Saturday, June 1, 2019
My Brilliant Career at Fuddruckers Restaurant :: Persoanl Narrative Essays
My Brilliant C atomic number 18er at Fuddruckers RestaurantBeing wawled a bitch on the job was becoming more and more an everyday occurrence. After all I did work with four or five guys I liked (males that are rather normal call other males they like the oddest things) and a most unladylike girl who hated me with a severe passion (females that are rather unrefined call people they hate the oddest things.) But today was slightly different. It marked the beginning to the downfall of my employment as Master Burger Flipper at Fuddruckers During the sp wind up I moved away from home. Since I needed money to live I found employment at the only place that would hire unskilled summer work Fuddruckers Restaurant. Fuddruckers looked like a fun place that I could leave behind at the end of the night and forget about at the end of the summer, as one normally does with summer jobs. But this was not to be. Fuddruckers permanently changed my outlook on several subjects, mainly k eeping my mouth shut. First, a comment of my co-workers. Ken was the main boss who generally ran the restaurant. Ken was one of those thirty-something guys that still thought he was a senior in high school. He also had the tendency to tell his employees ultra-ultra-sensitive information about his life. Example in grave detail he one day gave me a rundown of his marriages plain rather unfortunate sex life. This was naturally not something I relished being informed of, or -- to be exact -- cared about in any way. His intimate shortcomings were his own problem. My other boss was much the opposite his name was Mr. Metz and if youve ever seen the movie Ace Ventura When Nature Calls he looks exactly like the seemingly wickedness character Burton Quinn (the one with the raven on his shoulder). He was the owner of the restaurant and was rarely there. When he did make an appearance he neither talked nor showed an interest in many of the employees. But Mr. Metz and Ken did have two things in common. First they never said anything positive to their workers. I worked the entire summer trying my hardest to, as my mother would say, do the job right the first time.
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