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By
Tim Wildmon | AFA President
"Yes maam," I said into the sign with all the pictures of
colorful food on it. "I would like a burger plain just meat
and bread and a Sprite."
"You want a cheeseburger with what on it, sir?" said the voice
back to me.
"No, I dont want a cheeseburger, I want a plain burger with
meat and bread only."
I was ordering for my 12-year-old son, Wesley. I actually like
my burgers dressed. There was a short silence. I suspect the young
lady was distracted inside. Then she returned.
"So you want a cheeseburger with pickles only and a Sprite. Would
you like some fries to go with that?"
I put my head on the steering wheel in frustration, then went for
one more attempt. Deep breath.
"No, I dont want any fries. Listen to me closely. I want
a plain burger. Do you hear me? A plain burger with just meat and
bread. Thats it, meat and bread. This is not hard. I know
yall can do it. Now, can you repeat back to me what I just
ordered, please?"
She thought about it. A few seconds later, she responded, "So you
want a cheeseburger without cheese?"
Classic.
I paused as my tired brain replayed what I had just heard. For
me to say anything sarcastic at this point would have only confused
things further, so I restrained myself. I looked at my three kids
and their friend who had heard the entire thing. They were dying
laughing by this time.
"Thats right, maam. You call it whatever you want to
call it," I said trying not to laugh. "I just want a piece of meat
between a top bun and a bottom bun and nothing else."
When I got to the window she said she was sorry, it had been a
long day. I told her it was the first time I had had a hamburger
referred to as "a cheeseburger without cheese." We both laughed.
Ive often thought that everyone should have to work in the
fast food business for at least a few months. You grow as a person.
I know I did.
In fact, if you came by Burger King on South Gloster in Tupelo,
Mississippi, during the summer of 1980, I would have likely had
a hand in getting your Whopper, fries and drink to you. But there
is no way for me to know if you were at the front counter or at
the drive-thru window, because my boss kept me in the back, away
from customers. Perhaps it was my personality, I dont know.
I wasnt the sharpest knife in the drawer back then.
So I worked in the kitchen. I was a little slow at first because
Mama had always made my burgers for me, but by the end of the summer
I could work the fry basket, the drink machine and run the burger
line. I was an interchangeable drill bit a multi-talented,
smooth operator.
Still, sometimes, I would peer out the small rectangular window
where we, the lowly burger-makers, fry-dippers and drink-fillers,
would place your order when it was ready. I wondered what it must
feel like to work the front counter and deal with the friendly,
hungry faces of real people. That was a job my boss mostly assigned
to the cute, perky, smiling girls. The dull teenage boys like me
were sentenced to duties away from the public.
"Wildmon, what are you staring at? Get me that Whopper with cheese
now!" was something I heard from the other side of the small rectangular
window more than once that summer.
Sometimes I would daydream. Did you ever do that as a teenager?
Whats so appealing about a fast food restaurant with a drive-thru
window is not only the colorful pictures of tasty food, but also
the fact that we can pick and choose what we want and how we want
it fixed, and then get it to go. Gulp it down on the run. Kind of
like the American version of Christianity these days. Have you noticed?
So many of us treat our relationship with the Lord the same way
we order fast food. "Lord, gimme a little of this, some of that,
and bless it if you would. Amen."
Consistency and valued time with the Lord are what I desire more
of. Its been a challenge for me, spending quality time in
devotion, prayer and worship. I often think I can get by on spiritual
fast food, when Jesus says He wants me to come dine at His table
of bounty and blessing.
Well, I worked my one summer at a fast food place. That was all
I needed. I grew up some. Learned how to treat grease burns. Learned
how to fill a Diet Pepsi and a Mountain Dew at the same time. Its
not as easy as you think. I never did, however, learn to make a
cheeseburger without cheese.
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