me. Just re-enter http://blog.iheartmyshoes.com OR http://iheartmyshoes.com and it should start updating for you.

Thanks lovelies!! xo

———————-

Well, it’s official. The Hubs and I have been married for five years and have crossed the threshold into oldy-wed territory. I have to admit, I love that our response to “How long have you two been married?” no longer produces the “Awww, so cute! You’re so new!” reaction. Being a newly-wed was all kinds of fun, but I love being an oldy-wed.

Our anniversary was wonderful. It’s been more of an “anniversary week” than anything else, and I feel spoiled and loved. :)

On Tuesday I came home from work to find beautiful pink roses on my kitchen table. In case you missed the memo, I love roses. And I love that I get them just often enough to keep them as something special.

On Wednesday the Hubster rolled in from work just long enough to tell me to put on my shoes and that he was taking me out. We got in the car and started to drive, but he wouldn’t tell me where we were going. He can be pretty sneaky when he wants to. He drove back to my old Ghetto U territory and took me to the restaurant where we had our first date (and where he took me the night he proposed) and we had a lovely dinner. Afterward he drove to the park where he actually got down on one knee and asked me to be his wife five years ago.

It was the first time we had been back to that park since that night. It all seemed so… different. Mind you, the last time we were there it was night in mid-March and the park was buried knee-deep in snow. We walked the path to the swings where we had sat just minutes before he proposed and stayed for a few minutes. It was getting late and the air was a bit chilly so we didn’t stay long, but it was so nice to revisit our spot and drive around my first university campus. I have so many good memories from Ghetto U.

On Thursday I worked my last shift at the store. I have a whooooole post all about this coming, don’t you fret. The Hubster met me after my shift and walked home with me. We did our gift exchange as soon as we got in. I bought the Hubs a new watch that pretty much does everything but teleport and he bought me tickets to go see SOUTH PACIFIC next week!!!!! I didn’t even know it was playing in Toronto, but it’s one of my favourite musicals–I love all things Rogers and Hammerstein. So next Thursday I’ll be all dolled up and off to the theatre!!

On Friday (our actual anniversary) we packed up the car and went campin’. It was the first time we had ever been together so I over packed everything (sort of) and we drove into the bush. We didn’t have an exact address for where we were going so we got turned around a few times on the way there, but we arrived safely and set up our new pretty tent.

The Hubs and I quickly got to work getting our camp fire going, and I’m pleased to report that, ahem, I’ve still got it. Apparently there is still a little northern Ontario in me after all. ;)

Afterward the Hubster cooked me a fabulous dinner of gourmet camp fire hot dogs. That was one thing I managed to remember. You see, I always tend to over-pack, especially food. However, for this trip I managed to forget just about everything. I forgot the ground beef we were going to cook the next day, oil to cook our eggs and bacon, a spatula and a host of other things. Thank goodness camping is all about improvising, right? :)

After dinner I wandered over to the next site to see who was there and it ended up being a group of people from the West End of the city who knew some of my extended family! My cousin (in-law) and his son were actually camping with them! It was so fun to see them. Holy small world, no?

The Hubs went on a bit of an adventure walk while I stayed at our site and enjoyed our beautiful fire. I brought all kinds of games with us, but we ended up sitting and talking quietly for a while when he got back before turning in a little early. It was so peaceful and relaxing.

I was able to fall asleep fairly quickly despite the fact that the ground was a bit hard / bumpy (note to self: air mattresses are a NECESSITY for camping. haha). I woke up some time in the night to hear the pitter patter of rain drops falling on our tent. It didn’t sound like it was raining very hard so I wasn’t terribly concerned and fell back asleep. I woke up a while later when the rain started again and decided I should probably bring our shoes inside.  We were still dry inside, so again, I curled back up in my sleeping bag and fell asleep.

At around six am we were both awakened by a brilliant flash of light and an enormous clap of thunder, followed immediately by another. We jumped out of our sleeping bags and began the mad dash to try and pack the car before the rain started. We had barely rolled our mats before the sky exploded and it began to pour. The Hubster began making trips to the car with our things as I packed until we had emptied the tent. We were able to move it under the pavilion and dry out a bit–but our super tent didn’t let any water in! WOO! We decided to have breakfast before figuring out what we were going to do, and it was at that point that I realized that I had forgotten half our food. haha! So we had bacon and eggs (that stuck to the pan a bit) that weren’t nearly as good as the ones my mom used to make. *sigh*

We waited around for a couple of hours to see if the weather would let up, but as it continued to pour intermittently throughout the morning we decided to call it a day. Sadly, we didn’t get to do half of the things we wanted to, but it was still fun to sit by the fire and try out our new super tent. We were exhausted when we got home and ended up having a four-hour nap once we had showered and unpacked the car and it turned out to be a lovely, cozy, inside day.

Though it didn’t really work out for us this time, I would definitely go camping again. Hopefully next time we’ll be able to get some hiking and swimming in. :)

All in all, it’s been a wonderful anniversary week and I can’t wait to see South Pacific!

Oldy-Weds*

August 20th, 2005*

Five years ago right now (at 9am) my hair was done, my make-up was on, and breakfast was all but forgotten. I climbed into a car with my sister, her boyfriend (now husband) and my maid of honour and began the seventy-five minute drive to where I’d be getting married at 12pm.

I wish I remembered more of what we talked about in the car… I remember Peeah and Telly talking non-stop  and singing loudly to the radio, I think in an effort to calm my nerves, which I assume they assumed I had.

I don’t remember feeling nervous. I’m sure I was at some point–it is a life-altering moment–but I do remember thinking how odd it was that I felt so relaxed.

You see, when you get married people will give you all kinds of advice and tell you all kinds of things. They will tell you what you should do, what you shouldn’t do, and what you’ll need to have a successful marriage. They’ll also regale you with stories about how nervous they were on their own wedding day.

So, I expected it. I waited for an attack of nervousness or anxiety, but none came.

Now, when I replay the events of that day in my mind, that still surprises me. When I hear myself telling Our Story to other people and get to the part where we were engaged seven weeks after meeting one another, and married five months after that, I hear how crazy it sounds. In some ways we barely knew each other, but at the same time it was like I’d known him my whole life.

For a while before we got married (and even for a while after) people told us how crazy we were to get married so quickly. I was a naive barely twenty-year old college freshman, and he was the guy no one knew. I was so afraid to jinx our relationship that I barely even told anyone that I was dating someone until I got engaged. (Oops, sorry for the shocker ladies… haha)

I lost count of the number of times people asked me: “…but are you SURE?”

And then just for good measure: “…like, REALLY sure??”

I even had friends tell me that it was a stupid, rushed decision while giving statistics of divorce rates.

…but it didn’t matter. I knew in my heart that it was the right decision, and I’ve always believed that when you know, you know.

Today we are celebrating our 5th anniversary and I’m happy to report that I still know. Our marriage isn’t perfect because we aren’t perfect, but it is wonderful and we continue to grow together and that is what I think is so important. We work hard to grow closer together instead of growing apart. In the last five years the Hubster has become my partner, my confidante, my support, my love and my best friend.

I’m proud to be his wife, and to have him as my husband.

Is marriage what I expected? No.

It’s better.

Here’s to the next five years, Hubs… I can’t wait to spend them with you. xo

Love*

All my love,

Anniversary Allergies*

The Vat: Lily

My parents have a very small, very cute cat named Lily. She loves to get into everything and follows Big Dad everywhere.

Seriously.

When he is not home she drags an old piece of rope around and wails for him until he comes through the door. Until Princess Pea was born last year that cat was his grandchild.

Once when I was messaging Spart on the computer I accidentally typed “the vat” instead of “the cat” and it totally stuck. It just suits her, she is a vat.

My dad got her the summer before I got married which was also the last summer I spent living at home. At that time I had already been away at school for a year and had met and gotten engaged to the Hubster, so I moved home to plan our wedding with my mom. This meant that The Hubster and I could only see each other every other weekend or so when he would drive up and spend the weekend with my family.

Not long after he arrived he would start sniffling a little. Then his eyes would get a bit itchy, and not long after that he would start sneezing like crazy.

So, Big Dad came up with the most obvious reason: he was allergic to me.

As soon as the Hubster started sneezing, my dad would start in:

Big Dad: “Uh oh… it’s started again.”

Me: “What?!”

Big Dad: “He’s sneezing again. You two must be spending too much time together.”

Me: (laughing) “Sure Dad.”

Big Dad (straight-faced): “He’s obviously allergic to you, Shop Girl. (Then, to the Hubster) You’d better not marry her. Look, she’s making you sick!”

The Hubster: “…maybe you’re right.”

*This is where he would get a smack somewhere on his arm or leg. With all my love, of course.

As it turned out, the Hubster was allergic to the vat, not to me. (Sorry, Dad) He endured it for a summer and continues to put up with it every time we visit my family because he is wonderful. We just try keep the vat and the Hubster apart. (They are not friends.) Be assured, I was very relieved that he was not allergic to me.

As it turns out though, I think I may be allergic to him. Or at least I’m allergic to our wedding anniversary.

For the past four years I’ve gotten sick around our anniversary. It’s like clockwork. I’m not just talking a runny nose here, this was a full-out mother of a cold that lasts about two weeks. It starts with a sneeze here or there, followed by a sniffle or two then… BAM! I’m drop-kicked by the mother cold.

I started sneezing last week. I started taking Reactin IMMEDIATELY hoping to fend it off, whatever IT is. My nose is already started to get sniffly.

I’m obviously allergic to something.

It must be our wedding anniversary. Tomorrow is #5. :)

Lucky for The Hubster, I love him enough to keep him around even if he makes me sneeze. (I’ll just expect lots of love and pampering to get me through. ha)

What Couldn’t You Live Without?

I had my follow-up appointment with my optometrist today. When I went in a few weeks ago he was concerned about the fluid pressure in my eyes and wanted to run some extra tests to make sure I hadn’t developed glaucoma.

So, I arrived early and mentally braced myself for the dreaded eye puffer machine, which, thankfully, was not on the agenda for today. One of the tests I had done was to see if my peripheral vision has deteriorated. I had to put a pirate patch on one eye, stick my head into a machine and stare straight ahead at a small orange light. Small white lights then flashed intermittently in different places and I had to press a buzzer each time I saw one, without looking away from the orange light. It sounds easy, but after two minutes per eye I was more than ready to be finished.

I also had another test done that required freezing of my corneas. That’s right, FROZEN EYES. It felt SO weird. My optometrist put some special drops in my eyes and it froze my corneas and eye lids for about 15 minutes. He said this test was sort of like an ultra sound for my eyes.

The next test required another type of drop that made my tears yellow. So there I was in the optometrist’s office with yellow tears watering out of my frozen eyes doing all these tests waiting for my results.

It’s official: I’m a mutant.

(via: http://images.quizfarm.com/1121737273Cyclops.jpg)

…but I’m a mutant who doesn’t have glaucoma. :) I’m still a high risk candidate for it and will need to see the optometrist every year instead of two so he can monitor it, but I’m eye disease free for now. I can’t even begin to tell you how relieved I am.

While I knew deep down that he was just being cautious, the whole thing just got me thinking: what if I ever lost my eyesight? I honestly can’t even begin to imagine it. Even walking around without my glasses is terrifying as I can’t focus on the things I want to and I can’t see details on anything.

I’m big on details.

…could I live without them? I don’t know. After having sight for 25 years, for me (personally) it’s hard to imagine a life without it. Knowing I couldn’t see my mom’s face when we surprise her with something, or my niece’s little pig tails, or the sun as it peeks over the treetops in the morning would be very difficult to bear. I think I could easily let go of most of my other senses, but my sight is so precious to me. I could live without smell, touch or even taste, but I need my eyes.

But if it came down to a choice–keep my eyes or my ears, I don’t know what I’d choose. Not having music in my life (in the sense that I know it now) might be just as devastating as not having sight.

AH.

What couldn’t you live without?

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