I think I hated my college. something I will never tell my parents. I went to a small, liberal arts school on a beautiful campus with excellent faculty. I was recruited to play field hockey. I hugged my sweet parents goodbye the fall of my freshman year, and off I went for the picture-book experience.
Not so. At the time, all socializing was through an arcane greek system. The sororities were "dry" (and stupid), which meant everyone had to come grovel down at fraternity row to mix it up. While I made some incredible friends, that set-up was just wrong. Beer was thrown in girl's faces, "What does your dad do?" was a common question, voyeurs prevailed. Stories that would make your head spin. These loser-snobs made me sick.
The summer before my senior year, my home-town, best friend Sally presented me with a great offer. Her mom, a wonderful person who'd had great success in the workplace, had rented a precious beachhouse in this adorable town. I could live there for free, with the understanding that when her mom and workfriends came out, I had to split. I jumped on the offer and decided I'd just wing it when I got kicked out.
Late spring, Sally & I found jobs at a hot spot in town, a few blocks for our digs. We went in for our first day to find a tight-knit crew who were somewhat dissintrested in us. I felt like Baby, as our creepy boss awarded me with the hostess position, and the rest went out slinging food. I sat up front, sipping sodas and prancing around with menus for the first few weeks, bored. Sally and I would walk home together. Ho-hum. We both decided to get in shape. It worked.
Summer kicked in. I noticed two bartendars in particular: a very handsome, kind Pat and his sidekick Jimmy, pulling up stools and talking with us before the rush. Flirty drinks were slid my way throughout the night. The previously tight-lipped girls started spilling all the juicy gossip. I learned that Pat had his pick of many of the blond, tanned female staff-- Pat & I quickly became friends. But only friends. I was worried I may end up with my eyes clawed out.
The place was teaming with masses of sunburnt revelers. 3-4 rows of people clammering for drinks with Pat and Jimmy cranking out the orders. I became a cocktail waitress after my hostess shift. I was in.
Jimmy had my back with the rude customers & staff. He was a hardworking guy; tall, broadshouldered, dark hair, blue eyes, not as handsome as Pat. I was not at all interested in him until one day, I changed my outfit 4 times before going into work. I realized I couldnt wait to see him. He was funny, confident and nice. Before very long, he had me wrapped around his finger. Just in time, too, 'cuz Sally's mom started coming down on weekends. Perfect! I'd crash out in his small, cave-like, beach-house room until Sunday a.m.
The rest of the summer was a sunny, youthful blur. My schedule: wake up by jumping in the ocean, lunch, jog, shower, back to work, out late. I was completely carefree and surrounded by nice co-ed peoples. We all did things together every single night. We planned trips to neighboring towns. We gambled in Atlantic City. I had a 1-speed beach bike that I would zoom all over the small beachy roads. And I was crazy about Jimmy, which, after three years of putting up with stupid, spoiled boys was pretty magical.
It was sad to see the summer end, but it was just that. A summer gig. We all said goodbye and I went back to Abercrombie U and happily went to a whole lot less keg parties.
Not so. At the time, all socializing was through an arcane greek system. The sororities were "dry" (and stupid), which meant everyone had to come grovel down at fraternity row to mix it up. While I made some incredible friends, that set-up was just wrong. Beer was thrown in girl's faces, "What does your dad do?" was a common question, voyeurs prevailed. Stories that would make your head spin. These loser-snobs made me sick.
The summer before my senior year, my home-town, best friend Sally presented me with a great offer. Her mom, a wonderful person who'd had great success in the workplace, had rented a precious beachhouse in this adorable town. I could live there for free, with the understanding that when her mom and workfriends came out, I had to split. I jumped on the offer and decided I'd just wing it when I got kicked out.
Late spring, Sally & I found jobs at a hot spot in town, a few blocks for our digs. We went in for our first day to find a tight-knit crew who were somewhat dissintrested in us. I felt like Baby, as our creepy boss awarded me with the hostess position, and the rest went out slinging food. I sat up front, sipping sodas and prancing around with menus for the first few weeks, bored. Sally and I would walk home together. Ho-hum. We both decided to get in shape. It worked.
Summer kicked in. I noticed two bartendars in particular: a very handsome, kind Pat and his sidekick Jimmy, pulling up stools and talking with us before the rush. Flirty drinks were slid my way throughout the night. The previously tight-lipped girls started spilling all the juicy gossip. I learned that Pat had his pick of many of the blond, tanned female staff-- Pat & I quickly became friends. But only friends. I was worried I may end up with my eyes clawed out.
The place was teaming with masses of sunburnt revelers. 3-4 rows of people clammering for drinks with Pat and Jimmy cranking out the orders. I became a cocktail waitress after my hostess shift. I was in.
Jimmy had my back with the rude customers & staff. He was a hardworking guy; tall, broadshouldered, dark hair, blue eyes, not as handsome as Pat. I was not at all interested in him until one day, I changed my outfit 4 times before going into work. I realized I couldnt wait to see him. He was funny, confident and nice. Before very long, he had me wrapped around his finger. Just in time, too, 'cuz Sally's mom started coming down on weekends. Perfect! I'd crash out in his small, cave-like, beach-house room until Sunday a.m.
The rest of the summer was a sunny, youthful blur. My schedule: wake up by jumping in the ocean, lunch, jog, shower, back to work, out late. I was completely carefree and surrounded by nice co-ed peoples. We all did things together every single night. We planned trips to neighboring towns. We gambled in Atlantic City. I had a 1-speed beach bike that I would zoom all over the small beachy roads. And I was crazy about Jimmy, which, after three years of putting up with stupid, spoiled boys was pretty magical.
It was sad to see the summer end, but it was just that. A summer gig. We all said goodbye and I went back to Abercrombie U and happily went to a whole lot less keg parties.