Joonie
Familiar Face
- Messages
- 69
- Location
- Atlanta, GA
Library Card Catalogues
oh yeah, I can't sleep till I add this one, the aluminum Christmas tree and color wheel. My best friend had one,. I think it was the most beautiful tree I had ever seen.
klind65 said:The public telephone box! I especially admired the attractive red ones in England. In my youth we had the blue and grey steel and plastic ones, but before my time the wonderful wooden ones which I've seen in the old motion pictures were my favorites. They even had seats. They were cozy and quiet and the perfect solution for making a phone call in public. Dignified and civilized. I miss them. I especially miss them since I refuse to get a mobile phone!
skyvue said:Some enterprising bar or restaurant owner should revive those booths for cell phone use. They wouldn't make any money off them, but they'd score points with the customers.
klind65 said:Floor walkers in department stores! But this raises one of my major complaints about life today - the demise of service. Mother tells me in her day that when one entered a shop of any sort - from hardware to the most upscale boutique one was always approached by someone offering help. And what's more, these folks actually knew about the products they were selling - imagine that!
Conversly, a typical shopping experience today involves first having to search high and low for someone to help, then once located, he or she knows next to nothing about the items in the store. And fundamentally, the erstwhile conception of service is gone. Who was it - one of the very first department store entrepreneurs who said that "the customer is always right"! Nowadays the trend seems to be to defer to the clerk and to heck with the customer.
LizzieMaine, this is one of the best threads because there are just so many things one could list!
.....But I'll end with this last: What I miss most in addition to Service is Dignity - in dress, in word, in manner....everything.
Carlisle Blues said:However, the more upscale stores where I shop there is always someone there who knows me and me preferences; also with a nice touch ... when they see me they automatically get me bottled water and greet me by name. Great service, dressed nicely together with excellent product knowledge.
I love beautiful architecture too ( former Art History major). Thanks for the petition. I just signed. Let's hope we can make a difference.analiebe said:so much of our architectural heritage... the beautiful deco building lonsdale house in melbourne is about to disappear due to our arrogant and greedy government and council... so so sad - there's an online petition if you care to sign...
http://www.gopetition.com.au/petitions/lonsdale-house.html
Absolutely. I've seen customers behave obnoxiously and the best term for them is "ill-bred"! Mother always taught me to treat everyone - from the garbage collector to the Mayor with respect and dignity. It was simply, as you mention, the "golden rule" which used to be taught in grammar school if not at home. I don't know if it is taught much any more...LizzieMaine said:But good service is not exclusively a high-hat thing -- you can still find it humble surroundings if you look for it. There's a little lunchroom downtown where I go to breakfast every Saturday morning, and have for years -- and I never have to order. As soon as I take my seat, the waitress brings me my tea and a couple minutes later my meal arrives, along with a bit of cheerful conversation.
The trick, I think, is to be sure you treat the staff the way you'd like to be treated. No matter what kind of establishment you're shopping in, deal with the staff courteously and don't swagger around like you own the place, and they'll respond likewise. The service industry is the most thankless business there is, and people who work in it consistently see humanity at its most obnoxious -- so it's a real treat for them to be treated courteously by a customer. And they'll remember those who do.
klind65 said:I also love the quote from Plato which goes something like this: Always be kind to everyone you meet because each of us is fighting a battle of some sort.