The other day I was in a convenience store and the clerk called me, “Boss.” It was one of those chummy affectations like “Bro” which also annoys me. I don’t need to be called “Sir” but it seems to me that a guy who performs a small service I’m paying for, a total stranger I will likely never see again, could be a little more respectful of the relationship. I’m your customer, not your boss or your bro. It’s why I pay six dollars for a seven-pound bag of ice and why you get eight bucks an hour to sell it to me
And now that I mention it — I’m a CUSTOMER, not a “GUEST!” If I was a store guest I should get everything for free!
This is one of those old fart things, isn’t it? Don’t sugarcoat it. Tell me the truth. I’m making a big deal out of nothing, huh?
Well, it’s not nothing to me.
What it is, is a blurring of our healthy cultural relationships. It’s the same reason so many people today say “No problem,” instead of “You’re welcome.” We’re not supposed to think one of us is inferior to another, even for a moment. Ask a waiter for more butter and he’ll tell you it’s “no problem.” Whew! What a relief. I would hate to think that my asking you to do a small part of your job is a PROBLEM!
Fact of the matter is, a waiter really is inferior to his customer. That’s the way we all like it. It’s what we pay for. And when he gets off work and goes to a bar, HE’S the boss. I mean, the customer.
I know, I know…it’s an old fart thing.
Where’s my TV Guide?
Bro? Boss?? Man, all this time I thought my name was Dude.
Guess I gotta’ quit shopping at the 7/11. Actually, I’d give up shopping at Wal-Mart, too … but it’s a low cost way to learn a foreign language.
Morg
A-men. You summed it up perfectly. Can I still call you “Hoss” 🙂