Presumptuous Cashier at 7 Eleven

Most of the examples here just sound like people trying to make conversation to me, not any attempt to be rude or insulting. I say take things in the spirit they’re intended.

Except for the “diaper” comment that Jimmy Chitwood got. That’s just fucking weird and rude. That is ask to see a manager time.

Never said it did nor that was my intention.

But, uhm, yeah, they did.

Oh, don’t you worry. I cried for hours.

Dio, well, to be fair, he wasn’t wearing pants over them that time.

Hey, is that a low flying…

this is what i would have done. god bless america. fuck the arab obviously calling you a drunk at the seven eleven, lets abuse the 2nd amendment

Don’t worry. He poked the clerk in the eye with his rattle. It made a whooshing sound.

I used to work in the casinos where people would work three shifts, with the Graveyard (or third shift) not getting off work until 8 AM or so.

This girl I knew who worked that shift would say she would go to the beer store at 8:30 AM with the clerk and people giving her stares, like she was an alcoholic. What they don’t realize is that it her off time, and she is going to sleep the afternoon and her drinking a beer at 10 AM is no different than most people having a beer at 7 PM.

Oh for Pete’s sake. Lighten up Francis, it’s just conversation. And on the off chance he did mean that so fucking what? He’s a fucking 7-11 clerk.

Would it really kill you to write out the word fuck? I mean you were tempted to yell it at a complete stranger in public but you need to f#%k it up here.

Get in line.
:smiley:

Did you ask him if he meant to go to college?

This is only slightly more dickish than coming back drunk to murder him.

I don’t know about 7/11, but I know when I worked at McDonald’s as a cashier, I was always supposed to suggest other items that the customer could buy. I always fucking hated doing that because of the looks I would get from the customer. You could see them thinking “WTF? If I wanted an apple pie, I’d ask for it.”

But no, the managers were listening, so I did it.

I was sixteen at the time, and thus started my looooong hatred of the business community.

Hmmm. I think if anyone here needs to lighten up, it might be you.

Read it again slowly. (If you must, you can move your lips to sound out the hard words.) It wasn’t, “Hey, nice to see ya again. How’s it going?” That’s conversation. It was, “So how come you’re not buying it by the truckload? You on the wagon or something?”

You wouldn’t by any chance happen to be a 7-Eleven cashier, would you?

Fuck. Are we happy now?

Me: Latte please
Coffee lady: Nonfat?

Every single time. I don’t go there anymore.

I think he was just trying to be helpful (or just make conversation), too. Unless he’s quite stupid, I think he just didn’t realize that most people don’t mistake four beers for 18 beers. I’m guessing he spoke without thinking. I prefer my cashiers to say hi, here’s your total, and have a nice day. That’s all I’m looking for in a social exchange with a cashier.

Slightly related story:

As I’ve mentioned in the past, I don’t drive so I do all my grocery shopping by bus, and I usually have a cart i bring along so I don’t have to carry everything. Yesterday I was running several errands, one of which was to stop off and pick up a few things at Food Lion on the way home. Since the groceries weren’t going to be that heavy and I didn’t feel like lugging the cart around on the early errands, I just stuffed a tote bag into my jacket pocket. When I walked into the Food Lion the cashier near the door, who obviously recognized me, asked me where my cart was. I was not at all offended.

Nor was I offended last Saturday when I went to the Harris Teeter (one of my other regular grocery stops) and instead of being there in the morning I slept in and went in the afternoon, and while I was walking through the store one of the staff commented that I was late this week.

See, I understand your discomfort but I don’t think it’s the same thing. There was an implied value judgement. The classic, “Would you like fries with that?” is not objectional. “You know these babies are loaded with calories, right?” might be, especially if you’re Kirstie Alley.

You made up the judgment in your own anecdote, though, probably because you’re too drunk to remember which things are things and which things aren’t.

“No X this time? You usually get X” is just the cashier observing something that’s true. If that fact being a fact makes you an alcoholic, it isn’t because the cashier observed it.

I can indeed confirm if you don’t talk to your customers ENOUGH you get in trouble at Trader Joe’s. I can’t believe how rude you were.

She might have felt self conscious about buying beer at this time but I bet you the “stares” she got were imagined. People who work at stores don’t assume because you are buying beer at 10am you are immediately chugging it as soon as you get home.

Most store employees can scratch together enough braincells to understand that people shop for what they want when it is convenient to do so. :rolleyes: