Archive for January, 2009

“They will hold.”

Sunday, January 25th, 2009

Big stuff going down at the Harrison Gr1lle. We now have replaced our entire front display, which used to hold potato salads and fresh fruit. Now it holds about a hundred cans of Rockstar and two containers of yogurt. We finally got our priorities straight.

With the start of the new semester, we get new shift assignments, new coworkers, and new supervisors. I’m now shifted for every Thursday and Saturday. The coworkers are the same pretty much: ordinary college freshmen who probably would rather be somewhere else. I’m the exception. I get a little too “into it”. (When I ask for a “sitrep”, the others look at me like I’m crazy.) The new super is a little more eccentric. He put the Team America soundtrack on the stereo. We were singing it the rest of the shift. I like that the song “Everyone has AIDS!” is incredibly contagious.

We still have some issues left over from last semester. Lately, there have been ridiculously sized pizza zits forming while the pizzas are in the oven. You know what I’m talking about; when the cheese develops an air pocket and swells up. I’ve seen em up to the size of an ostrich egg, almost extending beyond the bounds of the crust.

Popping a pizza zit is so heartbreaking. It’s like killing a unicorn. To prevent such tragedy from befalling us again, we are sometimes required to use a jagged, serrated knife to mercilessly stab the unbaked pizzas to pop any air bubbles and abort any potential unicorns (if prep has not done so already).

Now, I cut my teeth on last semester’s Sunday night Hammer. So Saturday night shouldn’t be that bad, right? The heat’s off of us. The dining halls are open and any potential customers would take advantage of that. It’s a damn babysitting mission.

They made me eat those words.

How? Well, I had to make food for them to eat. They got to eat food; I ate words.

We had to triple team the wraps station to get things out on time. Hope was in the vital behind-the-front-window position. (Think of it as Captain Picard’s big comfy chair except instead of a starship all you get is a touchscreen, a knife, and a spatula.)

Ordinarily, the prep work would gradually cease as orders came in and the “engine” revved up to speed. But we hit a couple of hiccups on the way, like how I “misappropriated” some chili and the unwelcome bacon presence (UBP) that sent ripples through the order circuit by necessitating remakes. Yeah… my bad, guys.

The touchscreen flared an angry red for all the order listings that had persisted for more than 10 minutes. We spent the better and most frantic part of 2 hours fighting to get back in “the white”. The white was salvation. The white was safety. The white was the second shift. The mounted cavalry that routes the enemy. Air support that terminates a battle. Gandalf and the Rohirrim. We needed to survive until 2100 hours or risk perishing beneath a mountain of order slips, buffalo chicken and nacho cheese.

Bit by bit, we fought. Toasting, mixing and frying, we clawed out of that crimson damnation. Finally, the second shift flooded into the kitchen to help push back the onslaught. We emerged from the battle oil, cheese, and syrup-splattered, but we had survived. We’ve done the impossible. And that makes us mighty.

And then we did dishes.

Ghost Player

Sunday, January 18th, 2009

So I come back from playing outside on the ice. And I find sitting on the chair, a big ole guitar.

mysterious guitar

Now, my roommate is home for the weekend and he never mentioned having a guitar so I’m a little scared. Not just because it may be someone breaking into my room, but what if it’s not? What if we have a ghost? What if he plays the guitar?! What if he plays the guitar and gets laid a lot?!!

Man, that would suck if he chose to haunt my bed…

“Ass-shatteringly”

Friday, January 16th, 2009

You probably know by now (assuming you’re in the Midwest and not in, like, Oregon or something) how the air outside is colder than a nihilist penguin. The local county even issued a warning about prolonged exposure to the severe 237K wind chill.

“… will result in frostbite and lead to hypothermia or death if precautions are not taken.”

Almost every window in Harrison now has killer “Day-After-Tomorrow” frost. From the outside it looks like an apartment owned by Mr. Freeze. It wouldn’t be so bad except for that everyone has classes at some point. And me, my classes not agreeing with the bus routes, I’m forced to walk to a majority of them.

Not that bad, I thought. At least I’m not bony. And I have a decent wind-proof coat with a substantially-thick polyester-lined hoodie beneath that along with ski gloves and headphones (to keep my ears warm). I can’t wear scarves because I’m Asian. There’s some backstory required here. One of the Korean international students here has earned himself a nickname for his behavior. Back in August, Trendy Fashionable Asian wore a scarf along with his cargo shorts and t-shirt. So now scarves are off limits for the likes of me because TFA ruined them for all Asians. So I have to just zip up my jacket all the way to protect my neck.

So I was pretty okay after a couple of blocks or walking. Of course this was at 10:00 so the temperatures weren’t brutal. I passed what appeared to be a poorly equipped group of former friends that apparently went “Donner party” on each other earlier that morning. I had to say I could relate. I definitely had a couple of “To Build a Fire” moments when I just wanted to curl up on the sidewalk to escape the wind.

So my coat being zipped up all the way, my breath was being diverted upward, which I didn’t really mind since it kept my eyes from freezing open. But it also fogged up my glasses temporarily as always. But today it being so ass-shatteringly cold, the fog on my glasses started to freeze and form, rendered in frost, beautiful shapes and elegant designs and truly terrifying opacity.

I somehow made it to Matthews for the lecture with some time to kill and without being flattened by a pickup. I unpacked my breakfast granola bar from my backpack pocket and chipped my teeth on it. The oats’n'honey goodness was frozen solid. I tried to warm it by grasping it tightly in my hand but that only served to cut my fingers. I would have sucked on it for a while had class not been starting. I threw it in the trash where it tore through the plastic bag and made the can reverberate like a gong, probably confounding the Chinese kid who had just entered the room.

I made it back okay. A big sardine can overloaded with 70-100 fellow endotherms helped. I don’t know what that pig farmer was doing on campus though…