Showing posts with label deli. Show all posts
Showing posts with label deli. Show all posts

Sunday, December 8, 2013

good moments are easy to forget sometimes

my coworker ria encouraged me to write some smut. 

"like sex. like write something that will turn people off and get them off. mv, i know you have it in you to write something like that." 

she told me about how earlier this week her son referred to his balls as "those brainy things down there," after he was describing his doctor visit to his older sisters. 
we laughed and had a full conversation about how balls, should from now be called and referred to as brainy things, "because they do kind of look like brains," and kept shouting "brainy things" back and forth to each other while cutting meat and cheese for customers.

then she told me my deli manager always says, "a dildo never asks, 'is it okay to stop?'"

i described to her what going into the projects is like. and told her that im going to be going away.
she then told me how much she and other people love me:
"like that elderly couple who i just waited on. they were seeing if you were here. but you weren't yet. then you showed up and their faces lit up. and they started asking how you were, and how you're a good kid, and to take care. then that other guy comes up and tells you how you're such a nice kid, cuts his meat perfect, then you asked about his wife and how she is doing. people love you mv."
right after, a guy walked up to the counter.
"hey dude how are you doing? i haven't seen you in awhile. you've been doing okay?"
i told him, "i'm surviving. and alive. what about yourself?"
he smiled, which made his beard move and said, "the same. at least trying to."
i handed him his pound of american cheese, "it was good seeing you, have a nice night."
"you to man. hang in there. and take care."
he walked away.

ria pointed at him as he walked away, looked at me and said, "see. people do care. there is hope."
i said, "yeah, it's just easy to forget sometimes."
then we proceeded to talk about dicks.
and how she doesn't like huge dicks. "like they're not all that they are cracked up to be. shit's intimidating. do you got a big dick?"
"7 and a quarter."
"not bad. but you might be too big for me. hahaha."
i snapped my fingers, and said "aww shit." then laughed, thought of a sam pink reading on youtube, and sang "big dick hustlers. we're fucking awesome." 
i pointed at her, then myself, and laughed some more. but felt kind of shitty because we know there won't be many shifts like this left because she's getting transferred to the duryea store, and i'm going to be put away. "don't worry mv. you gotta stop thinking. and just do it. i know you can do it, you can get through this. i'll miss you. but remember write me and other people something that will turn them on. just try out that sex shit, and make it hot and raunchy!"
"oh baby! i will try. but i suck at sex in real life, so i'll have to pretend. i'll mention people getting wet and big dick shit. haha. thanks. i'm going to miss you a lot too."
it's moments like this is wish i could save, and crawl back into when bad things happen, until they pass. because good moments are easy to forget sometimes.

Another Failure At Trying To Help Someone Out In Life.

I was smoking a cheap cigarette outside of work next to all the shopping carts, at nine o'clock.

The front end manager, Joyce, who has short, you know it's dyed brown hair, and is considered a bitch by all of the cashiers but likes me for some reason, walked outside, lit up a cheap cigarette, scanned the almost empty parking lot, then looked at me.

"Mv, is that my truck?"

There was a white, beat up, late 90's Ford pickup truck with a dented quarter panel in the corner of the parking lot next to the entrance with its lights on and engine running.

I knew she drove a pick up truck, but never paid attention to the color, make, or what it even looked like.

We have been working together now for two years.

I took a drag from my almost finished cig.

"Maybe, I mean it could be your pick up truck, but I'm not really sure."

Smoke coming out of my mouth along with the words.

She looked puzzled. Face scrunching up creating more wrinkles. Eyes confused. Upper body wrapped in a bright pink zip up hoodie with white flowers that a twelve year old would wear.

She hacked up a cough on her next exhale, and look at me again.

"When the hell did my truck get here?"

I snubbed out my cig. I didn't have an answer.

"I don't know. Really wasn't paying attention. It could have just pulled in. Or maybe it was here for like five-ten minutes, maybe longer. I don't know. I'm sorry."

I snubbed out my cig and started to walk back inside towards the deli, while she put her bright pink hood up, hands in pockets, with the her cig dangling out of the corner of her mouth as she made her way to the truck in question.

We didn't say good-bye. And I was back in the deli before either of us knew the answer.

I didn't see her for the rest of the night. Or the truck.

I never have any answers.

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Goin' Nowhere Fast



Yesterday at work while I was throwing empty cardboard boxes in the bailer, I noticed a giant mechanical spider with a broken left front leg, and an abdomen empty, opened, and exposed, missing two double D batteries, which made its whole body lifeless.

It was two days after Halloween, and plush snowmen, reindeer, and santas have already replaced its ass on the shelves.

Two days after Halloween, and its smiling sewn on mouth and plastic eyes are suffocating in trash.

Right then, I made a wish to anyone or anything.

I made a wish to switch places, to give the giant mechanical spider my life, so it could do something better with it than what I'm currently doing (nothing.) I want it to experience life after Halloween. To fall in love. Get a good paying job. Be attractive. Suave. Sophisticated. Have sex. Have children. Earn medals and plaques. Get handshakes from old men. You know, actually accomplish something, instead of dragging other people down.

After this week, after this month, after this year, getting thrown out and crushed by a trash compactor is something I can actually look forward to.

But nothing happened, because nothing ever happens; both of us were still stuck in the same shitty positions.

Crying and embarrassed.

I went to my car and did some drugs and smoked a cig to collect myself because I can't have my coworkers thinking that I'm crazy.

When I got back to the deli, my coworker Ria asked me, "Mv, what's wrong?"

I looked up at here with tears swelling on the edges of my eyelids and told her about another failed attempt at love, about the spider, about how I can't take it anymore, about the surge in drug use, and about the reality of what it feels like to lose my sanity.

She tilted her head, looked at me with her powder blue eyes and said, "Awwww, Mv it's going to be okay. But you can't lose yourself in your own thoughts, and in pills. You can't change people, or how the world is. I know it seems like every time you try and put yourself out there, you get shot down. But you gotta keep going."

I started to cry, and she leaned in, gave me a hug, and pressed my face against her shoulder.

"You know, if it was 15 years ago, and I didn't have kids and wasn't married, it would be deli love between you and me. I'm sorry things never seem to work out, but I know this girl at the Duryea store who works in the deli, who would be perfect for you. She's real skinny, cute, and likes books just like you. I wish I had her number so I could hook you guys up."

We broke our embrace.

"It's okay, I'm just too much trouble. Too much emotional baggage. No one is attracted to a crazy person."

"Mv, it's going to be okay. You're going to be okay. You working Wednesday?"

"Yeah."

"Cool. You like plants? Cause I got this plant I want to bring in and give you. It'll help take your mind off all this shit. You know? Give you something to do."

"Yeah that be great. Thank you. Sorry for acting this way. I'm just so fucked in the head."

She grabbed my shoulders.

"Mv, look at me, it's going to be okay. If you let it get to you it will. You just gotta let go. You just gotta move on."

Later that night, still dwelling on facts I can't change in my bedroom, I hear the sounds of the mechanical spider's body being crushed in the back of a garbage truck. Sitting next to the window, listening. Heartbroken. Still crying.

It got to me.


Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Document1 (Autosaved) March 26, 2013 9:37 pm


Thought about throwing a ball of venomous snakes onto a middle-aged woman wearing glasses and a sweater, and carrying a James Patterson novel as she walked past the deli counter. A taipan gets a grip on her neck, bites, and drops her, face exposed and bloated pressing against dirt covered linoleum.

Thought about people giving up handguns, and strapping up with balls of venomous snakes.

Bustin. All scales and fangs.

Smokin blunts while neurotoxins and/or hemotoxins tear up vital organs.

And we all got some shit to say just for the fuck of it.

And this is my medium/fetish:

Watching a black mamba rub its belly across middle aged lips turning blue

While crouching down with palms on knee caps.

 

Thought about serrating my gums with a toothbrush,

And using the blood for facepaint

Then going to the dentist,

And saying, ‘Yeah, I made a complete mess of it.”

 

I’m not taking a shower this morning.

Thought about smelling really bad at work,

like head cheese bad.

 

Sorry for being self-indulgent.

I have zero confidence.

Thought about helping you rig up

Instead of wasting my time

In front of the computer.

 

Yes my gums are still bleeding.

Thought about giving up because what’s the point?

Sunday, September 15, 2013

91513


You don’t want to go to work at your part-time job.

You want to lie on the couch all day covered in blankets, watching mind numbing daytime game shows, and popping k-pins in the fetal position hoping a giant boot crashes through the ceiling flattening your body.

Hoping it twists, grinding your bones into the broken couch parts, for good measure.

Skin and bodily fluids oozing under rubber.

Five minutes pass.

And nothing happens.

You decide against taking a shower and brushing your teeth.

You decide that smelling like shit and having bad breath will help you avoid social interactions.

You decide that having social interactions when you smell like shit and have bad breath proves to strangers that you have no inner-drive or initiative to do anything important ever.

It’s important for other’s to understand this because it feels good to be honest.

You want to be alone, but you don’t want to be by yourself.

You want to be able to do something amazing, but “something” and “amazing” are such broad, general terms that are too complicated for you to understand.

So you put your blue polo shirt on with the company logo on the sleeve, and arrive at work ten minutes late instead.

Upon your arrival, you become a different person who is constantly smiling, laughing, and taking an interest in other people’s lives by asking questions about their jobs, sons, daughters, grandkids, pets, sports teams, vacations, and church functions while slicing ham, cheese, and/or salami.

Just another version of yourself to hate.

They talk and talk and talk and complain and complain and complain as you nod your head.

Always ending the conversation with, “Have a great night!”

Not really giving a shit.

More concerned with the tools you have at your disposal to kill yourself (slicers, ovens, knives, deep fryer, saran wrap + a full bowl of potato salad.)

Only to shut the lights off to go home and do it all over again tomorrow.

The daily $8.05 grind.

Teaching you to talk to yourself, because on your shift you receive no new messages.

She told you to wait because she needs time to think.

And the books you took out and studied to interpret those words have left you with a bad feeling that can be compared to a stomach ache that expands to encompass an entire body.

So you’ve started destroying yourself, instead of being patient because you are a fucking idiot proving everyone who has called you smart and talented wrong on a minute to minute basis.

Which is making you forget about how fucked your life really is until tomorrow.

Then you watch a documentary on people living in the sewers of Bogota, Columbia and realize the whiny pussy you actually are.

And how little you actually matter.

Always second guessing the words coming out of your mouth in comparison to the emotions you’re feeling.

 

 

 

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Excerpt #2 from: The Stings Don't Hurt So Bad When You're Busting Down The Beehive

 
 
 
Today at work behind the deli counter, I saw a forty year old man with a tan round face examining the quality of a box of glazed donuts.
He was wearing a black t-shirt that said: “I can suck dick better than any girl on this planet!”
The “suck dick” was written in rainbow lettering.
A tall bald man with a shaved head in a beige winter coat wiggled his way through produce until he was next to the guy who can suck dick better than any girl on the planet.
He reminded me of a construction worker, the bald guy.
He had to be.
His hands were large and calloused.
Permanent dirt glued in between the fingernails.
I thought about talking to one of them, but I always get nervous around celebrities.
I had a question to ask.
The man who can suck dick better than any girl on the planet put the box of donuts back on the table that serves as our bakeryour store doesn’t have an in-store bakery, which means all of the baked goods are brought in from the corporate factory bakery, put on the table in front of the deli, and marked “fresh.”
“These donuts look like shit! They’re already hard as fuck!” he said to the construction worker while moving his hands in a circular motion.
“Yeah! And for $ 3.99? Rather just go to Dunkin Donuts. Ya know? They’re made by those Indians, but at least they’re made daily.” the construction worker said to the guy who can suck dick better than any girl on the planet.
The construction worker giggled as he grabbed the guy who can suck dick better than any girl on the planet’s left ass cheek through acid washed jeans with one of his large calloused hands.
“Let’s go babe!”
“Alright.”
They disappeared around the corner like every customer does, but they were not like every customer because they were smiling, giddy, hand-in-hand.
The question I wanted to ask was: “Is it really all about oral sex or is there something else to it?”
Because they were the happiest couple I had ever seen so far in my entire life.

 
 


Thursday, June 27, 2013

all of my accompishments can fit into a single 12x6 envelope

I keep thinking about the pair of glass automatic doors malfunctioning while I'm walking through them, slicing me in half. Out of one of my halves emerges a magician in a black suit, shiny shoes, a top hat, and purple cape, and out of the other his assistant covered in pink sequins.

The assistant poses with her hand, palm upwards, next to my body, while the magician yells, "TADA! Now onto Atlantic City!" to unfazed employees and customers before disappearing in a cloud of smoke, and reappearing at the bus stop down the street.

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Two Facts About The Deli I Work At.



My one co-worker eats expired pies out of the garbage while I wait on customers and/or clean the fryer and/or rotisserie and/or dishes.

He gets paid more than me.

Monday, February 25, 2013

SOLD OUT + more news + two reviews via text + one review from a deli customer

here is a picture of the finished copies of 'FRIEND':
 


i sold out of all my copies yesterday. thank you to every person who bought one. to everyone who doesn't live in wilkes-barre, you will be recieving your copies shortly. i am getting the envelopes tomorrow, and sending them out this week, as well as setting up a paypal account so i can collect my bread from you motherfuckers.

i am writing a novella called: The Stings Don't Hurt So Bad When You're Busting Down The Beehive. its almost finished and will be up for sale sometime this month or next.

i'm also selling homemade bookmarks for a dollar.


here are two text message reviews of 'FRIEND':

 
2 new texts from _____ on 2/22/13 1:43am:

"yo."

"4/25/ 2013 didn't happen yet."

me:

"it means 4 out of 25."

1 new text from ____ on 2/22/13 1:58 am:

"AAhh ok I get it. Nice. I read it. Found one littttle type-o. you used the wrong your. sweet dreams mv."



*
 
1 new text from ____ on 2/24/13 11:55pm:
 
"Yo the book is sick dude. I really really like it."
 
*
 
and a face-to-face review by a deli customer:
 
 
"So I read your book, and it was really good. My daughter was disappointed she couldn't read it. It has that "makes you want to keep on reading" quality to it. So yeah, it was great. I wish it was longer. My husband saw it on the counter, and asked me it he could write a note on the back of it. I told him not too in case you get famous one day."





Saturday, July 28, 2012

30 minute lunch break


Today, I was on my lunch at work sitting on the bench smoking a cigarette. I saw Renee, a girl who works up front, carrying a broom and a dust pan. And Pat, a woman who is one of the night managers up front, following closely behind tapping a cigarette out of her green pack of Pall Malls. Pat lit the cigarette just as I was stubbing mine out on the ground, and then looked at Renee.
“We’re not supposed to smoke here because the higher-ups say it bothers the customers,” she says taking an extremely long drag, “which means we have to clean all these butts up.”
“Okaaaaaay.” Renee said rolling her eyes upwards along with her vocal tone.
I threw my butt in the broken black plastic flower pot which acted as our ashtray and garbage.
Pat abruptly turns, and walks towards the front sliding doors finishing her cigarette in three puffs before dropping it on the sidewalk.
I noticed a small brown bird hopping around near my feet eating the crumbs from a discarded poppy seed bagel, and shitting little white dots everywhere.  And it was unavoidable.
Renee dropped the white dustpan to the ground and started sweeping the brown butts and ash out of the cracks in the sidewalk into a pile. She turned her head and fixed her accusatory pupils on the white pack of cigarettes next to me.
“Are you the one whose doing this shit? Throwing them on the ground like a lazy motherfucker? Making me have to sweep your shit up?”
“Nah,” I said shaking my head back and forth before opening my pack, “all my filters are white. Those are brown, which means I’m not the perpetrator. SEE!”
I pointed down to a pile of 50 brown cigarette butts, none of which are white.
“Alright, we’ll keep up the good work.” she exclaimed with a wink.
I gave her a thumbs-up, and watched the pile gain mass with each sweep.
“The funny thing is you don’t even smoke. Yet, you have to clean up everyone else’s shit cause they’re too lazy to toss that shit into the ashtray, which is literally five feet away. Bastards! Hahahaha..haaaaaaaaa!” I said rocking back and forth on the broken bench whose peeling red paint exposed splotches of cheap wood. It made a clanging sound as the metal legs lifted up and slammed back down.
I started laughing after completing the sentence because it’s a nervous tick, which is probably really annoying to the people I am talking to, and most of the time, I don’t even realize that I’m doing it. But, she didn’t seem to notice:
“I know right! Those motherfuckers!” Renee exclaimed slamming her broom down in an impulsive act of sedition. “I mean I smoke weed here, but not cigs. And they got me cleaning up other people’s nasty ass butts and ash. I, mean, what the fuck right?”
I pulled another cigarette out of my pack and lit it.
“We should go on strike!”
“Yeah, Fuck this place!” she said throwing her right fist into the air.
She knelt down and brushed the pile into the dust pan.
“Do you know we are selling expired baby food right now? They told me to check the dates and when I did, they were all two weeks expired. When I told them, the regional manager said, ‘Ehhhhh…They’re vacuum sealed. I’m sure they’re still fine for a couple more days.’ Can you believe that? ‘a couple more days.’ I mean, we are talking about little FUCKIN babies here. It’s terrible!” The skin on her face scrunched together forming ridges and valleys. “I work here.”
In my head, I saw babies with puffed up cheeks and green tinted faces regurgitating globs of decomposing fruit purée.  Their soft pink lips were coated in thick jelly-like film of infected nutrition, which made them look rabid and pitiful at the same time.
“Yeah, I can believe that.” I said, exhaling unsurprised syllables through the streams of breath and smoke. “Because I work here too!”
“This week we have an ‘In-Store Special’ on the expensive imported ham. It’s $5.99/lb, and it’s usually $8.99/lb. Last week, I noticed the expensive imported ham was two weeks past its expiration date because it never sells since it taste the same as the regular imported ham, which is $5.99/lb. We have sold about 7lbs out of a 12lb block of the expensive out-of-date imported ham. I feel bad selling them that shit, but I still do it anyway. Half the population of Plains may have food poisoning. And it would be my fault.”
I laughed, “But the worse they could do is probably sue me, and it’s not like I have a shit ton of money— twenty cents above minimum wage + a dollar extra on Sunday. What’s the worst that could happen?”
I laughed.
(10 second silence)
“Anal rape in a prison shower.” She answered matter-of-factly.
"Shit." I laughed and snubbed out my cig on the ground. 
“You better not be fuckin up the sidewalk I just cleaned with your butt.”
I held the butt in between my thumb and index finger and shot it directly into the center of the broken flower pot.

"Michael 'Fuckin' Jordan!"
Renee dumps the dustpan full of ashes into the broken flower pot. It looked like a waterfall : the ash and the butts freely falling downward into the basin of empty 25 cent bags of potato chips, which created a misty cloud of ash that drifted sensuously out of the broken flower pot in all directions, coating the surrounding surfaces in a thin grey film.
Pat stuck her head out of the automatic sliding doors and screamed in the hoarse voice of a drill sergeant who has been chain smoking for the last 37 years as a way to deal with post-traumatic stress disorder.
“RENEE, IT DOESN’T TAKE 15 MIN TO SWEEP UP A PILE OF CIGARETTE BUTTS!”
“Alright. I’ll be in, just give me a minute.”
“I’VE ALREADY GIVEN YOU 15! LET’S GO!”
Renee gathered her dust pan and clipped it to the shaft of her broom.
“Yo, at 9:45 we might smoke a bowl in produce you down?”
“Word, I’m pretty far ahead on my work, and should be able to close on time. So, yeah. Just get me before you go.”
“Okay. Cool.”
Renee slowly walked through the doors following Pat to register two and immediately scanned a bag of cat food for a sixty year old lady wearing bulky glasses and pink stretch pants.
For the last 10 minutes of my lunch, I envisioned hundreds of babies keeling over in their high chairs face first into bowls of spoiled fruits and vegetables.
I laughed, because maybe we aren’t so horrible. Maybe we play an integral part in the solution to the planet Earth’s overpopulation problem. Checks and Balances. But still everybody gets a paycheck every Friday, which makes the whole situation kind of fucked up.
I noticed the small brown bird again and it was shitting all over the area in front of the store and, for some reason, it felt like justice was being served in some small way.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

An Elederly Deli Customer Offers To Give Me Psychological Advice While Ordering A Half Pound of Cooked Ham

The other day, a short elderly lady with a cute, but very wrinkly face, asked me to slice her a half a pound of cooked ham.

"Any preference on how that is sliced?"

"Very thin."

I told her, "I'll do my best," looking straight into her blue eyes.

She smiled.

"If you don't, I tell you what the hell is wrong with you!"

 I cut each slice extra thick on purpose and moved it onto the scale.

She shook her head, pulled a pillow out of her purse, placed it on the counter of the deli case, and told me, in a reassuring voice, to "relax, lie down, and make yourself comfortable."

And I did.

She proceeded to inform me of all my chemical imbalances and psychological deficiencies, as I explained my past and present staring into the stained drop ceiling.

I got up, bagged her half pound of extra thick cooked ham, slapped the price sticker on it, handed her the bag, and she walked away, pissed, towards the bread aisle.

We really shared a moment together.

And I'll never forget it.

Honestly.

Sunday, May 6, 2012

a survival guide for people who are shopping at a deli

Be cordial. Nice. Patient. Understanding. Don't get anal over your cheese being sliced to thin, or how it looks in the bag or if it's a little over/under weight. Also don't get pissed at us if we don't know where the pop tarts or chicken liver is because that's not our department—we're confined to a fifteen foot corridor for over seven hours each day. Last, refrain from using the phrase, "This is a SALE!!!" in a sarcastic context, then complaining to the deli clerk over the price. Complain to our CEO's, or the lunch meat company CEO's, or the cheese company CEO's that create the prices.


Most of us get paid 40 cents above minimum wage (except an extra dollar on sunday.) And we carry knives and box cutters on us at all time. ALL THE TIME. 
Just remember anyone can snap and kill you in a multiple of ways at anytime, anywhere. But if you follow these guidelines at a deli you should survive and avoid any cases of biological warfare which could arise from improper deli etiquette.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

sorry i'm nervous and don't know what to say or how to start this

Hi.

I write.
This is a place for me to show you what I write.
And for you to read what i write if you want to
 +
have nothing better to do
 +
cure boredom.

I will also post things that I find interesting because it will make me feel better about myself if someone comments on it because I need validation like everyone.

I also work at a deli in a grocery store in pennsylvania.
While I'm working, I think about all the random ways to get accidentally injured at a deli without being at fault. I also smile, slice, weigh, bag, and say, "Have a Great Day!"

It's like selling drugs, except you don't see very many hundred dollar bills
+
you have to put your hands near blades and hot oil
+
no getting high during your shift cause you're selling ham off the bone, american cheese, and bacon lovers turkey, instead drugs.

I graduated college and moved back home a couple of months ago.

I didn't get any sleep today because there was some guy using an electric drill because my parents' have to remodel every square inch of their house. Which means I'm tired.

"Have a Great Day!"