Anonymous wrote:I miss having my servant help me squeeze into my corset as the damnable Yankees burn the fields around my family’s huge home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really miss baggers at the grocery store. I wonder how I'll be able to manage when I get older.
I don't miss them at all. They generally sucked at bagging. I prefer bagging my own. Left to the baggers I would have 3 items in each bag and 5,000 bags to carry. I pack mine super heavy so I can get it all in one trip. I'm already old and still do this.
Anonymous wrote:OK, B00MER.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it just corporate greed? Or can we not find people who want to do the menial jobs anymore? I know very few high schoolers who work “normal” jobs like babysitting and grocery bagging. They are busy on their phones or else doing prestigious resume building volunteer work or paid work. Every barista I know is past college age.
I live in Loudoun County and that is definitely not true of the teens here. Every teen I know (in a nice neighborhood) has a real PT job, including my own. Commonly restaurant or retail. They all tend to work 1-2 shifts a week during the school year and more in summers. FWIW its actually really hard to get babysitting jobs now. I'm not sure why. It seems like young parents rarely go out anymore, or if they do they just take the kids and stick them on iPads? I'm not sure. But the families that my teens babysit for call them just a couple of times a year, which is why they needed to get "real" jobs instead. Babysitting is not steady income.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm 45 OP, and I've never experienced most of those things. Nor have I ever longed for those things.
I genuinely don't think service is bad these days, but I always approach people with an angle of curiosity, not entitlement.
Curiosity? That’s… patronizing.
Not at all. Entitlement is far more patronizing. I've had much better service and success when I go in to company/service with an "I was wondering" approach, rather than an "I need/I want" approach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm 45 OP, and I've never experienced most of those things. Nor have I ever longed for those things.
I genuinely don't think service is bad these days, but I always approach people with an angle of curiosity, not entitlement.
Curiosity? That’s… patronizing.
Anonymous wrote:I’m 55. Life has changed, and not for the better.
I have fond memories of getting all of my Christmas gifts wrapped (for free!) at department stores like Leggett, Miller & Rhodes, Thalheimers, and JC Penney. Sales clerks would ask if they could help you find merchandise, start a dressing room, or bring you another size to try. Yes, lingerie departments had bra fitting ladies.
A department store is where you went as a newly engaged couple to register for gifts. A staff member would help with your selections and make recommendations. Service was given with a smile and people were polite and courteous. Stores were clean, well-stocked, and organized.
Department stores are just one example, but service was better then in all areas of life.
People were just nicer. Now, much of life has gotten to be a slog. It’s very depressing as someone who remembers how things were not so long ago. I think much is to blame - corporate greed, decline of church attendance, changing demographics (diversity really isn’t all that great and hurts communities of all races).
I feed sad for the younger generations.
Anonymous wrote:Is it just corporate greed? Or can we not find people who want to do the menial jobs anymore? I know very few high schoolers who work “normal” jobs like babysitting and grocery bagging. They are busy on their phones or else doing prestigious resume building volunteer work or paid work. Every barista I know is past college age.