Thursday, December 2, 2010

Me, Black Coffee, and Anton Chiguhr

           Maybe I was just in a bad mood. Maybe I had just spent the previous four hours working in close proximity with my recent ex- while she herself was pissy about I-Know-not-What (“You doin alright?” “I’m fine.”). Maybe we had been understaffed at work, all damn day. Maybe I had just watched No Country for Old Men like two days prior and, like everything written by Cormac McCarthy and most everything directed by the Coens (sorry Intolerable Cruelty and Lady Killers and Burn After Reading, but you suck), it was having an effect on me. Maybe it’s all the f*cking Hegel I’ve been reading of late... But then, maybe it was the stubborn, self-assured stupidity of the man who, hiding behind his mustache and his glasses, insisted that a color effectively connotes something spatial in character! Maybe it is all the f*cking Hegel...



             I’m at my register. A man walks up. He’s older (60s), mustached, gray haired, wearing glasses, etc.
            “Hello, sir. What can I getcha?”
“I’ll take a small, black coffee.”
            “Room?”
            “Black.”
            “Do you wan’t any room?”
            “I said black, didn’t I?”
           “You did, but it’s black regardless of whether I do or do not leave room in your cup...” I mutter that last little bit through grinding teeth and turn to begin the process of assembling a small coffee w/out room for cream. I hear Anton Chiguhr gently tell the sweet, bumpkin of a gas station attendant, “Now is not a time. You don’t know what you’re talking about, do you?” 


          I feel like telling the man with the mustache and glasses, “Black is a color, not a spatial signifier! GADAMIT!” before going all sweet/gentle and asking, “You don’t know what you’re talking about, do you?” Instead of saying what I feel, I say nothing and just get the man his coffee. While I’m turned around, the stubborn, self-assured, stupidity of the man solidifies itself as he turns to a lady patiently waiting at his right and says, “Come on, like he doesn’t know what I mean.”

Alright, motherf*cker, sir, your mob-tactics went too far: let’s dance!



I’ll start by giving you your very best defense: saying you want your coffee “black” actually does tend to mean, within the cozy confines of coffee-shop discourse, that you don’t want any cream in your coffee. I know that. You, sir, know that. The lady to your right knows that. Maybe somebody who’s never been to a coffee shop in the U.S. doesn’t know that, but f*ck ‘em! We’re in Amuurikuh! There. That, sir, is your very best defense. But it’s got one big problem...
I didn’t ask you whether or not you wanted cream in your coffee, did I? No, I didn’t (see above transcription). I asked you whether or not you wanted room in your small cup, so that I could know how much “black” coffee to put in said small cup (“half full,” “room for spillage,” “about an inch of room,” “no room,” etc.). My question w.r.t. whether or not you want room in your small coffee was unequivocally clear because your request for “black” coffee was not: asking for a small “black” coffee tells me/anyone within earshot almost nothing about how much “black” coffee I should put in your small cup (I say almost nothing because I do think it’s safe to assume that if you ask for a small “black” coffee you want at least a smidgen of “black” coffee in your cup). There, sir. That’s my defense. Further, I couldn’t give two sh*ts what you/anyone else does with the room I may/may not give you in your cups.


“But!” you say, just like you said to the lady at your right, “but you know what I mean!” Wrong, friendo! I can guess. But, just as often as I can guess and guess right, I can also guess wrong, and in the customer service industry guessing wrong often transforms people who are normally only minor a**holes into giant, gaping ones (and my doctor recently told that I needed to start avoiding those). So, sir, in response to your, “He knows what I mean,” I say: But you don’t mean what you say! And you just don’t know what you’re talking about, do you...



The Thought of the Day comes from... UNCLE GEORG!!! (Hegel), who writes, "It glories in this pompous talk about doing what is best for humanity, about the oppression of humanity, about making sacrifices for the sake of the good, and the misuse of gifts. Ideal entities and purposes of this kind are empty, ineffectual words which lift up the heart but leave reason unsatisfied, which edify, but raise no edifice; declamations which specifically declare merely this: that the individual who professes to act for such noble ends and who deals in such fine phrases is in his own eyes an excellent creature" (The P of Spee, 234/390).

1 comment:

  1. Reminiscent of a certain Marlowe as well. You, i mean, Pickrell. You.

    ReplyDelete