Chapter 312.<h4><b><strong>Chapter 312. My Birthday: </strong></b><b> Interview. (3/4)</b></h4>
<span style="font-weight:400">It was on this day that my search for a nonexistent part-time job where I didn’t have to do anything began. It would no doubt be a long and arduous journey of discovery. Especially when I was toozy to write cover letters and tailor my resume for the positions. At the end of the day, I was azy bastard. Even when I tailored my resume to the positions and wrote cover letters, it typically didn’t do much for me in the past.
<span style="font-weight:400">I always lost out to women or attractive social guys. The world was harshest to the gloomy-looking guys who were social misfits. Appearance and sociability were everything. These days, employers even screen people through social media to see what they look like and get a better understanding of the person’s character by judging what sort of things they post publicly online. For someone like me who remained disconnected and had no such online footprint, a good job was a near hopeless endeavor.
<span style="font-weight:400">The best you’d get were shitty positions for call centers contacting you back only because they had sky-high turnover rate. You’d be lucky tond an ount that was mostly dead with low call volumes and little work to do.
<span style="font-weight:400">How did I know? Well, for a period of time, I’d worked for one in my first go through life of course. They were effectively the legal modern equivalent of sweatshops. You were paid not to help others with their problems, but to be scarecrows who endured endless verbal abuse from cranky customers and be incessantly degraded as a human.
<span style="font-weight:400">You’d be slowly worn down mentally over time until you cracked and had a nervous breakdown. The people who could put up with call center work for a long-term career were rare.
<span style="font-weight:400">Such ces would constantlye up with bullshit slogans and mottos. Sprinkling rubbish inspirational quotes your way and shoving their politically correct jargon down your throat. They do all sorts of things to convince you their working environment is normal. It’s all just a form of brainwashing to make you believe in their idiotic culture at work. I’d go so far as calling it a sort of cult.
<span style="font-weight:400">No matter what it is they tell you, it’s bullshit. All of it. Everything they force-feed you and make you regurgitate to eat again. They know it, and deep down, the workers know it too. But those workers have to lie and tell themselves that it’s not so bad. If they don’t they’ll face repercussions. They’re disposable and can be reced at the drop of a hat. That’s the problem that develops when there are more workers than there are decent jobs avable.
<span style="font-weight:400">Shitty work conditions be the norm. It’s the lifestyle thates with the growth of giant corporations and the death of small businesses. The little guys have be more and more incapable of turning a profit over the years. The big yers have the huge advantage in being able to set the lowest prices for consumers while still generatingrge profit margins thanks to purchasing stock in bulk at lower prices.
<span style="font-weight:400">Small businesses typically can’tpete as a result. The system is stacked against them to the point that it’s practically designed to crush them. Ny percent of new small businesses are destined to meet their demise. About twenty percent fail in the first year, thirty in their second, fifty in their fifth, and seventy in their tenth.
<span style="font-weight:400">For those statistics, it only grows more skewed in the future.
<span style="font-weight:400">Well, statistics aside, honestly, at least working here under the Owner’s tyranny wasn’t anywhere near as badpared to a crappy call center gig.
<span style="font-weight:400">Customers in person could be difficult, but customers over the phone? Their sense of holding back was gone the instant it became a private conversation without anyone else around.
<span style="font-weight:400">As I was now 16, at longst, I no longer had to disguise myself. The only thing I did was change into my work clothes and remove my name tag before I returned to the counter where Alicia was presently processing a customer’s payment. I didn’t need to disguise my voice at work anymore either. It was like another one of the heavy weights on my back had finally been removed.
<span style="font-weight:400">That constant worry of being found out and losing my job was gone. It felt great not having to hide anymore.
<span style="font-weight:400">When Alicia saw me step behind the counter she approached me in a panic and whispered frantically in my ear, “What are you doing? You didn’t change!”
<span style="font-weight:400">“Sorry to startle you, I was just hired on the spot on short notice to take over after my big brother resigned earlier.”
<span style="font-weight:400">When Alicia understood, she had an ‘oh, right’ look in her eyes.
<span style="font-weight:400">“Sorry for freaking out like that. I forgot… Sean’s... no longer working here starting today…”
<span style="font-weight:400">“What? No way man, Sean resigned? On such short notice? Wait, did you just call him your big brother? I guess... there is a resemnce, the gloomy expression… mmmm, it’s definitely the same.” The customer Alicia was with, overheard our exchange and immediately broke out into a barrage of questions with one brow raised.
<span style="font-weight:400">Now that I focused on him, I actually recognized this customer. He didn’t show up here as often anymore because the second store location was closer to his ce, but he still asionally stopped in every now and then. It was the customer I helped select oil for his car on Rosa’s first day of work.
<span style="font-weight:400">“Yes, I am his little brother.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“Aww, man. He was a pretty good guy despite how quiet he was all the time.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“It’s not like he’s dead.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“But I’m never gonna see the guy again if he resigned. It’s sad when someone you’re used to seeing somewhere is suddenly no longer there. Man, it really starts to sink in just how fast things change as time goes by.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“Yeah. The world around us is always changing and we’re constantly getting older.” I couldn’t help but agree.
<span style="font-weight:400">“Haaaah. Tell your brother I wish him the best of luck in whatever he does in the future.”
<span style="font-weight:400">We rarely interacted much yet he was giving me his best regards. What a strange feeling. I don’t know what this sort of feeling is supposed to be called or how I’d put it into words. It’s another among the foreign ones I’m unfamiliar with.
<span style="font-weight:400">“Uh, yeah. Sure, I will.”
<span style="font-weight:400">“Thanks. Haaaah. Man, I need a drink now. Might as well hit up a bar I guess.” We weren’t close or anything, the most I ever did was help that one time. On other asions, we barely talked or interacted. Well, after that particr event I suppose our interaction when he came to this location had increased a little bit despite the frequency of his visits decreasing.
<span style="font-weight:400">I didn’t think there would be any customers who would even notice or care when I stopped appearing here in disguise as Sean. I guess it has to do with the nature of small businesses.
<span style="font-weight:400">Unlikerge businesses with hundreds or thousands of employees, you’re typically not going to recognize many you interact with. Theye and go. But small ces like this are the exact opposite.
<span style="font-weight:400">One day… this sort of little thing willpletely disappear. Small businesses like this will either be forced to automate everything, cutting out the employees from the picture to survive and be a soulless husk of what they once were, or shut their doors and go exclusively online. It’s honestly depressing to think about.
<span style="font-weight:400">I’ve never drank before, but… I think I could also use a drink to forget about the depressing state of the future I’d personally seen.