Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Manners! In almost every job I've had, my day has been made so much nicer by the friendly greeting of the concierge, doorman, secretary, or janitor. There's nothing like a sweet cashier at the grocery store either. I learned that being friendly and polite is so important to keeping everyone's day running well.
I'm gonna take a wild guess here and say you've never worked in a law firm in DC.
Anonymous wrote:
I don't know what's funnier. That "educated" people buy PRINTS of famous artworks! TACKY. Or that you really don't think that white guys with beer bellies and tool belts don't know Jack Lawrence. Shit, my seven-year-old knows Jacob Lawrence's work.
Anonymous wrote:
Also in an emergency, I would much rather be around people who are actually useful and can do things themselves instead of outsourcing them to others.
Anonymous wrote:I know it may come as a shock to some posters, but some of us "less educated, sophisticated, blah, blah, blah" folks are actually smarter than you. I chose my job because it gives me great joy and satisfaction.
Signed,
Top 2% IQ, earning less than $45K
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Manners! In almost every job I've had, my day has been made so much nicer by the friendly greeting of the concierge, doorman, secretary, or janitor. There's nothing like a sweet cashier at the grocery store either. I learned that being friendly and polite is so important to keeping everyone's day running well.
How do you know that any of the people are less traveled, less educated, or less sophisticated than you?
This whole thread is pretty patronizing. Oh, we can learn so much from the hoi polloi. We're so corrupted from our "fancy book larnin' ." They're so much happier and simpler than us.
Gimme a break.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Manners! In almost every job I've had, my day has been made so much nicer by the friendly greeting of the concierge, doorman, secretary, or janitor. There's nothing like a sweet cashier at the grocery store either. I learned that being friendly and polite is so important to keeping everyone's day running well.
How do you know that any of the people are less traveled, less educated, or less sophisticated than you?
This whole thread is pretty patronizing. Oh, we can learn so much from the hoi polloi. We're so corrupted from our "fancy book larnin' ." They're so much happier and simpler than us.
Gimme a break.
I am the PP. The fact is that many, many people on DCUM do have an attitude that only middle & upper-class markers of achievement matter -- "HHI", neighborhoods, schools, jobs ... It's a good thing to be reminded that money & schooling are not all that matters in life. You're the one being patronizing to pretend that all the janitors in DC are actually secretly physics PhDs or something, when the fact is, they are (usually) not. It's not about having some naive view that "poverty gives good values," but rather realizing that there is inherent dignity and worth in all people. (And even if people are expressing a naive view here that the poor are somehow more noble, that's a worthwhile corrective to the crazy status-consciousness of DC anyway.)
Anyway, for what it's worth, I was totally serious about learning manners from the doorman. Knowing the right way to comport yourself in a crowded city & office environment is a really important piece of life knowledge to have. Taking a minute out of your day to stop thinking about yourself and to engage in the social ritual that keeps the wheels of society greased is crucial. It's something I never would have learned anywhere else. It's called "civility."
Sorry to burst your bubble, but if the doorman were rude, he'd be out of a job.
There's a difference between refraining from rudeness, and being genuinely polite. Now who is being patronizing, suggesting that a doorman can't both do his job and be a nice person?
I know it may come as a shock to some posters, but some of us "less educated, sophisticated, blah, blah, blah" folks are actually smarter than you. I chose my job because it gives me great joy and satisfaction.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I know it may come as a shock to some posters, but some of us "less educated, sophisticated, blah, blah, blah" folks are actually smarter than you. I chose my job because it gives me great joy and satisfaction.
Signed,
Top 2% IQ, earning less than $45K
What do you do? And how do you know you are in the top 2% IQ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was surprised to hear the kinds of responses elicited by this thread. When I read the title, I expected to hear stories about how sophisticated or intellectual people were despite their lack of advanced degrees, etc.
So here's my anecdote.
I was still living in the midwest, about to leave for Boston to start a doctoral program. One day I bought a tall bookcase and was trying to get it up the steps of my apartment building and into my apartment. It wasn't heavy but unwieldy. The building custodian saw me struggling, grabbed the other side of the bookcase, and helped me get it inside. On the way out, the guy noticed a picture I had my wall and asked, "Is that a Jacob Lawrence print?"
Shame on me for being surprised that a middle aged white guy with a beer belly and jeans riding low from the weight of his tool belt would recognize the work of an African American artist that most well educated people have never heard of.
I don't know what's funnier. That "educated" people buy PRINTS of famous artworks! TACKY. Or that you really don't think that white guys with beer bellies and tool belts don't know Jack Lawrence. Shit, my seven-year-old knows Jacob Lawrence's work.