Sorry to hear about your friend. Here in the SF Bay Area we seem to be having those kinds of train deaths daily now. Must be a lot of depressed people out there. The cost of living keeps getting higher and we hear about the impending doom of the drought, possibly the worst in recorded history and people just don't know what to do. Oldsters are shut out of making a living regardless of their experience. And Dubya once said we were supposed work until we dropped dead. Even then I shouted "at what?"

One of the reasons I got to Starbucks over a locally owned place is I know the staff at the downtown one. There's one woman who has been there since it opened and when I wondered why she wasn't made manager was told she didn't want the job though she is the most experienced there. We've had some bad managers come through there too.

On 03/18/2015 05:46 PM, s3raph...@yahoo.com [FairfieldLife] wrote:

In my local Starbucks this evening I asked one of the staff where one of the regular customers had gone. Peter - a Scot who was there almost every night - was always very boisterous and friendly so his absence was noticeable. I was expecting to be told that he had decided to move back to Edinburgh. Instead I learned that he'd killed himself by throwing himself in front of a train at Ealing Broadway station (right next door to the Starbucks). Naturally enough I was thunderstruck. You then start to think if you had been as welcoming to him as maybe you should have been. We all owe each other a certain acknowledgment and respect and I was thinking back to my own nodded greetings and occasional exchanges with Peter and judging that perhaps I'd fallen short of giving him his due. R.I.P.

Anyway, there was a staff member I'd noticed who always struck me as being a bright young chap. I thought that maybe he was one of those over-qualified graduates one reads about who are so desperate for work experience that cleaning up at a coffee shop has people queuing up around the block whenever a vacancy arises. Tonight I'd been sitting there reading Sam Harris's Waking Up (many thanks to those FFLifers who recommended the title - I'd probably not have bought it without your thumbs up). This staffer said to me that it seemed an interesting topic - "Spirituality without Religion". What was it about? So I summed it up by saying that Sam Harris was hostile to religion - and I meanreally hostile - but he approved of meditation and wanted to encourage its use while ditching all the metaphysical baggage. My staffer then responded by saying that he never read books. I tell you that his reply was more shocking to me than the news of Peter's suicide. It really hit me that someone who never reads books must have an overall view of life utterly remote from my own. How can an obviously bright and personable young man have gone through our educational system and ended up deciding that books have nothing worthwhile for him? Imagine what it must be like to have your worldview formed by television, the internet and your friends' chat. What a confined space you must live in.




Reply via email to