As I suspected when I started this blog back in the summer, the quantity of smiles one gets during one's day greatly reduces as does the light and temperature.
With the grey, wet weather we've had this winter, I can't say I'm coming across as many smiles as I was back in July and August however, that does however mean the ones I am seeing, are all the more lovely for the sparsity.
Tuesday, 21st, (January), all too quick to get a photograph or a name, I'd like to give a nice thumbs up to the female bus driver of the number 13 who stopped and waited on the Llanvanor Road stop on Finchley Road for the lady running to catch it in the morning .
The other Tuesday thumbs up goes to Richard, a waiter in Carluccio's in St. John's Wood. Although there were some problems with our order; our wine wasn't available, we didn't order the lemon Pelegrino or the tomato pasta, Richard made us laugh and feel like important patrons. Thank you Richard, and a thumbs up .
In light of this blog, I am also taking the 100 Happy Days Challenge - if you don't know about this, check out http://100happydays.com and the hashtag #100HappyDays on twitter, instagram and other social media sites. The challenge is to yourself - no one else - to try and find something that makes you happy in your day for 100 consecutive days. It can be a puppy wagging it's tail, a good coffee, a smile at a bus stop, whatever it is, big or small, try and remember it and "log" it. Take the challenge!
So move forward a week, the weather is even worse with miserable cold rain everywhere, (although I shouldn't complain thinking about all the flooding in Somerset and surrounding areas, those poor people www.bbc.co.uk/news/), and a friend, the lovely Lauren from St. John & St. Elizabeth Hospital, and I are on the top deck - best seat in the house at the front - of a 139 bus in the West End on our way to see The Book of Mormon. We're stuck in traffic on Oxford Street and on the bus in front we can see two inspectors really checking an empty top deck; under and behind the seats.
Lauren and I are chatting away, looking at the Christmas decorations, (still up), when suddenly right beside us are the inspectors from the bus in front.
Now this guy, who wasn't allowed to give us his name, couldn't have been more fun or nicer on a dark, wet, Monday night in January. Regent Street seemed to just whizz by. So Mr. Inspector, a thumbs up from us for the banter, thanks.
Another bus thumbs up ; this time to the driver of a 460 (unnamed/unphotographed - to protect the innocent) who allowed me to travel two stops without my pass and without paying as I was accompanying my mother. Thank you, that was a lovely gesture.
But it isn't all thumbs up to bus personnel this post: two thumbs down: Monday, 20th January, the bus driver who was at the stop outside Holland & Barrett in Swiss Cottage and knew I was there, that I knocked on the doors and said excuse me but still decided not to reopen the doors and drove off and also to a restaurant manager that when I told him we had a reservation, didn't look at us or smile, but instead answered a phone, walked off at the same time to adjust a pastry plate, carried on talking on the 'phone and the most we got was a raised finger . You guys know who are you.
Now, you must be getting a bit bored of my voice by now so why don't you send us your guest post, (details on how below), and use this blog as your opportunity to say thank you to someone who made you smile, or something else?
PROMOTING THE POSITIVE We name the good so others will know them while alluding to the bad so they'll recognise themselves
Showing posts with label St. John's Wood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label St. John's Wood. Show all posts
Sunday, 6 April 2014
Wednesday, 21 August 2013
service with a smile
London is bathed in sunshine and it is definitely making a difference not only to my mood, but others too. I just hope that this feeling I have had since starting this blog of seeing the good continues once the grey returns.
Staying on seeing the good and the positive, it is most definitely continuing at the moment and I feel like I could almost post daily, which is really weird. Londoners are meant to be surly and people are supposed to be miserable in their jobs, according to the press, but all I keep seeing is people smiling and giving that extra something.
Today a British Gas Service Engineer came to the house. We'd made an appointment, managed to narrow it down from a 12:00 to 6:00 slot to a specified two hour slot. Now, I don't have to tell you that this waiting in for a service engineer, particularly for the utilities, is normally a groan making event; we wait in for hours, they do or don't come, then there might be some sucking in of the breath between the teeth over the issue. Not today.
I was telephoned by the engineer to let me know that he was on his way and would be with me within 15 minutes. This was within my two hour prescribed slot. Already I was in pleasant shock.
Devene arrived, and as you can see from his picture, he arrived with a smile. He was polite, efficient, knew his stuff, (and some other stuff too), and with a smile was off again.
So, Devene, from us, thank you and you get a thumbs up .
And while I'm on a little "thank you" jag, I want to say thank you (not in any particular order) to the helpful folk at Myeloma UK http://www.myeloma.org.uk/, the lovely people in reception at Volvo Cars Central London (Swiss Cottage really), NW3 http://www.volvocarslondon.co.uk/contact-us/11/volvo-cars-central-london-aftersales, the helpful people I spoke to for general advice at Get Private www.getprivate.com NW3, St. John's Wood Medical Practice http://www.stjohnswood.nhs.uk/ NW8 for their continuing care and attention to my mother. the really nice and jolly (tall) guy on the till at BP Connect Fuel Garage, Finchley Road, NW3, the nice gentleman at Vistaprint I spoke to on the 19th who is getting married on the 24th (an additional thank you and good luck to him) and to the giggly manager (?) at the Cancer Research Shop in St. John's Wood High Street http://stjohnswoodhighstreet.com/charity-shop/ NW8. Thank you all and thumbs up -
Staying on seeing the good and the positive, it is most definitely continuing at the moment and I feel like I could almost post daily, which is really weird. Londoners are meant to be surly and people are supposed to be miserable in their jobs, according to the press, but all I keep seeing is people smiling and giving that extra something.
Today a British Gas Service Engineer came to the house. We'd made an appointment, managed to narrow it down from a 12:00 to 6:00 slot to a specified two hour slot. Now, I don't have to tell you that this waiting in for a service engineer, particularly for the utilities, is normally a groan making event; we wait in for hours, they do or don't come, then there might be some sucking in of the breath between the teeth over the issue. Not today.
I was telephoned by the engineer to let me know that he was on his way and would be with me within 15 minutes. This was within my two hour prescribed slot. Already I was in pleasant shock.
Devene arrived, and as you can see from his picture, he arrived with a smile. He was polite, efficient, knew his stuff, (and some other stuff too), and with a smile was off again.
So, Devene, from us, thank you and you get a thumbs up .
And while I'm on a little "thank you" jag, I want to say thank you (not in any particular order) to the helpful folk at Myeloma UK http://www.myeloma.org.uk/, the lovely people in reception at Volvo Cars Central London (Swiss Cottage really), NW3 http://www.volvocarslondon.co.uk/contact-us/11/volvo-cars-central-london-aftersales, the helpful people I spoke to for general advice at Get Private www.getprivate.com NW3, St. John's Wood Medical Practice http://www.stjohnswood.nhs.uk/ NW8 for their continuing care and attention to my mother. the really nice and jolly (tall) guy on the till at BP Connect Fuel Garage, Finchley Road, NW3, the nice gentleman at Vistaprint I spoke to on the 19th who is getting married on the 24th (an additional thank you and good luck to him) and to the giggly manager (?) at the Cancer Research Shop in St. John's Wood High Street http://stjohnswoodhighstreet.com/charity-shop/ NW8. Thank you all and thumbs up -
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