I hired a woman to clean my house a couple of times per
month. I’ve been budgeting for this
luxury for about the last 12 years or so.
Having grown up dirt-ass poor,
this is something I don’t take lightly and is one of the reasons I work as hard
as I do.
I have been very fortunate that I have found really good,
trustworthy, people to do this. After
all, these are people who get unrestricted access to my home. I prefer to hire individuals as opposed to
big cleaning companies (like Merry Maids or the like). They are still licensed and insured, but you can
really get to know the person providing the service since they are the only one
who comes in. After a time, they have
all become part of my life. The woman I hired here in Northern Virginia, Mirna, is
no different. She is wonderful, sweet, efficient,
and I trust her completely in my home when I’m not there.
Today we were talking about her schedule and making a few
adjustments, and I pretty much told her that I didn't have a set preference for
which days she comes by. She knows how
often I want her to come, and all I asked was that she send me a text the day
before so I can leave her a check. She
was, what I thought, to be oddly grateful for the freedom to run her own
schedule. Then she thanked me for my “civility”. I wish I could tell you that I was
shocked. But sadly, I wasn’t. I just felt badly for her.
I have always been appalled by people who lack
civility. You know the type…it’s the
person who can’t even manage to eek out a smile to the person taking the toll
on the Turnpike. My father’s last girlfriend
was like that. She would never say so
much as a “thank you” to the waiter/waitress who refilled her water, or a
simple “hello” the cashier at Target, even when one was initiated by them. It used to make me nuts. I would end up saying it for her. A waitress would fill up her water glass and
she would just give them an exasperated look.
I would say to the waitress “What she meant to say was, THANK YOU”. For those who know me, I’m sure they are able
to hear my tone.
My mother was a wonderful woman who imparted a very simple
rule addressing this very thing. She would
say “Ilisa, a person who is nice to you but not nice to the waitress is not a
nice person”. She was so right.
I wish I could go to my wonderful Mirna’s other clients and
tell them that they should be ashamed of themselves. Tell them that their momma’s obviously didn't raise them right. But I can’t. It probably wouldn’t do any good anyway. Still…shame on them.
1 comment:
Completely. Agree.
The way some people act towards others they consider their inferiors is sad and shocking.
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