Another phrase that really bugs me is when a clerk at a store says, "Have a good one!" What????? Did I hear this correctly? Is he/she saying have a good day and just being lazy and replacing the word "day" with "one" because he/she just isn't thinking? Does anyone know what this "one" is referring too? It could be "Have a good...." dinner, or drive, or time, or shopping experience, or bowel movement for that matter. Has this become the new hip way of talking?
And finally I move to my favorite phrase, "Have a GREAT day!" which is, I believe, what McDonald's trains their employees to say at the end of every transaction. I get really tired of this phrase. Maybe it is because I drink Diet Coke from McDonald's far too frequently. When I am in the charitable mood, I simply say back, "Thanks, you too." And we both smile at each other and I screech away. But most of the time I am in the rushed-get-me-out-of-here-mood so I say, "I will, thanks." I look at those two statements in print and realize that they are profoundly different. One gives back to the worker; the other just leaves them hanging. I guess the second one is a tad bit rude? After all, they have just provided me with a very lovely $1.37 medium Diet Coke that will give me energy for the rest of the day!
So this week, I am going to mix it up a bit! Because I prefer to live on the edge and be different! When someone says, "Have a great day" to me I am simply going to reply "Actually, that's not the kind of day I had planned." And then stare at them with no smile and a blank stare.....it should be shockingly fun!
So my 4 faithful readers (welcome Amber!): "Have a GREAT day!".
3 comments:
I'm looking forward to seeing the reactions of the people you do this to!
Yay! I got a shout-out!
I'm pretty sure that I once read somewhere that the phrase "Have a good one" is a Michigan or a Midwestern thing. I say it a lot, actually... I like to use it at work when I don't know what time it is, eliminating the figuring-out of "Have a good afternoon/ night/ weekend" etc. Otherwise I inevitably use the wrong one. Embarrassing.
Now I know not to answer honestly when you ask how I'm doing :p
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