Specialty Wood Warehouse 01
Hello, I'm Zack and I work at one of the many, many, many distribution warehouses in Middleton's warehouse district and I feel quite blessed to have acquired a job in one of the humongous warehouses because the investment group that I work for sublet a corner of the busy distribution warehouse where I peddle their wood wares. And the reason I feel so blessed is because my smaller dock area is cordoned off and segregated from the very busy main floor with those concrete filled yellow metal pillars. Which keeps the flinging and flying "beep, beep, beep" main floor forklift trucks well away from me because, you know, I'm the lady's man of the warehouse district and they are not. I mean, the jealous forklift drivers all want to kill me for being the lady's man of the place and they could still walk between the yellow pillars and stomp on my feet instead of running over them with their Hi-Lo's, but they don't because all of the lady's up in the front would be upset at them. And maybe even jealous over how all of the women up front might pamper my damaged feet after being roughed up by the rougher guys.
And you don't need to perform any fact checking against my lady's man status because you're way too busy in your life, so, let's just check the box on that and move on.
So, the humongous warehouse situation and I'm not exaggerating about how it's one of the largest distribution warehouses on warehouse avenue, but it's about 10% front offices for the management folks and support people, 85% main floor are for the warehoused products, where the forklift drivers prove every day that forklift trucks can take corners on two wheels while transporting a load and my safely enclosed 5% of space where I control everything! I mean, I control everything in my 5%, but I have my own dock roller door and everything and nobody pushes those green or red rear dock door buttons but me, so.
Anyways, my 5% area warehouses, receives and ships out, as the title of my story implies, wood. But nothing like a lumberyard, it's all specialty wood in basically rough cuts. I handle specialty wood in chunks, blocks, cubes, thick circle slices, shorter square posts, irregular shapes and things like that. Which are purchased and shipped to a variety of small furniture makers, arts & crafts stores, kitchen utensil makers and festival type vendors who either make table top inserts, wall hangings, salad bowls, stirring spoons, street address numbers, cutting boards and other things that wood crafty artists might make to make a buck. I ship out orders to several countries and receive in rough stock from even more countries.
I do not cut to size or anything like that, but I do make shipping crates, so, my working dock area has a few saws and tools. I do wrap individual field rough-cut pieces in industrial clear plastic wrap and crate several pieces together for a single vendor, but that about the extent of my wood working skills.
And if you're wondering, yep, the incomings and outgoings is busy enough that the investment group that sublet my job and warehouse dock area is busy enough that New York hasn't shut it down yet, so, it's constant enough for them to keep things going (thank you, New York guys).
And speaking of the New York based investment group, I mean, I even receive and ship out peat bog wood pieces, which I'm supposed to treat like bars of gold because peat bog wood defines the word specialty, but come on New York, it's me, your main man, so, if you're sitting there and reading this while filling out my employee evaluation from a distance, of course, I treat the peat bog wood like they are gold bars, check the box New York guys and gals.
I mean, I would never ever stack up three sliced chunks of 800 years old peat bog wood for a foot stool, not me, forget about it, not in 800 years, nope, that's not happening. You know, not without wrapping them in tough plastic wrap first, so.
Anyways, the long and short of it is that I work for the rich guys and gals in New York, but I'm contracted out and I locally report to the warehouse complex management bozo's, I mean, the warehouse complex management big wigs up front and life goes on because..."
[Footsteps clump, clump, clump right between the yellow safety pillars while narrowly be missed by the zoom zooming forklift trucks that were screeching the solid rubber tires while zooming around]
"Hey Zack, I just heard at the water cooler that you spoke with our warehouse floor manager, Mrs. Kelp, about you organizing and hosting some sort employee social mixer right here in your dock area this Friday and I have a few behind the scenes suggestions and questions for you because..."
Ahh, Mille Maye Miller from Accounts Payable with the clump, clump, clump shoes. We actually went to school together and the only thing that I need to say to introduce Millie Maye Miller, can all be said in one quick flashback to about three years ago as our graduation party circuit started to kick in:
[Whimsical flashback musical tunes and dazzling floating stars]
"[Shoulder tap, tap, tap] hey, Zack, since everyone knows that I'm so nice and that I treat all of my friends equally and fairly, I'm keeping my good girl rep intact and inviting you to my pre, pre, pre graduation party and you can talk to and mingle with any girl that you want to (as long as that girl is Sarah Jean), so, are you going to say nice things about me to everyone, especially about my perfectly pursed and puckered lips, and accept my personal invitation to attend my pre, pre, pre graduation party, hmm?"
[Reverse whimsical musical tunes and disappearing stars]
Yep, only Millie Maye Miller would have a pre, pre, pre graduation party and then a pre, pre graduation party and then a pre graduation party [inhales], all before her official graduation party [exhales], sheesh.
But she is really nice (and no longer stuck up) and I blame the early years on her dad because her mom is and always has been way too hot to blame for anything other than a 40 something trophy wife is the new 30 something trophy wife.
Oh, and the water cooler gossip had it right because if I clean, sort, stack, shift and clean, my work space would be perfect for after work mixer, which, is something I know all about. I mean, I looked a few things up on the internet and came to the conclusion that an employee social is blah, blah, boring and an employee mixer can include light refreshments and light snack food and then that an employee party includes the light beverages and snacks and includes background music with the hopes that the people let their hair down and maybe bring a change of clothing [exhales].
"Um, Millie Maye, is this your way of admitting that I was actually your school crush back in the day and now you've come to senses and this employee social hour event will be our official 'in a relationship' announcement party, huh?"
"Don't be a piece of driftwood, Zack, because you know that I have a boyfriend. Anyways, what was the first thing that Mrs. Kelp said back to you, after you proposed your mixer idea, hmm?"
"Um, the first thing that Mrs. Kelp said was NO! You know, in her half-raised voice because..."
"Mm-hmm, and just what was the second thing that she said to you, Zack, hmm?"
"Oh, she said AND SHUT MY OFFICE DOOR! Again, in her half glasses, I mean, her half-raised voice that the all of the employees in warehouse could hear, so?"