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Monday, June 28, 2010

Sometimes work can be a headache....

Most people are accident prone. Some are wont to go falling down the stairs because they trip over themselves, or they get their hands or fingers caught in car doors or other things that swing shut. Me? I have a tendency to bang my head, and it's not from listening to Quiet Riot either.


I was at a job site performing a service on an ATM. (one of the many things I do during my waking hours) It was a drive up ATM. When you open it up, the top part flips up like a hood. The terminal, that controls the ATM (resets, shuts it down, etc.) swings out of the hood and basically points straight down at the ground.


Next I opened the safe and was in the processing of clearing a jam from the machine. It never fails that people will stick “non-monetary” things into an ATM. I guess they, as a kid, always put their peanut butter sandwich into the VCR, or tried to insert a floppy diskette into a CD drive, and never really learned the lesson that “you can't do that.” After extracting what looked like a grocery list, I examined the rest of the machine.


I had to squat down to see the underside of the machine, looking for other things that have jammed, maybe some real money or a nice check. Finding no treasure, I stood up not realizing that the terminal was directly above my head. So, my crown found a nice sharp corner of the terminal to smack. Reeling in pain and rubbing my head furiously, I danced around the ATM like an Indian praying for rain. I'm sure the public, looking to use this particular ATM, saw me and considered me a security risk and stayed away.


I pulled my fingers away and noticed that, yes, I was bleeding. Not gushing as much as the typical teenager who gets killed off in a Rob Zombie movie, but it was bleeding. Then I started to black out. I looked at the open safe and thought to myself, “This would be hilarious. Me passed out with the safe open. People trampling my unconscious body in an effort to get free money. Kind of a like a reverse bailout.” Then I thought, “Well, it would be bad for the bank and I'd end up sitting by the roadside holding a sign that said, 'DO NOT GIVE ME MONEY, I WILL LOSE IT (instead give me something solid, such as your unfinished taco salad).'” I forced myself to focus, and though I still felt blood seeping through my hair, I managed to finish what I had started to do, got the safe door shut, locked and everything working again.


I had a nice mountain on my head and a couple of days of pain. But I survived. My friends have begged me to get a helmet, a hard hat even, but I'm too proud and really, not much of a story being safe.

Slick

I was in a suburb of Los Angeles that will remain unnamed. If I called it out, I might have a mob outside my mobile home with pitchforks and torches. Yes, I do live in a trailer park, I am white, but I do keep it neat most of the time. Anyway, I was eating at a fast food restaurant, when a big man came in, dressed in a white shirt, jeans and cowboy boots. He had a ID badge hanging around his neck. He swaggered up to the woman behind the counter, and instead of ordering, started asking her questions about the drains.

“I'm from the city, and it's been reported that your grease drains are draining to the ocean. Need a way to stop that from happening. You wouldn't know anything about that, would you? Well, can I come back there and look at your drains?” (All in one breath)

The employee said, “I know we have grease traps, not drains. What are you talking about?”

“Well, if I can come back there, I can show you.”

Incredulous, she replied, “Well, you'll have to talk to the owner about that.”

“But, but, there will be a huge fine. In fact, if you give me $100, I'll make sure no one knows about it.”

“There's no problem with our grease traps, as we have someone come by and clean them out. As for our drains, we haven't seen any clogs or odors or anything. I'm not gonna give you anything. Do you have a number I can call to verify who you are?”

Ignoring her, he blustered, “Well, I was outside and I noticed something with your outlet pipe, so I need to look at that too. It'll be $100 to inspect it.”

I'm sitting there drinking my coffee, listening to this exchange. In an effort to intimidate the woman, he then got on his cellphone and started talking about putting in a report. But, she wrote down the owner's number and handed it to him.

“Call the owner and set it up with him. I don't have that responsibility. Who are you with again?” She squinted trying to read his badge, but he turned around and kept talking on his phone. Finally, the man left in a hurry.

Definitely a small time con man and least likely to succeed.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Summertime

This happened in July 2006:

Well, the summer is here.

I went to Barbecues Galore to see if I could get one of those electric grills you could use inside the house to do some grilling.

The salesperson was VERY unhelpful (translated: he didn't know jack), but he said, "Take a look around". I did find an electric grill but it was for outside use only, with a long heavy cord. It was kind of steep, almost $180. So I looked around some more and then thought I should get one of those propane grills. There was one for $49.99, but it was a really basic unit, all metal and pretty small. It looked just like the one my grandfather complained about, so I kept looking.

The Weber Q grills caught my eye. The smallest one (Q100/120) could hold ten 1/4lb. hamburger patties or 16 hot dogs. Perfect for a single guy like me. What kind of sold me on it was that it's completely portable, you can take it anywhere. So, I decided to get that and a rolling cart. The top of the line (300) is huge and has two burners but it was around $300. I opted for the 120 which had fold-out shelves, and was a reasonable $149. So I went back to the salesperson to tell him what I wanted, but he was on the phone gabbing with one of his friends. So I walked around the store and watched the other customers who were helping themselves really as the salespeople were standing around looking bored! Finally, I saw what appeared to be the manager (he was dressed differently than the other yokels) and I walked up to him and, opening the Weber brochure, said, "I want this and this". He told me to meet him at the counter and so I walked over there and stood at the cashier station. The guy on the phone put his buddy on hold and finally asked me if I needed anything. I said one of the other guys was taking care of it. Being satisfied with that answer, he talked to his buddy again for another 10 minutes.

The manager came out with the grill and the cart and put it on the counter and proceeded to ring it up. I got some tools, a brush and a canister of propane (only $4). When my credit card went through, I signed the receipt, and then the manager said, "Have a good day," and walked off. So I'm standing there with two big bulky packages, no shopping cart (oh, did I mention they didn't have any of those?) and a bag full of implements. So, I struggled to get it off the counter (the sales people were "busy") and lumbered my way to the door. One of the other customers opened the door for me. Out in the parking lot, the propane canister fell out of the bag, which was perched precariously on top of the two boxes. Hindsight told me I should have hung the bag on my arm, it wasn't that heavy. So I went to the car, dropped off the boxes and watched three cars nearly drive over my propane canister which was rolling all over the road! That would have been a sight to see. The canister wasn't damaged too bad, but it had landed right on the valve, bending it a little bit.

Of course, I cursed the sales people all the way home. I guess they're used to selling $4000 grills so dealing with a guy wanting a little starter grill was beneath them.

Short anecdotes

This really happened a couple of years ago. :)

One day, my grandmother was leaving to go to the store. Grandfather and I were in the garage trying to fix the garage door (which broke again). Suddenly, we heard honking. So, I went outside to investigate and grandmother was telling me something was wrong with the car. She said she put it in reverse and the car rolled backward and suddenly the brakes didn't work. So, she managed to stop the car and put it in Drive to go back up the driveway, and it still continued backwards! Something was very wrong with the car, she said. So, I told her "Okay, put it in Park and get out. Let me look at it." So she put it in Park, reached up for the ignition key and realized.... the car wasn't on at all. Her excuse? "I couldn't hear the engine with the radio on."

A few days after this, Grandfather and I went to the new Winco Foods store that just opened up. It was very crowded (almost like Wal-mart on a holiday), and we found ourselves behind a couple of vehicles that were just sitting there. So, grandfather pulled out to the left and went up to the first car, which had its left blinker going, but going nowhere. He then pulled into the lane where the first car was going to go, and found a parking spot about six spots down. We got out and as we were walking toward the store, we saw that the car finally made its left turn and it was waiting for another spot to open up. As I passed, I noticed that the driver was a nun, complete with habit and a big cross around her neck. She looked about 95. I turned to grandfather and said, "You cut off a nun. An old nun." He said, "Well, she was just sitting there wasting everyone's time." The nun had seen us, and yet she smiled and didn't curse us out or point fingers. Or maybe she didn't notice.

Friday, June 25, 2010

Working Adventure

Yesterday was a typical Monday. I had a job scheduled for 10 AM. On the work order was a man's name with an address. It ended up being a major company, a car manufacturer with their Research & Development offices here in Orange County.

I found their address soon enough, and followed the sign for "Visitor Parking". I walked around the parking lot, looking for the Visitor's Entrance (pointed out by the sign) and didn't find anything. So, I saw a door and was going to enter through this door to inquire where I could find the receptionist. The employees' entry into the building was one of those rotating doors, which was automatic. They would swipe their card, and the door would begin to move. You kind of had to jump with the door moving to avoid being crushed.

But, I had no badge, so I stood there contemplating what to do next, when I heard a voice behind me. Turning, I saw a woman and she asked again, "Can I help you?" I said that I had an appointment with a person, and looking at my work order, gave her the name. She thought for a minute and told me that I should check with the receptionist. I said I was trying to find where that was. She nodded and led me back to the parking lot, then said, "See that black car there?" "Yes." "Well, at the black car, turn left, go down the street. There you will see a circle, that's where the main office is."

Thanking her, I started down that long road, with my tool tray in one hand, the parts to fix the computer in another. There were no sidewalks, only grass and pavement. Finally, I made it to what I hoped was the main lobby, entered (no rotating doors here, thankfully) and approached the receptionist.

Telling her I had an appointment, and after filling in the visitors log, she provided me a badge needed to be in the building. She asked me if she should call the person I was to see or if I would call. Looking at her, I had a brief thought of, 'Isn't that what receptionists are supposed to do, call people?' Seeing as she wasn't busy at the moment, I thanked her and told her I'd appreciate it if she would do the calling.

I waited in the lobby for about five minutes when a man approached. "You the Sony guy?" He asked. I affirmed that I was and he told me that I'd have to go back with him to the fix the computers, would I gather my things and follow? I did, and he approached the receptionist. There was another woman there, probably the receptionist's supervisor. She had a sour expression on her face, a look of distrust at anyone invading the area.

I had observed her while I was waiting and she was constantly fussing about the receptionist's desk. A delivery man came and dropped off a package on top of the counter, and she hurriedly took it off and put it on the floor behind the wall behind the receptionist area.

As we approached, her sour face turned to the man, who said that I was to go back with him to work on one of the laptops. She looked at me as if I was a spy, and looked momentarily at my two badges pinned to my shirt pocket, my ID badge, and the guest badge. Seeing that I was properly adorned, she nodded assent. She saw the box I was holding in my hand and inquired what it was. I said it contained parts to fix the computer. She opened her mouth to tell my escort that I couldn't carry the box into the building. So, he took it from me, quickly obeying her instructions and began walking away.

We made it through a rotating door and walked, and walked, and walked, and found our way into the IT department. He handed me off to a man named Pat (it was easy to remember his name), and so I said I was here to fix a laptop with a bad screen.

Pat looked around and so did I. There were about four stacks of laptops, all the same model and brand, piled on top of one another in the work area. He told me that it must be one of these. He asked if I had a serial number, and I did, showing him my work order. So, he took it and stared looking at laptops, while I stood there and waited. Finally, after about ten minutes, he found the one I was to work on, so I got to work.

An hour later, with the problem resolved and the laptop working again, I was escorted out. A different man, Steve, asked me where I was parked. I told him I was parked in the visitor area, and that I needed to return the badge. He asked me to follow and so I did. He laughed that the place could be a maze sometimes (it was a large building) and so I followed. He led me to another rotating door, leading outside. He waved my badge in front of a box on the wall, and the door started spinning. He said he would return the badge for me and told me to have a good day.

So, the door ushered me out to the bright day outside. As my eyes adjusted to the light, I found that I was in an area I didn't know. I turned around and the automatic rotating door had stop moving, so I couldn't rush back inside. So I began walking. I saw no one in the parking lot to ask questions or directions, no security men in golf carts watching for spies taking pictures of new car models. I walked first one way, then surveying the traffic whizzing by, determined that direction was the freeway and I needed to go the other way. So, I did, walking amongst new cars and unseen models. But I didn't stop to look or appreciate. I wanted to escape!

Finally I found a familiar area, found my car, and finished my adventure for the day with a much needed lunch.

A Boy

Some time ago, I did a job repairing a customer's computer. He and his family lived in a very large mobile home park in Orange.

I walked up the steps and in through the open door. He greeted me with a smile, and brought the laptop to the coffee table in the living room, where two boys were doing their school work. One was wearing a shirt, the other was not. He asked them to move, so they moved their sheets of paper to the floor and continued working. I didn't really look at them, as I was occupied with the laptop, getting the necessary tools to work on it.

As I worked, one of the boys, the shirtless one, stood by me and watched me with interest. I was looking down, and as he was at my left, I saw just a flesh-colored blob (I have little to no sight in my left eye). He asked me questions on what I was doing, and I answered them, while unscrewing the many screws that held the bottom of the laptop together. I told him that the computer wasn't working right, and that I was there to replace a part. I showed him the fan, and then looked at him. In fact, both were now watching me, and they looked like they were twins, or pretty close in age.

The boy with no shirt had no arms. On the left side, out of his torso, a single finger protruded. Only the nib tho. Part of the shoulder bone could be seen. On his right side, it appeared as if someone had glued a plastic glove to him. All five fingers stuck out, as if offering a handshake. The fingers were opaque, and you could see that there was no skeleton. With each movement of his body, the fingers flapped and waved. The thumb was pointed skyward, as if giving the okay, that everything was alright.

My heart sank at seeing this sight. But I still talked to him. His name was Ernesto (his name has been changed for this post), he was in 4th grade. He enjoyed school, and he liked math. We had a nice conversation going. Over his shoulder, I could see his father watching us, with a benevolent smile on his face. He seemed proud that his boys were smart. The father calmly told the boys to go back to their schoolwork, as he felt they were bothering me. The boys picked up their pencils, one with his hand, the other with his foot.

As I left, I tried to talk to the father about a hope for the future. A hope that would see the boy with no arms seeing his hands, being able to catch and throw, to craft and to create, to draw, to play music. But the father was not interested in what the Bible had to say. I hoped the boy would learn the truth later, to make his own decision. If not, I hoped Jehovah would extend mercy to this boy.

To Tile or Not to Tile

When I was a child, my parents had decided they wanted a jacuzzi. So, one day we all piled into our cute, red AMC Gremlin and puttered off on “a trip,” my father said.

We drove two blocks to a huge jacuzzi store, that advertised a “blowout sale!” We entered and oohed and awed at the huge jacuzzis, sitting on their sides (I guess because they didn't want people sitting in them). A salesman came up to my parents and started his spiel.

Me and my brother, three years younger than I, saw a stack of books on a coffee table next to an ottoman. So, we went over there to amuse ourselves.

The books were catalogs, but they were large, not very thick. They looked like those big National Geographic books with information and panoramic pictures of places like the Serengeti, or the majesty of the Swiss Alps. Of course, I assumed information because when I read those, I only read them for the pictures.

I grabbed one, and with my brother sitting next to me, opened it across our laps. Yes, it was that big, or we were pretty small, I don't remember. The catalog contained pictures of jacuzzis, obviously, in various settings, filled with water and happy, smiling nude people. Here was one possibly set in Aspen, the snow on the ground, the view of the mountains behind and nude people. Here was one in a rainforest, with huge trees in the background, a monkey swinging from a tree and nude people. Another one was in Holland, with a dike behind with the sea and sea birds flying fuzzily in the distance and nude people.

I don't remember how old I was, but I knew it was before puberty smacked me in the face and made me realize that women were …. special creatures to be misunderstood and who would mystify and befuddle me to this day.

You could tell the man was naked because his back was always to the camera, yet you could see the crack of his buttocks. The woman, if she sat in the jacuzzi, always miraculously had the waterline about an inch below her breasts. (Pretty tall women, I had thought) Or she was shown slinking into or out of the jacuzzi, with legs bent in a demure way to cover up. I had read National Geographic articles about African nations, so it was nothing new to me.

My father was discussing a model with the salesman. My mom was getting bored of the banter, and looked over at us, slowly turning the pages of the catalog. She came over to see what had our rapt attention, looked and shrieked.

My brother and I never set foot in a jacuzzi showroom again. They made us wait in the car.

My father, after trips to showroom after showroom, was getting frustrated at finding that the jacuzzis he wanted was too large for the very small house we lived in. It was even too large for the very small yard that came with the house. So, a light bulb burned steadily over his head as he told his family that he was going to build our very own jacuzzi.

So the project began in the only bathroom we had in the house. We took showers at our grandfather's house (he lived behind us in the duplex we lived in) as my father labored over the jacuzzi. Gone was the standard bathtub, in went the tile. We couldn't see what he was doing. He had the door shut constantly, and when he would come out, he commanded us not to peek behind the plastic curtain he taped up.

When he was done, he proudly showed us his handiwork. The jacuzzi was deep, maybe three feet. It looked cavernous to me, young as I was. You had to step down into it, using the seat as a stair. It had jets to bubble the water and look like a jacuzzi. The tile was a mottled brown, half an inch by an inch in size. Yes, it was a lot of tile, almost like a mosaic. I looked at all that brown and thought he should have made a picture of something at the bottom of the jacuzzi, to look at. My mother marveled, my young brother was scared (he thought he was going to trip, fall in and break his neck; I hoped he would), and I was still wondering how to take a shower in that thing.
I don't think the jacuzzi was ever used. It took forever for the thing to fill up with water. At least, I never used it as a jacuzzi, because whenever I took a bath, everyone else in the house seemed to bang on the door within 5 minutes of my getting in, yelling at me to get out.

My parents probably used it, after my brother and I had gone to bed. They may have filled it up with hot water, got in and relaxed, letting the trouble and trauma of raising two hellish boys melt away. I think that's what they did.

If anyone stayed with us, it was always a source of entertainment. My father would never tell them about the jacuzzi. They would go into the bathroom, disrobe and pull the curtain expecting a typical ivory bathtub and instead look down on the Grand Canyon of jacuzzis. Then they would enrobe, come out and ask, “How do you turn the shower on?” This made my father proud as he would show them grandly how the thing worked.

I eventually liked the jacuzzi, as the shower head was one of those pulsating ones, that you could remove. I had to stand on the seat to remove it, but it was alright.

When we moved away from the house, the tenants-to-be looked at the Grand Canyon and told my father they weren't interested in it. So he labored to put the bathroom as it were, with a typical ivory bathtub. The brown with flecks of gold tile was gone, the custom jacuzzi never to be seen or built again.

Thus began my father's work in tile and the end of this story.