Work Stories: Episode 39: Donkey in the Lobby
Previously on Work Stories, I wrote about the time that I
smelled urinal cakes. It wasn’t really a
story as much as a bunch of information leading up to that moment. I didn’t really like that installment, and I’m
sure that most of you didn’t. It wasn’t
really an interesting installment. This
week, I hope to make things slightly more interesting by telling you about
something that happened this week. Let’s
get going with the story then.
As you might know, I work at a museum in the tourist
district of my city. Which city? I don’t feel like writing that in here, but
it should be fairly easy to figure out.
Let me also note that the tourist season is summer, and we’re just
coming out the end of the busiest part of the year. I’m a little bit stressed out from all the
insanity, and all the utterly rude, arrogant, and stupid people. If everybody who visited our area was
pleasant, polite, and nice, I wouldn’t be as inwardly angry as I am. But they aren’t, so there’s a fury rumbling
inside me. And of course, as we near the
end of the season, the worst people come for their visits.
To enter the museum, people must buy a ticket. Then they go between our counter and a
railing, scan their ticket, and walk through a turnstile. It’s as easy as that. The railing is there to separate the queue
from the masses of people in our lobby.
At one end of the railing is the lobby, and at the other is a gate. This gate is there for people to get their
buggies inside, for large groups to enter, and for staff to quickly get in and
out of the museum and lobby if need be.
It is also sometimes used as an exit when we must lock up the main
exit. The gate isn’t big. It is two metal bars hooked to an upright bar
at one end, and connected to each other at the other end with another piece of
metal. It isn’t made for too much force.
So on Wednesday, I come out of the depths of our museum to
see a man sitting on the gate. This man
probably weighed a good 250 pounds. He
was sitting right on the gate, which was sagging under his weight. I asked him politely to not sit on the
gate. He just stared at me. I explained to him that people aren’t
supposed to sit on the gate because it was not made to handle the weight. That was when this guy went from a mistaken
tourist to an outright asshole. What
follows is not the exact words, but a paraphrasing of the exchange that occurred:
Me
“Sir, could you
please get off of our gate.”
Guy
“Huh?”
Me
“Don’t sit on the
gate. It isn’t made for the weight of a
person.”
He gets off of the
gate and turns to me.
Guy
“I need to take a
picture.”
He turns his back to
me and jumps back onto the gate.
Me
“Please get off of
the gate.”
Guy
“I’m taking a
picture.”
Coworker
“Get off of our gate.”
He begins to ignore
us and sits on the gate for another
minute and a half as we tell him to get
down.
This guy had no respect for the property around him. Everything had to be exactly the way he
wanted to and he was not looking at the repercussions and consequences of his
actions. In this case, nothing
happened. He was lucky. The security officers for our side of the
street were not on duty at the time. He
is also lucky that there was a camera where he was situated because I was ready
to push him off of the gate.
It is times like these in which I get really angry about my
job. People treat us like shit because
they are on vacation. Everything should
go the way that they desire. That isn’t
the way the world works. You being on
vacation does not stop genocide. It does
not stop disease. It does not prevent
and asteroid from hurtling towards Earth at speeds of which we do not know. None of these things stop, so why do some
people who go on vacation feel like their respect for other people should cease
to exist? I don’t get it.
That’s the end of my rant for this week. I needed to vent a little bit and get that
off of my chest. Sometimes people just
piss me right off. Next week I might
give you another happy story. But then
again, it is the end of summer, and if the last two years have proven anything,
it’s that these are the couple weeks that things get terrible. We’ll see.
Until then, don’t go chasing waterfalls.
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