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Before I realized that one can make billions of dollars as a
professional ass kicker, I worked in an office.
A regular office.
White walls, so everyone would remain neutral and avoid any unpleasant
massacres; dark carpet—stains are harder to see that way; small kitchen with a
fridge and coffee machine. We even had snacks that were free. I thought I was
one of the luckiest cubicle-whores in the world. Free food and drinks? Bad ass!
My life was all bliss and candy corn...
until “Jen” was hired. I'll call her Jen because it's a common name, easily
forgettable and boring.
I shuddered the first time I was introduced to
Jen. Clearly a smoker, she decided to try and mask the obvious by washing her
clothes in perfume and then hanging them to dry next to 42 Glade air fresheners.
That's the only conclusion I could reach when I realized I could no longer see
straight and my equilibrium was kicked in the nuts. And that was all from just
walking down the hall she resided in. I'm pretty sure there was an 8-foot radius
around her that would be considered highly flammable by virtually any surgeon
general. Despite her best efforts to dismember my olfactory system with her
offensive stench, one could still detect a faint hint of the classiest of
cigarettes: Camel.
Apparently, Camel cigarettes also cause leprosy of the
hands.
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Congratulations Jen, you're the only one who can turn
"smoking hot" into an oxymoron. |
Noisily crusty, her grasp was enough to make me certain that when our brief
introductory shake was done, I would be left with a piece of her—a finger or
chunk of palm. Her hands were brittle, decrepit, and mummified.
I couldn't understand why her hands were so dry. Looking at her, I was
convinced her caloric intake consisted exclusively of fried foods and milkshakes
with cheese.
Yes, she was a bonified fatty.
If you were to lift up her shirt, I
wouldn't have been surprised to see a North Korean strapped to her frontside in
one of those reverse backpack/baby holder things. It was like she was
permanently pregnant... with quintuplets... that were 4 years overdue.
She always asked me to move boxes for her. Allegedly, she'd had back surgery and
it never healed correctly. I'm sure it had
nothing to do with the 20-gallon skin bag she was
continually lugging around. According to her, the surgery resulted in her
inability to carry anything over 50 pounds. Considering the 9th wonder of the
world just below her chin, I assumed this limited her transport skills to
notepads and French fries.
Remember the free food and drink I mentioned
we benefited from in the office? This included the little candy tray up by the
receptionist. I always assumed, since we had a kitchen full of processed food,
that the candies, which were not in the kitchen, were for any visitors who
braved our notoriously sluggish elevators.
Until I saw Jen walk up to the
tray.
“Okay,” I thought, “maybe she's in the mood for a piece of chocolate.” I
mean, we all get those little urgings for candy or genocide.
Then I saw her Saharan hands start collecting certain pieces like it was 1995
and there was an box full of free Beanie Babies. Somehow, within 4 seconds, she
was able to grab seven Mr. Goodbar pieces and waddle slowly back to her cubicle,
careful not to put too much pressure on her overworked spine. The tray was like
a battlefield, candy spread to the edges, and
not one yellow-wrappered chocolate had survived.
Jen's love of sweet shit did come in handy. Somehow she had a sixth (maybe
fifth, since I'm assuming she couldn't smell) sense for desserts of any kind and
size. Before email or word-of-mouth could reach me at my corner office with a
splendid mahogany desk and credenza, I would see her stubbily shuffling past my
line of vision.
Plate in hand and head down, concentrated on the delicacy she was about to
engorge herself on, her tongue massaged her lips in anticipation.
This was how I knew someone had brought a treat in. Cake, cookies, pie. The
type of dessert didn't matter. If it had 739% of your daily saturated fat
allowance, she had a chunk before the host could say, “my daughter made it,” or
“don't eat the plastic.” Her ninja-like quickness belied her rhinoceros-like
stature (and texture).
I'd made a mental note of all of these disturbing
traits (in addition to her Roseanne Barr-esque fashion sense) when I was in the
unfortunate position of having to share an elevator with her. Chances are I
was on my way to have lunch with sexy women; I can only assume she was on
a cigarette break.
But I never made it to that lunch—the paralyzing despair of the following
conversation took its toll on me, especially when I realized that she's not the
only person like this:
Jen: Going to lunch? Me: Yeah,
getting up early means that by now, I'm ready to eat a live horse. Jen:
What time do you get up? Me: About 5, I try and
work out before coming to work. Jen: Oh, I could never do that,
I'm too tired in the morning. Me: It sucks sometimes, but I figure
that if I wait till after work, I'd never go. I'd have too many excuses to skip.
Jen: Me too. I could never work out in the afternoon either, I'm always
too tired when I get home. Me: …. Jen: Yeah, I just can't
work out. I'm too tired... and I had that back surgery.
“Yeah,” I
thought. “And you eat enough chocolate to be diabetic... and you smoke (her
post-lunch hackathons are a melodious symphony of phlegm launches)... and you
sit in a chair all day, only getting up to stuff your maw with more sugar-filled
sugar cubes... and you avoid even the tiniest amount of physical exertion
throughout your day. Other than that, you're completely healthy and should
probably be given a raise at work.”
What drove me to quit the next day
and become
an alcoholic of Mel Gibson proportions is knowing that, despite my
statuesque figure, award-winning personality, and head full of thick, luxurious
hair, Jen the Fat will probably outlive me.
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