My mother gets every Thursday off from work. She’s employed by the State of Florida, and some time
ago they went to four 10-hour-a-day work weeks.
In order to avoid a lot of office infighting, everyone was given the
choice of having a free Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday. Nobody was allowed to choose Monday or Friday,
because everybody was going to want a
Monday or Friday.
“But Joe,” you’re surely saying. “Certainly government employees are grown
adults and can fairly agree on a way to assign who gets Mondays and Fridays off,
right?”
Sure, and I just came home from a date with Keira
Knightley. Government employees argue
over everything. I worked for the government for two years,
and if you “borrowed” someone’s stapler, you were risking getting shot. I can only imagine the riots that would ensue
over trying to get the day you actually want off of work.
“But Joe, couldn’t they use seniority or—AAAUGGHHHH! MY EYES!
MY EYES!!”
I apologize for using mace on you, but if you keep
interrupting, I’ll never get this damn blog finished. Besides, the point of this essay isn’t shitty
government employment; it’s the fact that my mother was off of work last
Thursday, so she, my father (who’s retired) and I met for lunch at Olive
Garden.
I hate to admit this, but I am a functional idiot when it
comes to food. I don’t know what half
the items are on any decent restaurant’s menu.
The problem is exacerbated when the restaurant is a chain that supposedly
makes food from a different country, because the shitheads in marketing are
always going to make the dishes sound as “international” as possible. This is to convince you, the ordinary
ignorant fat-ass American, that you are indeed spending your hard-earned money
well. You see, you might not want to pay
more than six dollars for “Baked Chicken Next to Vegetables”. But hey, ten bucks for “Venetian Apricot
Chicken”? Sounds like a bargain!
To make things further complicated, I’m on a low-carb
diet. That means I can’t have
pasta.
Or tomato sauce.
In an Italian restaurant.
So, I have no idea what anything is, but I was secure in the
knowledge that 95% of their food could possibly kill me. That’s why, when the server came, I just
blindly pointed to a random item on the menu:
Server: “And what will you be having today, sir?”
Me: (Pointing randomly) “I would like this.”
Server: “You would like ‘Copyright Olive Garden 2008’?”
Me: “And please hold the tomato sauce.”
Actually, at her suggestion, I ended up ordering the
Venetian Apricot chicken, which tasted like (surprise!) chicken. I tasted neither anything Venetian nor
anything apricot about it. I did detect
a hint of Swanson’s Microwave Dinner, though.
At least my parents seemed to enjoy their meals.
One last anecdote before I end this pointless essay. Before eating my non-Venetian non-Apricot
chicken, I excused myself to use the restroom and wash my hands. The first thing I said to myself upon
entering it was, “wow, do Italians not have urinals in their restrooms?”
I’ll let you figure out what mistake I made and why I was
apologizing profusely to several people about two minutes later.