Friday, November 21, 2014

Creeper Joe and the Retail Woes

I thought I saw it all when I was a server.  I’d been degraded and talked to down by people with little or no education and by my congressman’s wife (and I won’t vote for him again until he can keep his dog on a leash).  I’ve been sweet-talked and complimented by customers racking up a $100 bill to stiff me on the tip (I’m sorry, but kind words are no substitute for cold, hard cash), and just been stiffed by assholes who thought that if I wanted to actually make a living wage that I should’ve chosen a different career path (hey, if you want me to make $8/hour, then your $8 burger is going to cost more like $24).

Now, not to brag, but I’m not exactly stupid.  I did graduate high school.  I even graduated college.  I just happened to get two degrees that are worth about as much as Enron stock.  Sadly, I was making more money serving than I was using my degree.  So now, I am getting my certificate of accounting and have had good enough grades that I was invited to join several honor societies (take that congressman’s wife who told me she went to college after high school).

Anyway, I’m not here to talk about my smarts or my asshole restaurant customers.  I’m talking about Creeper Joe.

Now, we’ve seen some people come through the doors of our little store.  We have Whisper, an online shopping compulsive who will buy $2000 worth of clothes and return IT ALL with the clothes still wrapped in the plastic they were shipped in by way of explanation that nothing fit (um, if it’s still in the plastic, how do you know it doesn’t fit?).

We have those crazies with reverse body dysmorphia who seen themselves two or three sizes smaller than they are.  I’m not one to call someone out for his or her size.  We all have our hang-ups.  But I’m not buying a size 00 and then bringing it back saying the manufacturing is shoddy because the clothes are all stretched to kingdom come and back.  No joke, I’ve even seen a size 0 co-worker be insulted by one of those crazies.  The customer asked my co-worker what size her shirt was and my co-worker responded by size extra-small.  The customer then said, “Oh, it must be running big then.”  To which my co-worker responded by saying “Well, this is the size in tops that I always wear.”

We have Crazy Town, a customer who comes into the store three and four times looking at the same thing, butting into other customer’s conversations to ask their opinion before leaving and not buying anything (which is great for conversion, BTW).

We have loads more nut-jobs that come into our store, but all of those pale in comparison to Creeper Joe.

It was a Saturday.  It was about 10:45.  Kamerin, the other girl that I was working at the time went to the restroom.  With no one in the store, I was just kind of bee-bopping around.  I glanced at the jewelry to make sure no grimy mitts had messed it up to badly, people watched, and finally went to the registers to check our e-mail. 

I was reading e-mail me when I voiced cut in above me.

“Do you have any scissors?”  Now, other than the fact that he was completely in stealth mode coming into my store (most customers you can hear from the other end of the mall), one look at him told me: Do not give this Crazy a weapon of any kind.

“No,” I lied.  And once it was said, I knew that he knew that I was lying.  But seriously, what was he going to say?  “Hey, I know you have scissors?”  He still wouldn’t get a “weapon” from me.

He hedges around and finally admits defeat and then begins to walk for the door.  And then the jewelry caught his eye.  “You’ve got some nice jewelry,” he says.

“Yes we do,” I respond because seriously, this is a women’s clothing store with women’s jewelry.  Now, while I’m cool with cross-dressers (money is money), this creep didn’t look like he had two quarters to buy a gumball.

“Can I try this on?” he asks. 

Before I can respond with “Are you fucking crazy?” Kamerin appears and tells him he can.  He then asks for a mirror and Kamerin points out the little mirror on our jewelry table. 

“I want to go back there,” he says spying our dressing room and big mirrors.

So he treks back there and Kamerin follows.  He tries on the necklace.  Mind you, he has on a hoody with the hood up and he has a hat on top of his hoody.  He also has a backpack.  The try-on doesn’t go so well, so he puts his backpack down, takes off his hat and his hoody and thankfully he has on a t-shirt.  Kamerin puts the necklace on him.

“I just wish it was longer,” he said.

Kamerin goes and get another similar necklace that is longer in length and puts it on him!  This girl is a trooper.

“It’s just not as nice as the other one,” he says.

Kamerin responds by saying, “ But it matches your shirt.”

To which he then responds by pulling up his t-shirt and showing off his boxer shorts and asking if it matches his boxer shorts.

Kamerin got a gold star by saying “It matched your shirt better.”

He then comes up by the jewelry table and to look at more jewelry, and we then learn the true intentions of his mission.

“I really just came in here for some scissors,” he says.  “Nobody will give me any scissors.”  Apparently, we haven’t been his first stop.  “I need to cut my hair,” he says and then proceeds to short us how his greasy hair needs to be trimmed around his ears and his bangs.

I’m about to tell him there’s a salon in the store when Kamerin says, “You can probably get some really cheap at Wal-Mart.  For less than three dollars.”

“If nobody will let me borrow some, I’ll just steal him,” he says.

Now, as a retail worker, this is exactly what I want to hear someone talk about: stealing shit!  If you’re going to steal scissors, what won’t you steal!

Anyway, Creeper Joe gets done looking at the jewelry and heads back to the dressing rooms to put his hoody, hat, and backpack back on.  I watch him like a hawk to make sure he doesn’t pocket any tights, belts, or anything really. 

A security guard goes by and Kamerin asks me if she should go and I get them.  I tell her no because at this point I just want Creeper Joe to leave.  If there’s going to be an altercation, I want it to take place out of my store.

And finally he leaves.  I call security and tell them about Creeper Joe, giving them an exact description about him.  They ask me what I want them to do about it. 

“Well,” I say, “He’s told me he’s going to steal scissors if he can’t find some to borrow and he said no one will give him scissors, so apparently we weren’t his first stop.”

I hang up the phone, shake my head in bewilderment and we talk about Creeper Joe.  I wanted him gone.  Kamerin thought he may have a weapon and didn’t want to upset. 

Anyway, I find out a couple of days later that Creeper Joe had been across the way at Victoria’s Secret and asked my sister-in-law (a manager there) for scissors.  When she wouldn’t give him any, he started looking at the swimsuits.  He tried to pull a girl out of line to get her opinion on the swimsuit and how it would look at him.  My sister-in-law told him he needed to leave.

Another co-worker hears from a friend that Creeper Joe made it all the way to the middle of the mall and approached a jewelry store and asked for scissors.  My co-worker’s friend gave Creeper Joe scissors.  Creeper Joe then turned around to walk to a bathroom presumable to cut his hair.  Her friend asked him wear he was going, and when he found he was going to cut his hair, the guy asked for his scissors back.

Anyway, the moral of this story is that while there are all kinds of creepers in the mall, Mall Security isn’t going to do shit about it unless you sit down in one of the massage chairs to simply sit (not get a massage).  At that point, they’ll pull your ass out of the chair and tell you to move along. 


Trying to steal scissors is okay with them.

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Erin and Chris Meet the Neighbors!

Disclaimer: It's been awhile since I wrote.  What can I say, except that life got in the way and I didn't want to force my writing.  But now that I'm studying for an accounting test, words are coming to me a lot easier than these damn numbers are.  Anyway, onto the blog!

It was a Friday night.  And it was a fairly nice evening which has been uncommon since about October of last year.  Chris had a monstrous night at work and wasn't able to leave until after 9:30.  I was at my parent's house that night for two reasons.  One of those reasons is because I like to be around company if I happen to have a Friday night off of work and not in my house by myself.  The second reason is that my parents have food.  Just because my baby is chef doesn't mean we have food in this house (in fact, we have less food in this house than I have in other apartments, ironically...).

Anyway, he calls me and says he's getting ready to leave the club.  I gather up my stuff from my parents house ready to spend at least an hour with my baby before I finally pass out from sleep deprivation.

Our house is located on a corner right in front of a bus stop.  I turn the corner and there is a person waiting on the bus.  It's a little late, and I live downtown, so I gather up my wallet and things pretty quickly because I don't exactly have a death wish and head to my door.

I reach the steps to the side entrance and that's when the stranger waiting on the bus speaks up and asks what time it is.

Now, I know this is going to be hard to fathom, especially for those of you who know me, but I really am not a mean person.  If you're nice to me I'll be nice to you.  If you're a bitch to me...well, I have red hair...so I really think it goes without saying that I can be a soulless bitch.

Maybe I do have a death wish though.  Because what I should've done was acted like I hadn't heard the person and headed straight into my house.  What I should've done, wasn't what I did.  Because I glanced at my cell phone, and I answered the stranger, a girl, that it was 9:51 (It really and truly was 9:51.  I remember it like it was ten minutes ago).

She says, "Dang, I been waitin' on this bus for fifteen minutes."

I respond by saying, "Oh my, that sucks," because it really does truly suck, but there isn't exactly anything I can do about it.  And honestly, getting a bus at nearly 10 p.m. on a Friday night in our little podunk town probably isn't going to be easy to begin with.  We're not exactly New York City.  Hell, we ain't even Grand Rapids, Michigan (which has a good public transit system...I know because I just Googled it!).

"Well," she says, "I'm your neighbor.  See that light," she says and gestured across the street.  "That's my apartment building.  My friend done had a baby, and I want to go over there and see it, but I been drinking, and I'm not about to get no DUI."

"Well, yeah," I respond by saying.  Honestly, though, I can't name one person that honestly and truly wants to get a DUI.  But I appreciate her thought process on this.  However, I knew what was coming next.  She saw me park in the driveway, she knows I have a car that works...And I've already looked around an ascertained that Chris's ass isn't home yet.  His absence pisses me off because I fucked around a little longer than normal at parents just so he could beat me home.  And, despite all of my fuckery, he hasn't made it home and I'm dealing with this drunk woman on a street corner who wants me to take her to her friends to see her new baby (Don't think that fact that she's wasted and wanting to see a newborn baby hasn't escaped me, but I don't judge other people for their decisions...unless they judge my decisions first...).

And then it happens, "Can you take me?  I got like three dollars I could give you.  It ain't far.  It's on Sweetser Avenue," she says but it comes out more like Switser.  I must've have looked confused because she went on to say, "Down by Glenwood School."

I know exactly where Glenwood School is and it's not because of my middle-class upbringing.  It's because a lot of shootings and stabbings and gang-relatated activity happen near Glenwood.  Our little patch of hell may not be Los Angeles, but we do have the occasional drug-related violence here (and happens THERE).

"Well," I say, "I'm waiting for my fiance.  He's on his way over here."  And then, like a sign from God, Christopher comes around the corner.  I wave my arms and yell his name and he stops a few feet short from his parking spot on the curb.

"She needs a ride and wants to know if we can take her," I tell him.

He looks at me, and I can't even begin to describe the look on his face.  It's a mix of disbelief, disgust, and a dash of curiosity.  "Ok," he says.  So I walk the drunken stranger over to the car.  She sits in the backseat, and I get in the front seat.

"I don't know you all," she says, "But you seem like good people.  I hope you're good people because I gotta admit, I'm a little scared."  Chris tells me afterward that he really and truly wondered how she was scared when she was driving us to the worst of the worst parts of our city.

"I got a little money," she admits again and I tell her not to worry about it.  She introduces herself to us and we introduce ourselves back.  She goes onto to explain that she's our neighbor and then says "I ain't got the best place, but I've got nice stuff.  You know NeNe Leakes?" she asks and I respond that I do and that I like her.  "I like her too, but NeNe forgets where she came from," our new neighbor says.

"I don't forget where I come from.  I worked hard to get where I am, but I don't forget.  NeNe was a stripper that got lucky and she done forgot where she came from.  And that's why I can't like NeNe," she says.  Well, everybody's got their opinion, and if she doesn't like NeNe, she doesn't like NeNe.  That's her prerogative.

"I do think y'all are good people," she says.  "Thank you, Chris for taking me.  I'm a little tipsy and I don't want no DUI.  Those cops be liking to target people all the time, so I was taking the bus, but I waited 15 damn minutes and that bus didn't show.  So thank you for taking me."

"It's no problem," Chris says.  Our neighbor gives a couple of directions and then says, "You know, y'all should come over.  Just knock on the door.  I like to drink some beer and wine.  Y'all should come over, we can drink some beer, have a few laugh, maybe even read the bible (Honest to god she mentioned the bible)."

At this point, she is now directing Chris to a house where a car is parked.

"Oh those liars," she says seeing the car.  "They done said nobody could come pick me up."

"Well, maybe they just got home," Chris says.

"Hmm," our neighbor says, "They's gonna hear about this.  Got me waiting for a bus and asking my neighbors for a ride."  She gets out of the car and says, "Well, thank you Erin and Chris.  It was real nice meeting good people like y'all.  Come over for some beer," and shuts the door.

Chris just looks at me.  I can't help it, I start to laugh as he pulls away from the curb.

"Really?" he asks me, the disbelief shining bright in his eyes.

I'm still laughing.  "I mean, we've got a bible-study we can go to now!  And we know she'll serve wine."

Chris just shook his head.  Five minutes later, we were parking at the house.  Thank God the bus stop was empty of any prospective riders.