Life lesson #314 – I’ll continue in spite of…
Well, I’m going to say this again, and yes, I’ve said it before several times.
I’m a pleasant person. I’m normally cheerful. I’m nice.
But in the city that I live in, maybe people just look down on others. As an Asian person, I can say for sure that multiple times I received poor service in restaurants, even before the pandemic. In other situations, people just seem to have no time for me. It could be a group setting and I’m literally ignored by others. When I do try to speak up, I get talked over by others and they appear oblivious to what I’ve said. I could say, “Well, my arm is sore today because…” and I get cut off like I didn’t say anything.
Or it would be something like, “Oh, what you’re saying doesn’t affect me, so I’m not going to listen to this story.” Or something like, “Who cares?”
I had a former boss named Ian who did that. This was about 15 years after I’d last worked for him — we had still kept in touch all these years after I’d left his school. He asked me something. I explained it. And his next comment was “So what?” in a patronizing tone. It was a question about why I wrote my 1988 Dodgers book. I said Fred Claire suggested it because it was the 30th anniversary of that season (back in 2018), and Ian’s response was “So what?”
I was offended and didn’t return his texts for a day. After that, he disowned me.
More recently, I had another boss (who kept insisting she wasn’t a “boss” but her business card said “….Manager” — so that counts. But she was helping me move to my new place sometime ago, and I invited my sibling to live there because my sibling didn’t have a home — and of course my sibling was supposed to pay rent. Yet my boss — jokingly — said that if I was “mean,” then my sibling did not need to pay. I found that to be offensive and not amusing whatsoever.
I had a parent who also said that my sibling could pay well below market value for rent. Well, that’s cute but why am I expected to support my (older) sibling who gets angry if I said I didn’t want to pay for the rides that my sibling sometimes provided me. I’d rather take Uber if I had to. I’m basically losing money every month because of the below-market-value rent that my sibling gives — and a few times the cheques were postdated — and so that boss thinks it’s funny that if I, as a positive and cheerful/upbeat person was “mean,” the sibling didn’t need to pay.
There are people out there who will not and do not respond to polite messages that I send. I suppose I am viewed as an annoyance or below their level, and so I do not even warrant any sort of response. It’s as though I’m a non-human in those specific people’s eyes.
I’m surrounded by people who just don’t want to listen to what I say, likely think I’m some sort of dirt below their shoes, etc. Through their actions, it’s as though they don’t think of me as a human being — which really means they don’t want me to succeed. By that logic, they don’t care enough about me and/or want me to fail. As Hathaway’s character said in The Intern (2015), her mom was a “terrorist.” By that logic, I would not be out of line to say those people around me are terrorists, too. Not everyone, obviously, but quite a lot.
In spite of all that, I’m someone who’ll continue to try my best in my daily life. And I’ll continue to be upbeat and cheerful.
Posted on August 24, 2025, in Lessons Learned, Life, Life Lessons. Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.





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