Saturday, June 1, 2013

Silverware

Today I worked the silverware machine.

This picture from Google is the closest approximation I could find to the one we have at the MTC.
Silverware was a good job. Better than some I've had (more on that in the future).

This is how it works:

The people on pit (the ones who are interacting with the trays) drop the silverware in a container of water with a big square strainer-type thing in it.

When that's full, we run it through the silverware machine once.

Then we dump the silverware on the counter and sort it into little cups.

Then we run it through again.

Then we dump them into bins and the people on salads/dessert/silverware come and pick them up.

The most philosophical part was sorting the silverware. You pick either knives, forks, or spoons and dig through the pile to grab them all. While the forks are poking you the whole time.

At first, I liked picking out the knives. They just seemed so friendly because they're nice and smooth and don't jut out obnoxiously at the end, like spoons and forks do. But the problem is that knives are heavy. Your wrists start hurting after you have a handful of 'em in each fist.

So later, I liked going for the spoons. They hardly weigh anything and the handles fit nicely in your hand because of the way they're shaped. But there weren't many of them.

So by the end of the shift, I went for the forks, despite the fact that they poke you all the time, because there were just so dang many. It was easier pick them out because really, forks were the majority, and besides, picking up the knives and spoons afterwards was more enjoyable when there weren't forks to poke you.

As I pondered these preferences, I learned a couple of important things.

1) I personify everything. Not just my laptop ("Toppy") or my little red car. Each type of utensil had a personality, I tell ya. For example, I'm pretty sure that spoons are women. And that forks are jerks.

2) Everyone and everything has merit. At first I didn't like the forks. In the end, they were the ones I picked out first. Give people a chance, even if they don't seem like "your" type of person. Everyone has a place. Everyone has merit.

À bientôt,

Camilla

2 comments:

  1. We had a dishwasher like that one year at scout camp. They are so cool! We opted for washing dishes just so we could use it.

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  2. Glad to see I'm not alone in my personification of most things.

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