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Atnizs last blog post..Wordless Wednesday
I don't worry about Jessica (our daughter) anymore, since she is now a yellow belt in Shinpu-ren karate, and will be able to handle herself around men.
Bills last blog post..The Yellow Belt
I just sat through a day long customer service training class yesterday. Waitressing actually utilizing many, many techniques an office job doesn't. To be a successful waitress compared to a successful office worker, is so much more challenging. Interesting post. I will be interested as more comment.
I used to look down my nose a bit at bartenders, but then I learned how much they make in a night. In New York, you can pull down 400+ cash in a night. Heck, even coat check people make out big in the right place.
Sometimes it really just is all about the money, and you can't fault people for choosing a profession that pays their bills in the style they prefer! ;)
The Fitness Divas last blog post..You Are Who You Hang With
I know it sounds snobby, but I have to be honest!
Kirstens last blog post..I Would Like to Thank the Academy
I know several waitresses that are a lot happier and more fulfilled that some high level executives I know... and enjoy their lives more even if they are making less money...
Anitas last blog post..More about strawbale homes...
But again, I would reiterate that this is not true for ALL restaurants, but the average one in middle America---I'd probably point my daughter elsewhere.
SmallWorlds last blog post..Book Review: The Sky Isn't Visible From Here
I have two grown daughters who have both worked as waitresses at one time or another. I am proud of both of them because they worked these jobs and made the best of work that was less than appealing for all of the reasons you stated. But there were things they wanted and to get them they had to accept work where they could find it.
I have no doubt that there are waitresses that make $80,000 a year. Keep in mind that the average salary you cite takes into account the high end of earners as well as the low end, which could be less than $10,000 per year...and I've know a lot of waitresses who fall at the low end.
Having said that, this post is less about what waitress do or do not make and more about self-righteous morons making judgments about people based on the work they do. To equate waitresses with prostitution is probably the most asinine statement I've seen in my life. It is the worst kind of elitism. I wonder if that woman feels the same about the people who serve her when she eats out. If so, I hope they spit in her food.
I'm confident that the waitresses who make $80,000 per year both know how to deal with difficult guests to be able to avoid the groping and know what good service is all about. Wait staff perform a very difficult function in an atmosphere of very demanding 'clients' and have to know a lot about human nature to do well.
If a person enjoys their job, whether it be as a stock broker, lawyer, doctor, garbage man, sewer cleaner...whatever...and they work hard to do the best job they can, then it is a worthwhile, honorable job. People looking down their noses at any profession need to ask themselves what makes them the judge of everyone else.
Sassy Mama Bears last blog post..Current giveaways at Mama Bear Reads:
Men have dreams and visions of what they "can be or should have been"
Women have dreams and visions of who they "are married to, who they know, who they are friends with, who they connect with".
We all want the ultimate statement " I AM"......______________
For men what we do is who we are...........so if someone is a waiter.... that's who he is. Even if he was married to the President of the USA, he would still be a waiter.
Male transition jobs are for the under 30 guys, because that is when the "quiet desperation" starts to sink in to our souls. My son worked 4 years as a waiter in his 20's, not his career.
If a job is considered a transition job, then it is because the person has dreams and goals beyond the now, and they have the ability to delay gratification, which has been proven to be more inportant than smarts...
Waiter and waitress jobs are for those who want them or for those who don't want to look for something else.
Any job that puts you face to face with the public (car sales, retail sales, service industry) will
open your eyes to how people are. I wish everyone had at least one year of their lives exposed to the public. Afer the year, they would never forget to say "Thank You" to the person serving them.