As I sit here and watch the past five years of my life being hauled out
the side door and loaded into big trucks, I don’t feel…anything. Well,
that’s not precisely true. I feel embarrassment. The place is filthy.
Not remotely in a condition that I would have liked anyone to think I
tolerated in my establishment. But five years of trying to run the place
perpetually understaffed and overworked, with no time or energy to do
the “extra cleaning” myself, and employees that we were lucky to have
deign to show up for their shifts, much less put out any extra effort in
the direction of more than the minimum required, have left the place
looking pretty sad. Once all the equipment is out of here, I’ll be left
staring at spotted walls and scummy floors. My final obligation will be
to try to restore them to some semblance of acceptable before turning
over my keys on the last day of June.
But melancholy, or regret
about the way things turned out? Not really. It was such an endless
slog, and I worked so hard and got so nowhere in 59 months that I feel
absolutely no sadness as the equipment goes rolling out the door. It’s
like each piece gone is one less link in the chain that kept me bound in
slavery. I can only think of it in terms of the dollars that will be
going back into my bank account in exchange. And then I will be able to
pay off the rest of my obligations and have done with the experience
for good.
Only one debt—the small second mortgage we took out
on our house—will follow us beyond the doors of the cafe. We’ll have to
cough up $400 a month, for roughly -ever, in exchange for the
opportunity to “live the dream.” I don’t know. Many people pay a lot
more than $45,000 for higher education. In fact, I would have been out
more than that if I had chosen to go to culinary school. And with my
chef school diploma in my hand, I would not have possessed one hundredth
of the valuable (though hard-earned) experience I have under my belt as
I walk away from five years of running my own business.
I did
have one moment, as I pulled my artwork off the walls in the “back
corner,” when a mist of tears threatened to undo me. I put myself in
“don’t-think-about-it” mode, and the tears dried up almost immediately.
Honestly, I don’t know why that one action bothered me. Maybe because I
wish the whole experience had been more about playing with pretty
things than busting my butt, working like a sweat-hog, and waiting for
the next round of manure to contact the oscillator.
Eight days
from today—after the last of the grease has been scraped off the kitchen
floor, and the last spot of marinara has been scrubbed off the wall
behind where the food warmer used to sit—will be the first day of the
rest of my life.
Bring it on!
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment