Showing posts with label politician. Show all posts
Showing posts with label politician. Show all posts

Monday, December 30, 2013

End Of Days - Tuesday


‘Good Christmas?’ Asks trainee F, after the shortest morning meeting on record. It’s the graveyard shift between the birth of Christ and the birth of another almighty hangover.

I ponder F’s question. Pleasingly, my sons were both home for the festivities, an increasingly rare occurrence. Equally gratifyingly, I wasn’t forced to mingle with too many unwanted family members and friends, death and an increasing propensity to not return non-business calls, saw to that.

‘Pretty good.’ I tell the failed Mensa applicant, apart from some joker seemingly swapping my favourite suit trousers for a pair 2 inches tighter, over the festivities. ‘You?’

F looks at me with those puppy dog eyes that usually make you want to chain him up outside and leave him to scare off unwanted visitors.
‘Bit rubbish.’ He finally says dolefully.
Probably the mad mother falling out with another “Uncle”, or one of his half-brothers taking his room and the contents of his wallet again. I should call Social Services but he’s a white male, so probably won’t match any quotas…

I hesitated before taking the working days between Christmas and New Year. But every now and then some long-distant socialist in me decides to lead by example and insist staff shouldn’t be given a job you aren’t prepared to do. I’d make an awful City banker. Politics is a no-no too.

‘Where’s B? Asks F as if he’s only just noticed our loose lettings lady is not at her station. I clocked it as soon as opening time arrived. I consider the options. Drunk still, almost certainly. Horrendously hung-over, a given. In a strange bed with a strange person - about 50/50 depending on how harsh the lighting was at her last port of call.

‘She’ll be in about lunchtime, I guess.’ I tell F. In the meantime we’ll field calls from irate tenants who had no heating over the holiday period, or suffered damp, either rising via the floods, or falling through the ceiling where someone’s washing machine overflowed. Not that F and I are busy. The diary has more gaps than a wino’s teeth. I’m only here because the bean counter boss insisted all offices had a skeleton staff and judging by the way my waistband is digging in, that shouldn’t have included me.

‘Is it always like this?’ Asks F mid-way through the morning as the procession of shoppers clutching sales bags flow past the door, but nobody actually comes in. The phone has only rung, as predicted, with problems for the still absent B in lettings. I’ve wandered to the back of the office several times to look at the diary, as if consulting it might magically provide a nice probate valuation or even a divisive matrimonial dispute. I’ve even been tempted by the dozen or so mini Bounty bars still sitting in the tub on top of the filing cabinet.

‘Pretty much.’ I tell F still irked he hasn’t offered me a cuppa, particularly as I made the drinks before he even arrived. I might be audibly dehydrating, unless the tinnitus is back.
‘I could have covered it this morning.’ Suggests F breezily. He couldn’t. Then the phone rings. It’s the bean counter boss. On a sun-bed somewhere hot again, judging by the reception.

‘How is it going?’ Probes the figure-fiddler. He knows how it’s going. He has the P & L accounts, the weekly key performance indicators and my invoice register. All I can add, is I’m half a stone heavier, tens of thousands light of the year end target and liable to die of thirst while a borderline retard looks on wondering why I’m lying on the office carpet leaking tears I can ill afford to shed.

‘Not too bad.’ I tell him. What does that mean? Screams a voice inside my head, as the bean counter echoes the thought, word for word - with just a hint of satellite lag.
‘Getting a few bites.’ I tell the boss, hoping a malarial mosquito is chowing down on him even as I prevaricate.

‘How was the boss, boss?’ Asks F, after I’ve ended the call.
‘We need to do better in the next twelve months.’
‘Isn’t that always the case?’
Yep.


Happy New Year.

Thursday, December 06, 2012

Red Card - Thursday


‘Call me old fashioned…’ I begin.
‘You’re old fashioned.’ Interjects assistant manager T to barely suppressed hilarity. Not sure what happened to the respect campaign but when you realise you are starting to sound like one of those grumbling pensioners you used to think euthanasia was a solution for, self-worth can be a dwindling commodity.

‘What is it?’ Asks negotiator S kindly. I reckon she was born too late or I was born too early. Unless I’m as delusional as all those old crumblies living in over-priced sheltered apartments, thinking they’ll be leaving a worthwhile asset to their beneficiaries.

‘A bloody email.’ I say contemptuously.
‘You get loads of bloody emails.’ Says T.
‘Not with a sodding digital Christmas card attached.’ I tell him witheringly.
T and S walk to my computer screen and scan the wretched download, something with all the, goodwill and peace to all men content of a land mine, as far as I’m concerned.

‘I think it moves.’ Suggests S leaning in and brushing my arm with her substantial frontage.
‘Click on it.’ Suggests T as I try not to gulp audibly.
‘Do you mind if I use your mouse?’ Asks S innocently. There’s only so much unwitting innuendo I can take with my blood pressure. I nod acquiescence and try not to let the aforementioned red-stuff rush anywhere but my head.

‘Look it’s rising up.’ Exclaims S to a momentary feeling of horror until I realise the tacky Santa and sleigh montage is moving in clunky fashion, as the reindeer take flight and a Merry Christmas message flashes on the screen like some virtual virus.
‘Seriously?’ I gripe in Scrooge-like fashion.

As the scene plays out to a tinkling digitised soundtrack, I read the attached message stating sanctimoniously that the sender company are saving the environment (their franking machine bill) by not using the physical postal system. Not content with expecting me to swallow that bullshit, the text informs me that any cost benefit from not mailing the traditional way will be donated to a charity. One I’ve never heard of.

Now I’m ambivalent about corporate Christmas cards at the best of times, as the sentiment is more about reciprocal business than Christian – other religions are available – goodwill. But if you are going to make a list of recipients who might be of use to you in the coming year, at least make the effort of actually buying and sending a touch me, feel me, put me in the office window, three-dimensional piece of tinsel-tinted-tat.

‘You don’t like it then?’ Concludes S moving back to her desk.
‘It has all the sincerity of a politician claiming they only do the job to serve their constituents.’ I tell her.
‘You’re so cynical.’ Replies S with a look of disappointment I’ve seen before.
‘You start idealistic, move on to brutally informed then migrate to pessimism.’ I respond before adding and instantly regretting: ‘It’s the circle of life.’

‘That’s more of a linear progression.’ Chips T with a smug smile.
‘It comes to all of us eventually, particularly if you stay in this business.’ I tell him, disliking myself even as I spout the bile-laced response. My romanticism withered after the first few sales fell through and I realised anyone who stated: “My word is my bond”, was a pathological liar.

‘So we won’t be sending out any company Christmas cards then?’ Asks S a hint of sadness in her eyes. I feel like I’ve just told her Santa won’t be coming to fill her stocking ever again, but I just end up fighting a shameful image. One that would give the harridans in Human Resources a whole new inappropriate behaviour chapter to write, on the company standing orders.

‘He’s got a list on the computer.’ Says T knowingly. He’s right and at first I believed in it. Thought it was a nice sentiment to acknowledge those you’ve dealt with all year and to wish them well for the future. But time, a bean counter boss and a less than healthy profit and loss account has chipped away at my belief. At best I’m agnostic now.

God help me.

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