A funny thing happened at the Barnes and Noble last week. I had stopped in to browse a little before an afternoon class, and picked up an issue of Writer's Digest. As I checked out, the clerk -- an older woman -- asked if I was a writer.
"Yeah," I responded, "I am."
"What do you write?" she asked.
"Well, I'm a professor at the University, so a lot of my writing is academic stuff, but I also write quite a bit online, mostly how to-type articles."
At the mention of my teaching, she lit up. "What do you teach?"
"I teach Women's Studies at the university, and anthropology at the community college." I'll admit I wasn't all that interested in a chat -- I wanted to get some lunch before my class started, too -- but I'm always willing to talk about my work with an interested party.
"Oh, I took women's studies at San Jose State years ago. All the professors were hardcore bull dykes!"
Oh. So we're not going to talk about my work, I see. To be honest, I was pretty taken aback -- was the bookstore clerk trained to insult customers' academic fields, or did she learn it in her spare time?
"Well, you know, there's all sorts..." I started.
"I'm a femininist," she declared.
Always one for the wordplay, I asked if that was the opposite of a femin-out-ist.
"No," she replied, apparently missing my subtle linguistic tricksterism, "it's the opposite of a feminist. I was one of the first card-carrying members of NOW, back when it started. The ACLU, too. But I learned better, believe me!"
"Well, yeah, ok," I said, backing towards the door. "Well..."
"I have a master's degree in child development, and [something something something -- I wasn't terribly interested at this point]. I worked with autistic children for years -- you know you're getting through to them when they say 'fuck you'."
"Well, I have to go," I said, lamely, and walked out the door. I admit, while I generally give employees of stores I patronize a lot of latitude, having been a clerk for several years of my life, but seriously, I've never had a job, no matter how bad, where I felt justified in attacking a customer or free to use profanity with a customer (and I'm not exactly sure how we got to the autistic children thing). I probably should have complained, but I think the world's better off with her behind the register at a B&N than going back to childhood development!
What a strange thing to happen. All I wanted was a magazine!