My Work History
Can I blame everything on Mercury, or is it just my life being so ass-backwards lately that nothing is going my way? Evne my spelilng hsa been jsut awful lately. My editor swings back my work and slaps me in the face about five times before it gets submitted for publishing. I really should consider waitressing or acting. Even as a waitress, I’ve always sent the wrong food to the wrong table, gave them potato salad instead of cold slaw and always forgot to include their artery clogging tarter sauce with their fish and chips. God forbid the wrong check was tossed on the wrong table. All hell broke loose or I would get a wink from the truck driver who received the $1.00 bill for his ribeye. He’d always come back on Tuesdays with a twinkle in his eye. The poor guy always had a little schmutz on his scruffy beard and a flannel shirt that reeked of gasoline and motor oil. I always wondered if he had a wife and family at home.After my waitressing days and officially done with school, I went into the corporate world to give it a shot. They were so unified and even had their own little language like, “report everything to human resources” or “team player” and my personal favorite, “liquid lunches”. Human resources were any reservations you had left in your body---not bunch of catty women chained to their cubicles handing out demerits and bringing on board scared little soldiers to join “their team”. “You have to be a team player!” they chanted to all who were hired...and of course, eventually fired. They would escort you out of the building with two security men wrapped in each arm of the fired victim like a prisoner. Everybody had their face pressed against the window to watch the humiliated employee see his or her last day in the office of doom.
There’s gotta be something better than this...
And there was...
So I thought...
A call center. A call center for a phone and internet company that seemed to be, ....normal? My interview was even fun. They gave personality tests over the phone. One person would be in the other room and call you up in the little office they provided you with. She tested me on how well I handled a customer. Cool! Here’s the thing: you had to be in the union. All I ever knew and was brainwashed to think in the corporate world was: THE UNION IS EVIL. This is because no company wants a union to take over and dictate. I thought it would be quite the change so I tried it. The training was intensive and the people were very friendly and helpful. Although there were very difficult technical things to learn, they made it fun and after three months, it just clicked. You got it. You were flowing and ready to take 100 calls per day if need be.
After a while, then you got to know the company. It’s as cultish as the typical corporate world, only with a personality. Every Thursday, the union people were “advised” (forced) to wear red. Basically, if you didn’t wear a red shirt on Thursdays, then you were the enemy or buddies with someone in management. They had meetings after work and then of course, good ol’ happy hour at the local watering hole to humanize us up. (That was my favorite part.) Come February, one bitterly cold winter, we were on strike. We had to stand out in several locations in zero degree weather. I had to go out and find a goose down jacket with fur and hunting gloves---basically stuff you get if you plan to vacation in Antarctica. We had to stand out there for ***4*** hours! I had to wear two huge signs on me held by two strings. One sign in the front said one thing and when I turned around, it said another. I looked like a huge triangle with legs. Utility trucks would pass by honking because they were union workers too. We got “the nod” of approval and support. My brother-in-law who is also in the union passed around coffee and hot chocolate to all who were out there striking.When I got home on my 4th day of striking, I came down with pneumonia without pay. This wasn’t my gig. Management started playing musical chairs and we weren’t getting the same humanness that we were used to. I opted out and played the “step game”. Those of you who are in the union know what this is. If you are sick one day, then you are on one step. You are officially allowed to take the entire five working days off and still remain on step one. Step two is if you call in within the next three months, you get another “week off”. Step three is tricky. If you go on this step it means you either may get fired or just a huge warning. So, every three months, I’d take a week off. Company morale was down and so was my tolerance for the inhumane treatment we were getting.
My last day there, I remember it clearly. It was 9am and I had just put my headsets on and booted my computer so I could take the first crabby caller of the day. I was in a pretty good mood, had my fill of coffee and was ready to take on the world. All of the sudden, I kept getting dizzy spells. Everyone kept warning me about the window seat and how the tower next to it outside was cancer causing. This always stuck in my mind...but I pressed on. Then, another dizzy spell came on. I went to my supervisor and asked if I could just take a 15 minute break to get some orange juice or water because I felt like I was going to pass out.
“NO! We are at 80% call volume and we need to be at 99.9%!!! We need you! You can do it!”
So, I tried. I went back, put my headsets on and then, woke up to a bunch of EMT workers putting an oxygen mask on me and slipping me onto a gurney. I was carried out of there---not even escorted out by two security men arm-and-arm. I thought that would be most humiliating, until this happened.
After my past work experience in the cubicle world of hell, I decided to write for a living and work from home. It took me almost 4-5 years to even make a living from it. And although it’s not that much, it sure beats living in a cubicle pod chained to a desk.
Labels: corporate world, Debra Pasquella, strike, union workers


WOW, that is craziness right there! I tell ya, in my few short years here on earth I have had some terrible jobs...jobs that have made me cry every day when I left...jobs that made me hate waking up...FINALLY, I am in a job that I love! I love the people, I love the job, I love the location...just LOVE. I consider myself very, very fortunate! You have quite the blessing yourself! Congrats!
Unions, don't even get me started. I was a non union worker at a union plant. I watched some of the most lazy people basically do as little as possible. When ever I got way ahead in my work (2 or 3 days worth) one of the union members would take my job until I was no longer ahead and they would then switch back.
I remember our truck driver being followed back to the plant one time and the person complained. He was drunk. Guess what, the union kept him from getting fired. There were two other people on my shift that deserved to be fired many times over but no. It seems the union protects those that should not be protected.
Now granted without unions, management would probably take advanted of the employes so... what can you do.
I have managed to survive working but one time I stepped up to a sudo middle management position. Shortly after that I discovered two things. The people that worked for me whom I stood up for against the company did not back me up and I looked foolish. And two, behind my back they stole one of my employees and had them go work for another division. I am glad he was moving on to something else but I was not glad it happened behind my back. Lucky for me I had interviewed for another job many months back and that night I got a job offer for the other company. The next day I turned in my resignation.
Now I try to just live in my cubie and be unoticed as much as possible and hope it will be time to retire soon.
Glad your writing is working out for you Deb.
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Jess: It's so rare to hear, "I love my job". I actually said that in my first years of that call center. But when union and management butted heads, it was ugly.
Barman: Wow, yeah I heard a lot of stories similar to yours. It's so tricky who to trust and who to bring on your team, especially if you're 'sudo management' so to speak. I remember whenever management needed to speak with me or another employee, a union rep would have to be present. Like chaperoning us in a meeting. It was really rigid. Although in my line of work, we worked our asses off, 12 hour shifts and unexpected overtime---but that's because this was an office gig. I have heard of those who slacked off in the blue collar fields, but in different aspects. Depends on what kind of job it is I guess. Sorry you went through that. Hope your retirement is soon and well worth all the efforts put in! My writing is freelance mostly, but it's my sanity if anything. (If I even have ANY sanity left--which makes for better writing sometimes!)
;)
wow those were some jobs. i have some horror stories of my own to regale but it seems like the tower thing was much. glad you got out of there.
Follow the heart !!! I will move to the Caribean and open my bar. When you come to visit you can have juice,coffee,or soda. I am just to close to retirement right now to walk out the door.
I love the spelling issue you printed.
Mars: They always warned me about the tower that loomed over the side of the building where my desk sat. Every time I got a ringing in the ear, I feared the worst. I know everyone has their war stories to share regarding jobs! Thanks, Mars!
Chris: So true so true and so hard to do sometimes. If I visit you at your new bar in the Caribbean, I will be OFF the wagon...definitely. But I thank you for your thoughtfulness. And what do you maen by my spelling isseu? Waht’s wrnog wiht it?
Damn girl, that sounds like a movie in of itself. Forget 9 to 5, (how 80's), damn, now i am getting writers block,GRRR (pulls hair out).......
Heres my problem....daydreamer
Thats right, "Hi, my name is Samantha Anne, and I am a daydreamer!"
I visualize great achievments only in my own mind. A 50's movie was produced starring Danny Kaye in "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty", well I'd be his female version. I start but never finish. The only thing so far that I have maintained is , well you know how i am.
ANYWAY, I have started 3 books, written 50 poems, sketched 10 drawings, came up with countless numbers of songs, symphonies, operas, etc....NONE of Which has ever made it to the light of day. Its all in my own mind. PRETTY PATHETICK and LAME isn't it?
I just don't get it, I can think all this stuff, but I cannot for the life of me materialize it in my hands. (I really did start 3 books and write 50 poems, but never finished them for publication or submitted). AM I "grown up" enough to admit this major flaw of mine, or am I finally be able to admit, that 40 years of my life has only been a dream.
Ha,Ha. Youre starting to sound like me.
So what actually put you in the the ambulance Deb?
I've worked non-union and union jobs, I was a shop steward at the last gig I had (only long enough to correct some management problems) and to be honest even though there is a TON of job protection going on (like barman said) I personally preferred the union gig.
It's not so much whether one is in a union or not but rather the character of the person holding the position. A slacker is going to be a slacker regardless of the dues they pay.
I will admit, though, that I have seen some pretty egregious violation not end in termination as they should have. But others that shouldn't have ever gotten to that point were also likewise not terminated.
Of 3 DPW garages and 9 shifts the one I was on consistently ranked by the numbers as the most productive. The union had nothing to do with that.
I had to laugh at your strike...the only one I ever participated in was like that...4 hours on the picket line to qualify for the $1.38 a day strike pay. We stayed on strike three weeks and lost exactly the amount that was returned to us in wage increases over three years. The union never went on strike again after that.
Chris: That's why we argued so well with one another! ;)
The Walking Man: It was an anxiety attack. It was so stressful at that time that I kept getting little dizzy spells from the lack of oxygen from not breathing properly. I just remember my heart racing a gazillion times per minute and not remembering the rest...until the EMTS were standing above me. 3 weeks on strike is a lot, especially if it's too cold or too hot. I remember my nose was so red and so cold---but everything else was like HOT because of my hunting gear. The signs with the two strings hardly made it around the huge puffy coat that resembled the likes of a gorilla. The hat covered my big hair and none of my friends recognized me until I shot off my big mouth.
I haven't done different kinds of work at all. Been a techie all my career yeah corporate world can be weird but then so am I.
It is amazing what we do to get by and how much we hate doing it!
You mentioned Mercury--are you thinking of the retrograde?
Hey Debbie. I also had a harrowing experience at that gawd forsaken place. I had just arrived at work 15 minutes before when I get a personal call stating that my apartment is on fire and the auto garage that was located nect to mine already burnt down to the ground?! After trying to process this information because everything was fine when I left. I turned off my headset and started to approach the all knowing time keeper. I stated that my apartment was on fire and that I needed to leave right away. I was still felt like I was in some surreal tunnel of horror when her reply was... Well she says looking down at her bible of phone stats.. Do you want to use your lunch hour for this?! Having an Alli McBeal moment in my mind of punching the sh** out of her and then sitting in jail victoriously. I came back into my body and simply just turned around and walked out not listening to whatever she said before that and drove like hell to my apartment. The auto shop was a smoldering heap of ashes and theire were firemen in my apartment which was totally trashed and smelled like a campfire. I somehow wound up at the police station until I was aloud to go back to my apartment. I called my supervisor at this time and told her that I was calling from the Goshen police station and that she could caller id this if she didn't believe me. I then proceeded to tell her that the story will be front page news the next day also. I believe that I was still stepped for this! The was a human compassion element that was missing from this women and corporation as a whole. I have never worked in an environment where people were leaving on mental disability?! Everyday I would come home and slam the door shut! You know me and worked with me and know that I am not that person. My husband said that will you please quit that place. It is not worth the abuse and he was right! Why do people lock themselves into these kinds of hell? Never again I vowed and never went back to such place............
SJ: Technically--still the corporate world! :)
Enemy: Yes, I was referring to that! I forget everything during this time too!
Karen: I will never forget that time, I remember it clearly. I even remember you receiving the phone call and coming back to your desk, slamming down your stuff and saying, "I cannot believe this"... That had to be the worst response she has ever come up with. I always thought that in such circumstances, she would be more understanding because I have seen a human side to her. But I felt so bad for you, and then a couple of years later, I felt that same wrath upon me when management were playing musical chairs and I ended up passed out and taken away by a fricken ambulance. They did it for "insurance reasons", but still, I was laid up and needed medical attention. Everyone was surrounding me and faces were pressed to the windows. I was so humiliated. All I needed was 15 minutes to get my blood sugar up and I would have been fine---really. But because of their 99.9% volumes that needed to be maintained even if you did die, you had to take calls, and remember-----7 calls per hour----NO MORE OR NO LESS! AND, make sure each call was $1.49 sale or you'll be on the bottom sales list and talking to the union reps and management about your performance.
Mental problems? Naw, .....ask my shrink about that one! ;)
I'm glad we're both out of there! But it was fun on Halloween!!!!