Wednesday, May 25, 2016

Customer Service is Like Whistling

After 2.5 months of radio silence, I'm coming in hot with news- at the beginning of the month I got a new job.  It's within the same company, but it is not customer service. 

I normally don't talk about this kind of thing because it's personal, and frankly kind of boring. But I also like being square with myself and those around me. This is all stuff I've touched on here over the years, but never really went into detail with.  

I've always known that customer service is not my deal, but I also figured it was my only option until I get a degree. I have no idea when that will be, but I do know it is years away. So, in my mind, customer service was my only option in order to be able to survive for the unforeseeable future. I honestly thought that I would be miserable for probably the rest of my life. I thought that was just my personality- a miserable asshole who hates everyone and thinks babies are a waste of everything (still half true).

I have worked in customer service exclusively for my entire working life, over ten years. And, as I'm sure most everyone knows, I hated it. Most people don't like it, but for me, it was awful.  It is often said that every job would be great if it weren't for the people, and I'm always on board with that sentiment one-hundred percent.  Over the years I have developed a curmudgeonly, grouchy or even outright mean persona or attitude that has been pointed out to me multiple times, whether in a joshing way or negatively in countless performance reviews. I was constantly told to 'just be more friendly', to smile more, or be more open or natural. I understand these things fundamentally, but when it came to my trying to actually do these things, I couldn't. It was often interpreted as I wouldn't, that I didn't care, or was grumpy, but I just could not make myself function the way that was expected of me without tremendous effort. 

Here's the thing- for people that this comes naturally to, it seems stupid or lazy or weird.  But for me, something that seems a simple as making small talk with a customer is incredibly difficult. I don't have the same problem when in the opposite situation- I don't find it excruciating to talk to a cashier. However, behind the counter, I feel as though I cannot judge a situation at all. So every encounter with a new person makes me feel as though I am having to guess how this person is going to react to how I act, how I talk, how my face looks. That level of anxiety makes it feel like I'm on a spinning wheel with knives being thrown at me. I know this comes of as melodramatic whinery, and I often felt as though I should just be able to deal with it. If I were to just get over it, whatever "it" was, I would be fine. If I just improved those unfriendly parts of my personality, I'd be able to make people happy.  If I could just try harder to blah blah blah. Well, guess what? I tried harder for ten years and it never got any better.  I finally came to realize that customer service is like whistling. It's something you can either do or you can't. Those who can do it naturally find it easy. Those who can't can try to learn but it's never going to be as easy for those who can just do it.  

I've dealt with depression and anxiety for the greater part of my life, and it's not something that's going away any time soon- or probably ever. What is most frustrating about my particular brand is that I'm not an Eeyore. I don't have the recognizable symptoms of not being able to get out of bed, ect. I actually had never heard someone put my experience into words until several months ago, when I read this blog post (do yourself a favor and spend the next four hours crylaughing at all of her other posts).  Instead of being a sad stuffed donkey, I'm actually a high-strung maniac who thinks people who ride their bicycles down the sidewalk kind of deserve to be shoved into oncoming bus traffic, or that people who don't buy all the the things they bring up to the register should have their money-spending privileges revoked until they learn how to shop like a goddamn human being, but that doesn't necessarily read as "depressed". It reads as asshole. Which I totally get. The person who is enthralled by the tiny colored pencils at the register is not a bad person. But for me, every time I had to pretend like it was the first time I'd ever heard about how cute they were was like that person was shoving those tiny colored pencils into my eye sockets.  I know everyone is like, they're just colored pencils, chill on the freak out, but I'm on the spinning knife wheel, remember? I'm so anxious already, that everything that is just a minor irritant to the rest of the world is titanic.

The reason I'm bring all this junk up now is that since I started this new, customer-free job, I have felt like a different person and it is significant enough for me to be actually, honestly shocked.  I'm still a crotchety ass who thinks that people who talk on cellphones indoors are the worst, but where I was constantly running at easily a 130 percent stress level, I'm now at about 60 percent. And that happened in two days. Two days and I didn't want to slap everyone I came into contact with. My new job is stressful in that it's a new job and I still don't really know what's going on, the usual first months at a new job stuff. But, to remove one element of a job and have a new outlook, or whatever you want to call it, has been incredible.   When I learned I had gotten the job, I had hoped I would be able to be less stressed out, but I imagined it would diminish only slightly. The fact that it has changed so dramatically and so fast is so mindblowing to me, I can't really believe it. 

Part of me is annoyed that I didn't go out and get a non-customer service job sooner, but it's easy to think that in hindsight. I have often times tried to maneuver my way into back-of-the-house positions in  nearly all the retail jobs I've had, but I'm always stuck in the cashier or service position. It's something that I don't really understand- why would you make someone who's clearly not very good at something do that job? Why make the gardener perform brain surgery? But that's on those terrible mall job managers, not me.  In a world where not being a people person is seen as a personality flaw, I'm so thankful to have found this position. At one point I found that I wasn't worrying about if my face might come off as angry to others when I was concentrating on the computer monitor, and I realized just how many layers there were to my anxiety and how so many of them frankly didn't matter any more. In this work environment, no one cares if I look grouchy.

So to the guy who told me I had a bad personality in 2009 because I didn't share his enthusiasm for a "world famous hazelnut latte", go fuck yourself. I'm a happier person, and you probably still go to the Starbucks where prostitutes broke the sink off the wall in the women's bathroom.

Tuesday, March 15, 2016

hey remember me

hey remember like nine years ago when I wrote my last post on here? 




I've been very busy the last couple months, working on (but not finishing) several sewing projects, getting sick twice, watching and rewatching RuPaul's Drag Race, Mostly though, I've been preparing for the booth space I was able to get  in a vintage/antique/resale shop, Found on Fremont. 

 It's something I've been wanting to do for a long time, and the opportunity came out of nowhere at the beginning of February. I had a little less than a month to get everything together for moving in at the start of this month, so I spent all of my free time trying to get enough stuff together to fill a booth! I only had a handful of things that were left over from my etsy shop, and absolutely no display shelving. I was able to get enough stuff to get it started, and I'm pretty happy with how it turned out for this first month. 

At the start of the next month, I'll be having a partner move into my space (she already has a successful booth in the same store, and we have a similar aesthetic, so everything should blend in really well together) which will plump it out a bit, and save me from having to try and haul shelving on the bus.


These are from the day I set up. It's pretty sparse, but this is just the first day!  As someone who works on weekends, it can be tough to find really good vintage items, since those are usually found at flea markets, yard sales, estate sales- all events held on weekends. Luckily. I really enjoy digging for treasures, and, especially when it comes to clothes, not having to just find my uncommon vintage size opens up a lot of options.

Since it's not specifically a "vintage store", I can add some of my handmade items, like the felt pennants and brooches based on vintage celluloid brooches I've been working on recently.




I decided just to keep the name Blind Cat Vintage from my etsy store, and made a small felt banner that matches the stamp I ordered from an etsy store years and years ago.


some examples of the felt brooches, along with the paper dress I wish was my size. 





Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Four Things Meme or whatever (PS I'm Not Dead)

Hey remember like nine years ago when I said I'd be posting a gift guide?

This holiday season turned into a nightmare for me, so here I am, months later without a gift guide. But I do have a blog tag thing.  I found this over on Chronically Vintage!


Four Places I've Lived

(still looks the same)
Eureka, CA
Portland, OR
Eureka, CA
Portland, OR

I've bounced back and forth a few times.

Four Jobs I've Had


appropriately miserable sales associate at Hot Topic
 mildly miserable barista at Starbucks
even more miserable photo specialist at Walgreens
resident grump at bookstore 


Four Foods I Don't Eat


mayonnaise
spicy foods
tomatoes
salmon


Four Favorite Foods


Biscoff spread
tacos
cheese
ice cream (let's be real)



Four Movies I've Watched More than Once


Monty Python and the Holy Grain
Blazing Saddles
Star Wars
Marie Antoinette (the Kirsten Dunst one)


Four TV Shows I watch


Parks and Recreation
30Rock
Broad City
Empire

Four Celebrity Crushes


Dita Von Teese's cat Aleister Von Teese
 Brian Wilson circa 1964
Andy Dwyer
 JFK? I don't know



Four Pet Peeves

 (PLEASE, park this directly in front of fire exit)

people using open mouthed cups outside of a restaurant/home environment
people who talk on the phone when at a register
people who use giant strollers for one child
people



Four Things I Wish I Could Do


not be annoyed by people
be better at pretending to be chipper
move to another state
have a therapy chinchilla


Four Subjects I Studied in School


er, the ususal
english
math
science
getting out of PE

Four Things Located Near Me Now


embroidered portrait of Robert Goulet
cat
sewing machine
empty applesauce container

Four Things I'm Looking Forward to

 

seeing Noel Fielding in April
 the leak in my ceiling being fixed
SNOOTYCAM being fixed!!!
honestly, eating dinner
 




Tuesday, November 24, 2015

another one fighting the good fight

I'm in the middle of making up some gift guides that I'll be posting on thanksgiving-ish, but I just had to pop in and say how blown away I am by Pinup Girl Clothing. I've been aware of them for a long time, and have seen their stuff featured on a fair number of vintage and retro blogs, but as they're pretty far out of my price range and not reeeeeally my style, I haven't poked around on the site in several years.  When I did used to look at them (when I was in high school, so a good while ago), their plus size selection was pretty minimal, and what was offered in higher sizing was often displayed like this:
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As is most common with sites that are not catering exclusively to plus sizes. Which is all fine and good, but I have no idea how that's actually going to look on me. I don't look anything like that mannequin, nor do I look like the typical alternative, a straight sized model, or the token "plus" model who is something like a size 10.  Today, I wound up on their site through another blogger and found this:

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WHABAM. Actual plus sized models with non-"ideal" plus sized features- and she's not the only one.  Modcloth made recent waves with their extended sizing and no photoshop pledge, and while they do a great job of utilizing larger sized models, they do have a tendency to be the same shape, or worse, only display a garment on a dressform.  One of the issues I have with the still burgeoning body acceptance movement is that we still get hung up on a "ideal" plus sized body- typically curvy bust and hips with a small waist and flat stomach. If you're going for total body acceptance, it shouldn't fall into the pattern of idealizing one body type, or only allowing one type represent the whole. I am very impressed with Pinup Girl Couture for really putting their money where their mouth is.



x

x
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I had heard in passing about their #coutureforeverybody campaign, and being a cranky sue, I assumed it was just a PR move. However, the above three photos are essentially the same dress on totally differently shaped women.  Anyone who has shopped online for clothing knows how much of a pain in the ass it is to try and guess what something is going to look like on themselves versus on the model, regardless of size.  The fact that Pinup Girl Clothing actually lists what size the models is wearing is a nice way to judge (especially since places like Modcloth don't even list measurements other than length. I still do not understand that at all.)

x

x


Anyway, I just had to drop in and rant about how happy this whole company makes me just because they have bothered to cater to larger sizes (which is still rare), and actually do it right. It makes me want to stand in the street yelling LOOK HOW GOOD THEY LOOK AHHHHH


Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Pattern Review: McCall's 1925 Coat

behold! my terrible photoshop skills!

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McCall's 7259 Archive Collection Coat circa 1925

 
Pattern Description: Archive Collection: Misses Coat and Detachable Cape and Collar 

 Pattern Sizing: 14-22 

 Did it look like the photo/drawing on the pattern envelope once you were done sewing with it? Yes!  

Were the instructions easy to follow? Very, plus there were some basic steps that are usually left out of Simplicity and Butterick patterns that would be extra helpful for beginners, like how to handle ease in fitting a sleeve, ect.  

What did you particularly like or dislike about the pattern? Very easy to follow, and I didn't have to cut of a massive amount of fabric for the bottom length like I usually do in almost all patterns.  

Fabric Used: red poly (I'm assuming), textured jacquard type fabric with small amount of stretch I found at Joanns. I originally wanted to make it out of navy blue wool, but when I went in, they had taken out their already very small wool section. Or at least, I couldn't find it after wandering up and down all the apparel fabric aisles like nine times. Anyway, I found this in the seasonal area. It's supposed to be some "tribal" or "southwestern" print or something, but I think it looks vaguely like some Egyptian revival prints that fit in well with the era of the pattern. I would have liked to make the cape as well, but there were only four yards on the bolt. It's lined in a blue, sort of floral patterned poly lining fabric.

 Pattern alterations or any design changes you made: None.

 Would you sew it again? Would you recommend it to others? Yes! It came together quickly for a jacket, and didn't need any altering to work for me. I'd make it out of a heavier fabric like the wool I originally wanted to make it out of.

 Conclusion: McCall's has really seemed to step up their game recently with their line of vintage Archive patterns. I used to shy away from McCall's patterns, but this pattern has renewed my interest in their designs. 




Full disclosure: My overhead light burned out and I had to position my dress form in front of the window to get any type of light at all... and this washed out monstrosity of a set of photos is the result.  Add to the fact that in order to get positioned in front of the window, I had to take the pictures facing the messiest part of my room, as opposed to up against the door like I normally would, I tried to photoshop the background out to save you from having to see this.




Please remember that literally everything I own save bathroom toiletries, food, my one cooking pot and weird collection of mugs is in this room, which doesn't have a closet. But that doesn't explain why the fan is so dusty.



The pattern includes a detachable faux fur collar, but I'm hesitant to actually try and sew with fur. Here it is with my collar, which would work a little bit better if it were longer, but I still like it.

again, one room. no closet.
 On another note, I attempted to photograph my halloween costume (which I never got any photos of when I was wearing it, unfortunately) today, but due to the shitty lighting, I couldn't get any to come out. I will try again later.

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

ain't nobody got time for holographic sequins


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I have been so busy, I've totally neglected blogging. Halloween is 11 days away (with only two days off for me, and on both of my weekend days coming up, I have appointments)  and I am starting to zero in on finishing the jazz bat as time runs out. I had to abandon the Pizza Rat costume- I just didn't have time, and wanted to spend the money it would take on embellishments for the bat costume. 


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Today, I finished the basic parts of the hat and cape, leaving only detail work left. It's been a bear trying to gather materials semi-last minute. I thought I'd be able to go to goodwill and find a giant stretch velvet dress to use as hat and belt material, seeing as I don't think I've ever set foot in a goodwill without seeing a giant stretch velvet dress, but they had nothing. Not even the giant stretch velvet pants I also always see. I ended up having to get a smaller skirt (I scoured the store and only found two things that were stretch velvet, and one didn't have a price tag), so I'm unable to make the belt the way I originally planned. It also seems that no one within reasonable busing distance carries regular silver sequins. HOW IS THIS POSSIBLE.