During my university years, I worked a few different types of employment. One of these types of employment during that time of my life, I worked selling markers and monuments you purchase to be the marker you have at a cemetery. True, in theory you only have one grave marker because you only have one grave. Still, you really do not have people really interested or really engaged with the only grave marker your going to have for decades and centuries down the history of time. For a vast amount of people, they spend a great amount of time and energy, debate with themselves, debate with family members, make plans for purchasing groceries, make plans for producing the dinner -- and this is a Thanksgiving dinner. The plans and planning for a Thanksgiving dinner, have more people engaged with this activity than making plans and planning of grave markers and monuments -- were grave makers will be around decades and centuries.
Still, the family lack of interest and general dislike to purchase, but feeling a moral and ethical duty to do so does have a interested impact of selling the products. What was a bit morbid with this type of employment, I had to park my car next to burial vaults. Plus, we also did cremations. So, my office was less than 150 feet from someone being cremated. The real problem was, it was the way the building floor plan was designed. Were people were being cremated and the sale floor, was divided with a wall but the wall was around 80% glass. So you can be on the sales floor selling grave markers and monuments, and look at someone being cremated at the same time.
One day I had a woman and her daughter who was around 10 years old. I was making headway of selling a single grave marker when her daughter came to her mother and asked a question. "Mom, what are they doing with that naked woman?" On the other side, they were bringing in a woman to be cremated. The mother looked what was happening, she grabbed her daughter, and I lost a sale.
Still, the family lack of interest and general dislike to purchase, but feeling a moral and ethical duty to do so does have a interested impact of selling the products. What was a bit morbid with this type of employment, I had to park my car next to burial vaults. Plus, we also did cremations. So, my office was less than 150 feet from someone being cremated. The real problem was, it was the way the building floor plan was designed. Were people were being cremated and the sale floor, was divided with a wall but the wall was around 80% glass. So you can be on the sales floor selling grave markers and monuments, and look at someone being cremated at the same time.
One day I had a woman and her daughter who was around 10 years old. I was making headway of selling a single grave marker when her daughter came to her mother and asked a question. "Mom, what are they doing with that naked woman?" On the other side, they were bringing in a woman to be cremated. The mother looked what was happening, she grabbed her daughter, and I lost a sale.