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Last week I ate at Golden Corral because I felt like having a salad (plus I’ve been fighting a little case of gout and staying away from red meat, ugh, sucks getting old). I was nearby, and it was convenient.
Sometimes, it’s hard to find a decent salad the way you want it without having to modify everything. It’s fresh, and the variety is endless.
What’s nice about Golden Corral’s salad bar is you can customize it any way you want, plus get super creative on toppings that you wouldn’t typically think of, including fried okra, stuffing, fried fish, deep-fried breaded shrimp, meatloaf, hot dogs, ice cream, just to name a few.
Anyways, I watched a couple finish their meal the way people from here often do, without ceremony, without fuss, just a quiet stacking of plates and a gathering of napkins into a tidy bundle. No rush. No performance. Just a small act of order before stepping back into the cold.
It reminded me of the days that I spent bussing tables and washing dishes at Mark Pi’s. That job taught me the weight of work that rarely gets thanked — the bending, the wiping, the lifting, the endless parade of small messes that keep a place running.
Some tables left behind a storm. Others left behind a whisper. And the difference was never about class. It was about memory.
People who’ve worked in service carry a kind of knowing in their bones. A double shift in your past changes the way your hands move in the present. Your body remembers the ache of a tray balanced too long, the sweet and sour sauce hardened on a plate, the relief when someone, anyone, made your job a little easier.
In Mansfield, that memory runs deep. This is a town built by hands that have done the work.
I see the same thing pretty much everywhere I go…
- Retail workers folding and refolding and refolding shirts.
- The grocery store workers that restock the shelves perfectly conditioned like a wall.
- Custodians with their cute miniature lobby dust pans and kid-sized broom sweeping up trash and cigarette butts.
- The janitors who make the schools shine before sunrise.
- Fast-food workers cleaning up spills.
- The street department heroes who plow and salt our streets overnight so we can get to work the next morning.
- The Carrousel staff wiping down the figures without being asked because they understood the invisible choreography of keeping a space ready for the next kid.
Once you’ve done the work, you see the work. And once you’ve carried someone else’s burden, adding to it feels wrong in a way you can’t quite explain.
We are full of invisible labor. Most people move through these spaces without thinking about the hands that keep them whole. But those who’ve done these jobs can’t unsee the effort. They know every abandoned mess is time from someone’s day, strain on someone’s back, a sigh that didn’t need to happen.
This isn’t about being a good person or a bad one. Plenty of kind people leave messy tables, etc. Plenty of annoying, difficult people tidy up.
But these small gestures reveal something about how we move through the world … whether we notice the quiet work that holds our lives together. And what’s beautiful is how this awareness spills into other corners of life. People who stack plates tend to be the same ones who return shopping carts, who hold doors a beat longer, who pick up stray litter. Not for praise. Not for points. Just because not doing it feels off.
We all have blind spots, of course. The executive who tidies a restaurant table might overlook the emotional labor their assistant carries. The considerate diner might be impatient with a customer service rep. Awareness is uneven. That’s part of being human.
But next time you eat out, notice your instinct when you’re done. Do you start organizing things? Do you leave everything as it is? Neither choice defines you. But it might whisper something about the life you’ve lived.
And if you’ve never worked in service, here’s the simplest truth: Someone will clear your table. Someone with a name, a story, a tired back, a long night ahead. A small act of consideration can shift the weight of their day in ways you’ll never see.
For those who stack plates without thinking, you already know why. You remember the rush of a slammed dining room, the heaviness of a tray, the gratitude for every table that made your night a little easier. That memory lives in your hands now, guiding them into small rituals of respect for work that too often goes unseen.
In a town like Mansfield, where labor has always been the language of love, these gestures aren’t small at all. They’re how we say: I see you. I remember. I won’t make your load heavier than it has to be.
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