'Til Death (Or Annoyance) Do Us Part

by Lisa Lombardi in


When quarantines and mandatory shelter-in-place orders became the norm, I heard a lot of comments about how there might be a spike in breakups and divorces when this is all over (har dee har har). As a single person, however, I can’t help but wonder about the rest of us – those stuck in close quarters with people we can’t neatly excise from our lives once things “go back to normal.”

I’m talking, of course, about family.

I’m 33 years old and living with my parents again for the first time in nearly a decade. The last time I was home for a semi-permanent stay was also, coincidentally, the last time I was unemployed, and it was a particularly contentious period. I had been on my own for more than five years at that point, and not used to anyone caring where I went, what time I came home, or if I came home at all.

There were some heated conversations about “while you’re under our roof” and whether or not it was okay to have a boy in my room (it was not). Up until this point, my parents had never had to deal with such issues – in high school, I was a well-behaved nerd who never got invited to parties and whom boys could not have been less interested in. Mike and Carol were #blessed.

We were both (I assume) relieved when I finally moved out again after ten months.

The upside to this time of co-habitation, I suppose, is that there’s nowhere for me to go and I’m essentially forbidden by the government to have a boy in my room. So, things have been going fairly smoothly.

I say “fairly” because, as in almost any living situation, you’re bound to learn new things about your roommates. You’ll discover new quirks and idiosyncrasies that never raised any flags before you were faced with them every single day for 31 days. (But who’s counting?!)

***

I’d forgotten, for instance, what a vocal person my father is.

“I’m going to work out in the garage and then probably go for a bike ride!” he often announces, unprompted, to my mother and I.

“I think it’s time for a sandwich,” he’ll say, once noontime rolls around. He might even tack on his plans to toast the bread.

“Yessir, this is the life,” he’ll proclaim as he stretches loudly in his chair.

I don’t know why my father’s need to constantly narrate his life surprised me. He’s done this in the car for as long as I can remember – so much, in fact, that my brother and I have threatened to record him and release it as a regularly occurring podcast. He doesn’t just point out things like new restaurants or other changes that have been made since we last made a pilgrimage together. Instead, he’ll comment on exciting landmarks like an Arby’s that’s been there forever or a chain hotel my brother and his college roommate stayed at once, twenty years ago, when they were on spring break.

I like to point out similarly inane things to him (“Tree! “Overpass!” “Dead snake!”) until he realizes what I’m doing, calls me a smartass, and pantomimes turning a key on his mouth to lock it up.

It never lasts.

***

Spending this much time with my mom, however, has meant gaining fluency in another language altogether.

She’s often been, shall we say, a bit scatterbrained, but her attention span and memory have taken a dive since she retired a few years ago. When I ask if she’s been taking her memory supplement, she’ll admit that, no… she forgot. She then recently followed that up with a wave of the hand and “What do I need to remember things for? It’s just you guys.”

The three of us got into the habit of watching a few episodes of the show Ozark every evening after dinner (more on that later), and each night Mom would inevitably pick up the remote and ask “What is this on, again? Hulu? Amazon?” And my father or I would remind her it was Netflix.

Every. Single. Night.

Later, when we’d finished that series, I was lobbying to try The Wire since none of us had seen it. Mom scrunched her nose at the suggestion.

“That’s the one with the bald guy. I don’t like him.”

“You mean, you don’t like the actor who plays him?” I asked.

“No.”

I should point out that this is all typical behavior for my sweet Catholic mother. Her standards for television and movies rely heavily on the superficial. For instance, she refused to watch Scrubs not because she thought it was a bad show, but because Zach Braff is “too weird looking.” She also thinks John Krasinski would be so cute if he would “just pin his ears back.”

Anyway, having never seen The Wire, I had no idea what actor my mom was talking about.

“He’s the bald guy. He’s in… things.”

It was only through my own distrust of my mother’s memory that I eventually figured out she was talking about Michael Chiklis. Of The Shield.

“Why do you always have to be so precise!” she complained when I pointed this out.

***

I can tell I’m disrupting their lives, too – don’t worry.

All of a sudden, their dinners that had created leftovers for several meals are being polished off the night of. Often, this happens several hours later, when I have my second dinner at 10 p.m. (What? Doesn’t everyone do this?)

We also seem to have different ideas of what constitutes as suitable when it comes to cleanliness. My philosophy takes a page from the “out of sight, out of mind” stance, and as such, it seemed perfectly reasonable to leave my four types of sunscreen out on the patio for my inevitable next session of sunbathing. I also didn’t see why I needed to fish any of the noodles or floats out of the pool each evening. (They’re made to be in the pool!)

My parents disagree.

My worst transgression, though, happened this past week.

Though I am inching toward my mid-30s, I still have the pleasure of fighting acne on the reg, and after almost of month of being careful, I finally ruined my mom’s guest towels with my napalm-level face wash. The wash cloths look like a tortured spirit was murdered, its face forever imprinted on the terrycloth before it disappeared into the ether.

“Oh my god,” I heard my mother gasp when she saw the evidence hanging from the towel rod. I winced.

On the bright side, they now have something to remember me by.


Superficial Joy is Still Joy

by Lisa Lombardi in


I’m here to say that this is a terrible time for trying something new.

Don’t get me wrong – I, too, was filled with ambitious goals of how I’d spend all this newfound free time. I was finally going to learn more about Content Marketing and Search Engine Optimization! I’d read those intimidating Pulitzer Prize-winning books! By God, I would finally watch The Sopranos.

Here’s what I learned: Content Marketing and SEO are about as interesting as I thought they would be – which is to say, not at all. Books that are a slog to get through defeat the purpose of “entertainment.” And I don’t get the appeal of watching unattractive New Jersey mobsters in hideously dated fashion kill people. (I get the appeal of baby ducks in a pool, though.)

So these days I find myself returning to my old favorites. My existential comfort food. I’m sure you have your own, but what is the purpose of recommendation roundups* other than to force my beliefs on others? Enjoy what I enjoy, dammit!

*As a note: This is not meant to be an exhaustive list of everything worth checking out. Rather, it’s content that I’ve loved and (in many cases) continued to revisit in these dark times. Utterly bingeable and perfect for having on in the background when you might be feeling frustrated or lonely.

PODCASTS

No matter how many times I explain to my dad that podcasts are essentially the same thing as his beloved Car Talk, he doesn’t get it. And man, do I regret allowing him to walk outside while I was listening to a program that essentially recaps old episodes of The Office – he’s never gonna let me live that one down.

Hopefully you’re more evolved than Mike Lombardi.

Reply All: My go-to top podcast recommendation for anyone and everyone. Self-contained episodes that dig into stories related to the internet (which is, at this point, everything), often hosted by a duo of delightfully bickering nerds. The world has already praised the recent episode, The Case of the Missing Hit (and I wholeheartedly agree), but in moments of insomnia or depression, I find myself re-listening to all of their Yes, Yes, No segments. The premise is simple: The hosts’ boss, Alex Blumberg, comes to them with (usually) a tweet that he doesn’t understand, and they break it down for him. Think of it as Memes for Dummies. It’s delightful. (Bonus: The hosts are interviewed in this other podcast episode.)

How Did This Get Made?: The same question you ask yourself anytime you inadvertently watch a bomb of a movie, this podcast features three comedians/actors (and guests) who rip apart some of the most well-known turds in the film industry. I’d recommend starting with episodes where they review a movie that, if you haven’t seen it, you at least know enough about it to follow along. Suggestions include: Face/Off, Junior, Super Mario Brothers, Ernest Goes to Jail… and, for a change of pace, any of the Fast and Furious-related eps. You’ll see what I mean.

TV

Yeah, yeah, yeah, I’ll give Schitt’s Creek and Curb Your Enthusiasm another try. But when faced with endless empty hours and an uncertain future, I wanted some familiar faces.

Friday Night Lights: Confession: I don’t like football. Seriously. I’m pretty ambivalent to watching most sports, actually, unless it’s once in a blue moon and live, but football is probably my least favorite. But I LOVE this show. It makes me want to move to Texas. It makes me want to live in a small town where football is the top attraction and pastime. And you better believe it makes me want to grow up to be just like Tami and Coach. Even at its worst (The sudden appearance and then disappearance of Santiago? Anything related to Becky? The murder coverup?!?), it’s like a warm blanket for the soul.

Parks and Recreation: If you haven’t watched this series start to finish yet, it’s time to take a long, hard look at the decisions you’re making in life.

BOOKS

I went on a very bad date last year with a dude who had gotten his Masters degree in creative writing (first red flag) but didn’t like to read. This blew my mind, and when I dug into why, it basically came down to the fact that he felt like he had to read only what I like to call “impressive” books. And while, yes, I get the benefit of challenging yourself to reading something more challenging than a Jodi Picoult novel, now is not the time to read something because you should.

The Identicals by Elin Hilderbrand: I get a special kind of satisfaction from reading books that take place in locations I’ve visited or lived in, so this one – which is set on the islands of Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket – was perfect. I’m stranded in Florida at the moment, and while I’m enjoying the warm weather, this hit home what makes summer in New England so special. Plus: Identical twin switching! Intertwined love affairs! Major home renovation!

Well Met by Jen DeLuca: Again, this is not the time to force yourself to read anything impressive. Hence, this romance novel that takes place at a quaint summer Renaissance festival. (ICYMI: I used to hit up the Michigan Ren Faire every summer in high school and beyond.) Nothing less than a pandemic would have me publicly admitting how much I enjoyed this book, but there you go.

Hit me with your own recs!


Unemployed in the Time of Corona

by Lisa Lombardi in


Where to start.

Like millions of other people, I’m currently unemployed. Unlike a good portion of those collecting unemployment, I was laid off before COV-19 really ramped up in the U.S., so I’ve been twiddling my thumbs since back in February.

Ah, February. I was so naive and hopeful then. Freshly free of a toxic workplace, I had nothing but options in front of me. A healthy savings account. A lease that was up in a couple months. A laundry list of places I wanted to travel before committing to anything long-term.

And then the other shoe dropped. Or, maybe it’d be more appropriate to say that the avalanche began.

I couldn’t do anything before successfully enrolling in Massachusetts’ unemployment insurance program. (It was a headache to get through then, so I can only imagine what it’s like these days.) I needed to get health insurance, somehow – this ended up being a two-hour appointment with a counselor and we still hadn’t finished everything by then. (I work two part-time jobs in addition to the full-time one I was fired from, so there was a lot to fill out. To make things even more complicated, both of those jobs were recently bought by other companies, so none of the names and addresses lined up with my paystubs. Good times.) To this day, I don’t think I actually have health insurance, which means that I also had to discontinue my biweekly sessions with a therapist I’d been seeing. (Three cheers for lifelong depression!)

Alright, two things handled. On to my lease. About nine months ago, I was told that I wouldn’t be able to extend my lease again once it ended May 1st, because my landlords wanted to rent out my basement studio together with the first-floor apartment. It didn’t make sense then and still doesn’t now. ANYWAY. I checked that this was still their plan and – hey-o! – was told, actually, if I wanted to, I could renew the lease. I asked if I’d be allowed to sublet to someone else briefly, since I wanted to do some extensive traveling for a bit. Denied.

At this point, the Coronavirus was spreading rapidly each day. A lot of my potential travel destinations were being affected and I kept having to rethink my plans.

Plans. Y’know what they say about God and plans, right? Get ready to laugh.

At this point, I’d been searching for another job in Boston for close to a year, so I wasn’t feeling too optimistic about my chances of landing something permanent (and enjoyable). The thought of committing to another year in this soul-crushingly expensive city, and paying for that empty apartment, and then likely still being unemployed… Not great.

So I pivoted, thinking I’d just put my stuff in storage once my lease ended and bump around for awhile. I picked up a couple freelance projects while this was happening, and figured I’d stick around until the end of my lease, and then head out of town.

Days passed. The virus spread. Anywhere international started to seem like a bad idea, though I was still sorely tempted to split to Oaxaca. My friends continued to encourage me, my parents continued to freak out. Things started closing. Entire cities were quarantined. (My cousin in Milan has been stuck at home longer than anyone else I know. I’d feel bad for him, but apparently he has an Italian boyfriend living with him who also cooks, so… lucky bastard.)

My in-house freelance project paused when Boston ordered businesses to close. The other remote projects dried up, too. I was back to sitting at home with nothing to do, because any events or classes I’d signed up for were canceled, too.

At least there’s the gym, I kept telling myself. I’d show up each day, dutifully wipe everything down, and give nasty looks to anyone who tried to set up their mat too close. And then even the gym closed, too.

Faced with the thought of being stuck in my small basement apartment, alone, for who knows how long, I did what any desperate entitled person would do: I bought myself a $22 one-way ticket to Florida, where I’ve been staying with my parents for the past three weeks.

Rest assured, I’ve been taking plenty of notes for my future screenplay. And since I no longer have therapy, I guess I’ll be writing in this blog more. Get pumped.


There's a Path for a Reason

by Lisa Lombardi in ,


In 2001, I quit my job, moved all my stuff into storage, and spent the next four months driving around the country by myself. There’s hardly a week that goes by where I don’t think about that time – usually with wistful longing and an aching homesickness for the time in my life when I legitimately had no home.

And then, sometimes, I remember how that was also the time I almost died.

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Both of my arms were shaking as I braced myself against the inner walls of the crevice. I tried again to lift myself up and over the edge of the cliff, back to safety.

Not happening.

Twelve feet below my dangling legs was the compact desert ground, littered with rocks and small boulders. Overhead, the gray sky rumbled and drops of rain continued to fall, getting faster with every minute. I could see the parking lot in the distance.

My racing heart suddenly slowed and I felt a surprising clarity.

Okay. So this is how my trip ends.

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Here’s the thing: I swear I’m not a careless idiot. I’m the girl who spent more than six months meticulously planning the aforementioned four-month-long solo road trip. I’m that weirdo who accompanies all decisions, from college to dates, with a pro/con list. Y’know the nerd who never had detention a day in her life because she always followed the rules? Present.

Yet there I was, hanging off the edge of a cliff somewhere in the heart of Devils Garden in Arches National Park, all because I didn’t stay on the trail.

I had made it halfway through my hike and was ready to turn back when thunder crackled in the distance. The trail was empty; the dark clouds had deterred everyone else that morning.

A flash of lightning. I needed to get back to my car now.

In that moment, I made the cardinal mistake that derailed everything: I tried to take a shortcut.

The parking lot peeked just beyond the horizon and I recklessly thought I could get there before the skies opened up if I made a beeline straight for it. I scaled boulders that made backtracking impossible and dead-ended on the edge of a small cliff.

As an experienced jungle gym scaler and rock climbing dabbler, my solution was simple: I’d wedge myself in the large crack in the cliffside and shimmy down. But as soon as I lowered myself over the edge, my brain finally kicked in: WHAT. NO. TOO HIGH. WHAT ARE YOU DOING. ABORT. ABORT.

I froze.

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There was no way back up. There was no one around to help me. The only way was down.

I took a deep breath and made peace with the fact that I was probably going to break a few bones. Then, I let go.

I fell, scraping and banging against juts along the way. The ground rushed up, uneven and angry, and – miraculously – my feet each landed on impossibly narrow channels of dirt between the large rocks.

For a long minute, I was numb. Then the burning of my skinned shins kicked in; the throbbing of my bruised hips. There were tears on my face and my hair was soaked from the rain, but... nothing more. I took a hesitant step. Then another. My legs were still in tact.

I hobbled the rest of the way to the parking lot and got in my car, the lone vehicle remaining.

I sat for a minute behind the wheel, and two crucial thoughts pulsed in my brain.

  1. My mom must never know about this.

  2. Stay on the path, you dummy.


That Time I Sold Myself for Charity

by Lisa Lombardi in ,


I can probably count on two hands the number of times I've been asked out on a real date. Narrow it down to requests from someone I'm actually interested in? One hand.

I've never been the girl that guys flock to, or flirt with, or talk about with each other — like, "Is she gonna be at the party? Is she single?" 

I've never been the girl who gets the attention. 

Until two weeks ago.

My attitude toward life for the past six months has gone a little something like this: fuck it.

I was fed up with roommates, flaky friends, internet dating nonsense, money worries, job troubles, and my life in general. So I started taking a new approach.

Sick of my living situation? I moved, broken budget be damned. Tired of trying to arrange outings with other people? I started going solo and exploring on my own. Bored and unappreciated at work? Time to stop saving those vacation days.

This might sound like common sense to most people, but for someone who's spent the majority of her life meticulously planning, constantly worrying, and always trying to please everyone else, this was a revelation. And it was at that point that an email circulated around the office: a friend of an employee was running a date auction for a local charity and needed volunteers to be auctioned off.

Fuck it. Sign me up.

NAME: Lisa L
AGE: 29
OCCUPATION: Copywriter
INTERESTS/HOBBIES: Reading, road tripping, trying out new recipes, fixing up my apartment, exploring the city, pretending I'm outdoorsy
SUPERHERO POWER I'D LIKE TO HAVE: Teleportation (no more parking tickets or taking the T!)
ONE PLACE I'D LIKE TO VISIT: Iceland

I submitted my profile info and then promptly forgot about it for the majority of the next few weeks. It felt like this abstract thing that I mentioned to people, as a sort of "Isn't this hilarious?" conversation topic. (Also: a "these things still exist!" conversation topic.) It didn't feel like something I was really going to have to do.

Until the week before, of course.

In a panic, I got my hair cut and colored. It was a disaster, and I had to go back to the salon to get it fixed. I walked around with frizz and zits for days, certain it wouldn't get better before the auction. In my attempt to not make the night feel like a Big Thing, I hadn't bothered shopping for a new outfit, and that just added another layer of anxiety to the mix a few days beforehand: Do I own anything appropriate for this kind of scenario? Do I own anything that makes me look even vaguely appealing?

The day of, I rushed home from work, cracked open a bottle of wine, and frantically texted my friends for makeup tips. (When was the last time I'd worn eyeshadow?!?) My dress of choice was one I've had for probably four years at this point; the heels were shoes I cursed at last year's Christmas party when I could barely walk by the end of the night.

I inhaled a burrito, downed half the bottle of Chardonnay, and hopped into a Lyft.

The event was held at ICON nightclub, and this marked my first ever visit to a nightclub, period. I teetered up the steps, signed in, and was forced to slap on a name tag that I spent the rest of the night trying to smooth down. I'd known that another girl from work — the pitcher from our company softball team — was doing the auction, too, but it turned out that two more Wayfair people had volunteered, as well. I chatted with them for bit while I sipped my $14 (it's-for-charity, it's-for-charity) vodka tonic, and then forced myself to work the room.

We were encouraged to mingle and talk to guests before the auction, but at that point in the evening, it was nothing but a sea of fellow auctionees. I was impressed by the array of people who'd thrown their hats into the ring: heavyweight fighter, CEO, personal trainer, designer, police officer, engineer, performance artist (yup), marketing manager...the list went on. One thing I realized after talking to people was that most had brought along an entourage of friends and family who could be relied on to bid for them if things became dire.

Per usual, I was completely and utterly solo.

I was having a pretty good time talking with the others, joking (but secretly serious) that my goal was to go for at least $30. It was at that point that one guy, who had participated in the auction before, proceeded to tell me that the highest bid last year was $450.

Whaaaaaaat.

If you know me, if you've read this blog, if you've ever talked to me for a significant amount of time, you know that I'm a total Scrooge McDuck. I don't pinch pennies; I cling to them with a death grip.

It's at this point that people usually chime in with "Yeah, but it's for charity..."

Valid. But the way my mind works? Something like $175 would be my big, all-out bid. Even if it's for a good cause. So, needless to say, I was pretty shocked.

At that point, guests had finally begun to arrive, so I said goodbye to my comrades and started circling the room, awkwardly trying to insert myself into conversations and introduce myself to people. I managed to talk to four non-participants before the bidding began and I was summoned to the stage, told that I'd be the second woman auctioned off. (What do you mean, second?!)

The stage was a tiny thing at the front of the club, and our hosts for the evening were two local radio personalities. (Thanks for dressing up, guys.) The first man up had a little choreographed number planned to the James Bond theme song, and bidding started at $100.

It started at $100?? There went my $30 goal.

Number One had bids pile up pretty quickly, and eventually sold for $300 (they went in increments of $50). One of the next guys opted for a PG-13 strip tease to earn his bids. The first female was an executive chef who loved yoga (theme of the night: all girls "love yoga") and she had a respectable number of bidders.

It all went much too quickly. It was my turn before I knew it.

The upside? There was no time for a full-blown panic attack. I clung to the stair rail and made my way onto the stage. The hosts had some fun with my profile, offering to the crowd that I was good at fixing things: "Guys, she can fix your toilet!" (Nope, really can't.) And the second they started the bidding, I had an offer — one of the people I talked to earlier in the evening! Two points for awkward socializing.

And then something crazy happened. Someone else put in a counter-bid. It was a guy in the back of the room, too far to tell if it had been one of the other people I'd met. But it set off a full-on bidding war.

If there's anything more surreal than watching perfect strangers offer to pay large sums of money just to spend an evening with you, it's this: watching a perfect stranger pay $650 to spend an evening with you. Also known as: the highest bid of the night.

I think the look on my face in that picture pretty much says it all.

So what have I learned from this experience?

#1. I will do almost anything for a good story.
#2. I should probably invest in different shoes.
#3. I'm actually pretty good at holding a conversation when forced to turn on the charm.
#4. I should avoid mentioning my love of yoga in any future dating profiles.

Am I pleased I was able to raise that much for Project Smile? Heck yes. Did I gain a little smug boost of confidence in that moment? Guilty. By the time the night was over, though, that had worn off and mostly I just felt a combination of hysterical laughter, confusion, and squirming uncomfortableness.

I don't all of a sudden think I'm hot stuff, and that guys are going to actually start noticing me now (though I did leave the club with a phone number). Realistically, I just happened to talk to the right person at the beginning of the night — someone who was willing to donate a significant amount of money to the charity no matter what — and I managed to pick a good conversation topic (books, you never let me down).

But at the very least, I learned this, too:

#5. I'm worth more than just $30.


Hanging up my Apron

by Lisa Lombardi in , ,


My first kiss was sprung on me by a boy I'd pined after my entire senior year of high school. We were saying goodbye before leaving for our respective colleges in the morning, and all of a sudden his mouth came out of nowhere, leaving me feeling both terrified and confused.

I did not appreciate it. At all.

My second kiss came from an older gentleman who was watching a Syracuse sporting event from one of the upper-level suites of the Carrier Dome, where I was stationed as the Suite Manager/Suite Liaison/Suite Bitch/whatever they called it. I was in charge of getting the food and drinks to the suite at the right times, and just generally making sure everyone had a good time and that the buffalo wings weren't cold.

It soon became clear that my duties also included making polite small talk with guests who couldn't care less about the game and just wanted to hang out by the bar the whole time. So I did. And when the game was over and the stadium began to empty out, this man walked over, bade me goodbye, laid an efficient smack on my lips, and pressed a $70 tip into the palm of my hand.

This, at least, I appreciated.

It makes sense that the food service industry has played a part in some of the more formative experiences in my life: I've held jobs ranging from bored hostess to harried bartender at various points in my life from the time I was 17.

It all started with a part-time hostessing gig at an Italian restaurant franchise in my town, something to fill my summer days and then, when school started again, the odd evening or two each week. I was in charge of walking patrons to their tables, pre-slicing endless loaves of crusty bed, and telling every group — no matter how small or large, no matter how busy we were or weren't — that it would probably be no more than a 15-minute wait. Okay, if we were really busy, then maybe I'd predict a 20-minute wait. Max.

First lesson of the food service industry: hostesses are full of shit. At least, the teenaged ones making only $7.75 an hour are.

Second lesson of the food service industry: be wary of restaurant owners whose idea of appropriate business attire is a quarter-zip fleece pullover that fully exposes their yeti-like chest hair. Give your two weeks' notice the second said owner tells you that you're "looking foxy today."

The summer after my sophomore year of college, I graduated to a waitressing gig at a Middle Eastern place in the middle of our downtown. Its central proximity didn't do much for its popularity, though; when friends and former classmates learned where I was working, their first response was usually "Where? Never heard of it." That should have been my first hint that I would be making no money that summer.

At the time, it had the look of a dingy cafe — nothing terrible, but nothing particularly appealing, either. The menu options averaged $9 and there was no liquor license, so I quickly realized that I would essentially be making only $2.75 an hour. My "tips" were like puddles in the desert: juuuuust enough to keep me going.

I was also the only person working there who didn't speak Lebanese, something the assistant manager — a tiny, somewhat shriveled old lady with a permanent frown — seemed to hold against me, if her constant glare and muttering whenever I asked a question were any indication.

The restaurant has since acquired a liquor license and undergone a full renovation, turning it into a swanky-looking place that's packed every time I've driven by during visits home. 

I bet the tips are amazing now.

I curse its name every time I see it.

In college, I worked a variety of odd jobs, but the one that stuck all four years was slaving away for the Carrier Dome's catering department. I started out as a runner, literally running giant platters of food from the kitchen to the suites just before the mad rush of halftime. I then worked the hotdog concession stands on the lawn before football games, waking up Saturday mornings while it was just barely light out and walking to the Dome through grass that had begun to frost over during the night. When it switched to basketball season, I mastered the cash register at the Italian Stand, handing over endless subpar chicken parm sandwiches and overpriced meatball subs.

I soon graduated to Suite Master, and then some sort of vague senior role during my final two years due mostly to the fact that I was reliable and had been around long enough to know the ins and outs of most of the jobs. I started working during the week, managing the meals for the different sports teams after practices or helping with special event dinners. I stocked the suites in between games, riding pallet carts filled with cases of beer down the empty halls of the stadium and having endless pointless conversations with my coworkers about how much homework we had, how we longed for the free time our peers wasted, which events we hated working the most.

It was expected to bitch about the job, but I wouldn't have had it any other way. There was something eerie and exciting about working in that giant space when no one else was around, and I secretly loved it. My meals were more often than not provided by the events I worked, or simply care of the friendly kitchen staff who would feed us leftovers even on days when there was nothing going on. If I could change anything about my college experience, I wouldn't have worked less — I would have chosen to simply study less.

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So that's how I ended up in Boston, nearly three years ago, applying to work for a catering temp service that hired out servers and bartenders to events that needed the extra help. That's how I worked my first wedding that was marked by a hysterical bride and three gigantic performing drag queens. That's how I slowly got to know each of the million universities within the city limits, serving re-heated bacon-wrapped scallops and mini quiche by the trayful to both alumni and prospective students. That's how I had my first visit to the Cape (summer wedding) and attended the very first Boston Calling concert (beer garden).

When I finally landed a real, full-time job, I continued to bartend on the weekends because I have never been one to turn down extra money. Time went by. Raises and bonuses happened for the first time in my life. I got another new job. And I finally realized a month ago, with a weird jolt, that I really didn't need to keep bartending.

Maybe, instead, I should, like, try to have a social life? We'll see.

Either way, it's time to hang up my apron for good; pack away my bow and bistro ties, my scuffed black wingtips, and my now-dingy white Oxford.

Goodbye, my friends. You served me well. Probably better than I served anyone else.

A few more friendly tips learned from the food service industry:

Lesson #3: When they put out coffee at the end of an evening event, it's all decaf — no matter what the sign says.

Lesson #4: If the hors d'ouevres look like the frozen stuff you can buy at Costco, they probably are.

Lesson #5: You can become — and remain — a bartender without knowing anything about mixing drinks as long as you're charming and hard-working.

Lesson #6: Everyone should work a food service job at least once in their life. At worst, it will teach you humility and appreciation for others. At best, it will bless you with endless crazy stories and experiences, as well as some impressive biceps courtesy of all the heavy trays, racks of glassware, and cases of beer.