The very nice man from the hotel staff—who not only brought me
a cart, but hauled my copious amount of luggage (6 pieces total) to the garage
and loaded it in my car—refused any tip, insisting that it was Mother’s Day and
his pleasure. (Though, I assure you—those bags were freakishly heavy. Just ask
Delta airlines.) Because of him, and other kind and helpful hotel staff, I will
stay at the Marriott whenever I can in my travels. The people there are
incredibly respectful.
On the other hand, a rental car employee stood and watched
me unload this same luggage, without assistance (and sporting the slightest
smirk) as I wrestled all six ridiculously heavy bags onto the ground and went
in search of a cart—AND THEN informed me that he was charging me yet one more
astronomical fee. Another rental employee also watched, amused, as I wrestled my
cart toward the BROKEN automatic door, then stood aside, waiting for ME TO OPEN
IT FOR HIM. There was more, but I won’t
bore you with the details. Needless to say, I will never rent from Hertz again.
(They may have a policy against helping customers with luggage—I don’t know.
But the door thing? Yeah, I can think of nothing to justify that.)
The thing is, it’s not always about company policy.
Sometimes it’s about human beings treating each other with value and respect.
Sometimes it’s about helping each other when it’s obvious that we need help.
Much like the hotel gentleman--by the way, he was not a bell boy—who jumped to
assist me because he could tell I was struggling. Unfortunately, that type of behavior
is becoming more and more rare.
This is what is wrong with our society. Somewhere along the
way, we’ve lost sight of the basic important things, the little things that
very often make a big difference. I think it’s up to each of us to be that
person who makes a change, regardless of where we work or what we do for a
living. Some things are about being human, and WE—not our jobs or companies or any
other outside force—are the ones who choose how we act, and how we react, and
what we stand for.
Will you be the person eager to jump in and help or the one
who stands on the curb and smirks? It’s your call. But remember—one day you may
also be the one struggling with the baggage. Which one would you want to
encounter?
That is all.
*end rant*
2 comments:
Yeah, Hertz just lost my business too! I'm sorry you had to deal with that. Really uncalled for.
That's shameful of Hertz. Really. But I'm so glad to hear that about the man at the Marriot. I love what you said about deciding what WE will do. You've helped encourage me to try harder.
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