Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Ok I give in. Waitressing pet peeves.

I avoided doing this blog for a long time because I think it is so overdone, but I cannot help but continue to be both fascinated and horrified on a daily basis of people's social and eating habits. As the granddaughter of the queen of grammar and etiquette, I was raised to have good table manners...or else. Nothing fancy like knowing where the shrimp fork goes, just things that I personally consider common sense. When you want something, say please, and when you receive it, say thank you. Don't chew with your mouth open, don't play with your food, etc. However, I have discovered that many people I have waited on over the past 6 years seemed to have missed these lessons, but somehow they are allowed to dine in public places regardless of how disastrous their manners are. I'll start with examples of general rudeness:

Me: "Hello ma'am, how are you doing today?"
Customer: "Sweet tea."

Me: "Can I get y'all anything right now?"
Child: "WHERE'S MY CHICKEN FINGERS?"

Me: "Ok guys, I've got a large pepperoni pizza?"
Customers: (dumb silence as the pan continues to grow increasingly hot against my hand)

Manners are the worst thing I have to deal with, but watching people eat can be pretty terrible too. Some habits are gross, and some are just weird. The other day, for example, a woman ordered a calzone. Rather than cut into the giant mound of bread and cheese with a knife and fork, however, she began by picking it up and meticulously brushing off the crumbs from the plate. She then tilted the plate up as if she was looking into one of those adjustable mirrors, and began to pick at the vegetables inside, pausing every few minutes to brush away more crumbs. I'm guessing she was OCD, but my fellow waitresses and I could not help but watch in fascination as she demolished her calzone piece by tiny piece. Other times are less fascinating, and more disgusting. People trying to ask for things while still chewing is particularly gross, as I cannot help but notice the half-chewed piece of pizza being passed around in their mouth. I thought people learned not to do that by the time they reached third grade. And of course, most tables tend to require at least a bucketful of ranch with every pizza.

Want to know an interesting fact? I actually like waiting tables. Sure I complain, but I'm pretty sure any job has its downsides, and this is just one more thing to write about.

Salads and their pointlessness in dieting

I hate dieting. Most people know this about me due to the fact that no matter how much I complain about my figure, I continue to eat basically the same foods. I have found that if you want to lose weight, the absolute worst thing you can do is go on a "diet" and decide to cut things entirely out of your diet. In my experience, this will only lead to failure and general hatred towards the world at large when in the presence of carbohydrates. Rather than be extreme and cut things completely, simply eat less of it and more of healthy things, exercise, and eat smaller portions. It's simple.

Salads in particular are one of the worst mistakes of dieting. Not to say that salads are not good for you or not delicious, because I personally love vegetables and eat salads whether I am dieting or not for both the taste and nutritional value. However, my boyfriend introduced me to a phrase the other day which I have found to describe salads perfectly: "just enough food to piss me off." The other day I was feeling particularly defeated when I looked at myself in the mirror, analyzing every pooch and roll and mentally beating myself up for gaining weight over the summer. So when I went to work that day at 4, I decided to eat a salad for dinner rather than a hoagie to cut down on carbs. As I spent the next 7 hours waiting tables and carrying fresh, cheesy pizzas to tables, this proved to be a terrible mistake. The energy lasted me for maybe 2 hours, and only made me more hungry. I learned the other day that professional eaters expand their stomach by eating massive amounts of lettuce, which expand the stomach. So, when people eat nothing but salads for diets, they are actually expanding their stomach's capacities for taking in food, making it harder to become full when they get around to eating real food again, making the diet pointless.

Extreme Couponing

So, as you have probably gathered by the subject matter of my blog, I'm kinda broke. I've become fascinated with the show "Extreme Couponing" and have recently become determined to use more coupons to save money. One problem is that most of those things have little nutritional benefit, like getting 75 cents of 2 boxes of Hot Pockets. I know I could get them because they're on sale, but why do that if it's bad for me? I might have more money but I'll be less healthy, and to me that's always worth it. Secondly, I do not understand why those people have to have 2034238 boxes of EVERYTHING. Who in their right mind needs 3 crates of toothbrushes?? Yes, I saw one the other day with that. I know that in order to get it for completely free you need to buy multiple items because of something with how the coupons work, but really, do you have to have a small grocery store in your basement? People can use those supplies, you know, people that don't have anything? On a lot of episodes, however, many of the items are donated to charities, and those are always the best episodes to me. However, all of those women seem to have hours and hours of time on their hands to put these massive shopping lists together, and it's extremely strategic. They research sales, then collect tons of store coupons which they then combine with manufacturer coupons, and calculate how many they need to buy in order to get them for free. Not to mention the fact that they spend the majority of their time either dumpster diving for coupons or researching sites on the internet to find deals, and usually have to divide their lists into transactions for the store. I have neither the time nor the math skills to do any of this, so for now I think I'll just stick to using my Kroger card and using the random coupons I get in the mail. Any money I can save helps, even if I can't get a small grocery store for free!

Meal of Champions

The poor college student's concept of "living on a budget" should be more aptly phrased as "barely living." Granted, I don't anything to complain about and can make groceries last for a long time, but once the supplies start to diminish my meals are pretty pathetic. I'm not a huge fan of canned food like ravioli because I find it pretty disgusting, so I always buy perishable ingredients that can be versatile such as bread, tortillas, cheese, turkey slices, and eggs. By the time I pay all my bills I have little money left for groceries, so I am stuck with whatever I can find in my refrigerator. My dinner the other week consisted of a single tortilla with about 2 teaspoons of cheese, cooked in the pan of course so I can feel like I'm actually feeding myself. Instead of the usually present hot sauce, however, I had to resort to fire sauce packets from Taco Bell. Bon appetit.