Author Topic: A tale for anyone who has shipped from US to Australia via USPS  (Read 828 times)

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Offline scondon

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(This was originally intended for Terry's inbox, but it got too long and he'd never read it there.)

A TRUE STORY


  I could see her there, behind the plexi-glass window. Even before I opened the front doors to push my packages through I could see her head turning to catch me with her evil squinty eyed glare. Pig Faced Demon Lady.

  As I got near the front of the line I could see her, ignoring her own customer at the window in order to push her bloated carcass a little higher so she could peer over the counter at my packages on the floor. She was not interested in any of the other 15 people in line today. She was locked in on ME and I could see her licking the taste of blood from her lips. Pig Faced Demon Lady.

  Happy indeed was I when the poor sap in front of me got called to her window. Today I would be helped by sweet old Clementina four windows down. Far, far away from..... Pig Faced Demon Lady.

   As I pushed my pile of large, yet amazingly light, boxes towards the warm glowing haven that was Clementina's domain I felt a cold chill and a dark shadow passed in the corner of my eye. I turned my head, slowly, fearful of what my mind told me I would see. At first I only saw the poor sap who had stood in front of me in line, his arms in the air and a look of bewilderment on his face, his gaze following something moving behind the counter. Something that was moving towards Clementina. Something with a cloth measuring strip in one hand, a shipping regulations book tightly clutched in the other. It was.......Pig Faced Demon Lady.

   I began to perspire and my hands shook slightly as I lifted my first box into the revolving cube cut into the plexi-glass wall that seperated me from the horror that now stood so close behind it. Suddenly it became clear to me just who the architects of this hellish space had meant to protect by installing the 2 inch thick barrier that seperated the bowels of the post office from the fresh, clean air of the lobby. The architects had intended to protect ME....from Pig Faced Demon Lady.

   As I spun the cube containing my first package I could hear the demon spew "79 INCHES" at Clementina as it waved the limp measuring strip at my box. I felt my bowels loosen as I sidestepped to the window, clenching tightly as I moved in a feeble attempt to regain control. I now stood in front of Clementina and the demon, and watched as the demon loosely applied the measuring cloth to the box I had just surrendered. The demon was gurgling out numbers that did not make sense in regards to my now helpless 20x14x14 pristine white box. "LENGTH... Twenty-wan inchessss" "GIRTH...Fiftee-nyn inchesss" "Tow-Tull....A-T inchessss" "TOO BIG, NO SHIP, 80 inchesss,79 inchesss MAXIMUM, 80 inchesss NO SHIP".

Damn You! Damn you back to the dead,festering black womb of the disease ridden she-hag monster that birthed you to ooze filth and wretched despair upon our peaceful planet. Damn you Pig Faced Demon Lady, Damn you!


   Until that moment I had not been the type of fellow who listened when people blathered about such things as divine intervention, but something happened just then that made me belive there might just be a god. No sooner had the last "NO SHIP" belched forth from the demon's lips when a loud rapping sound came from my left, four windows down. The poor sap who the demon had left so ungraciously was now banging on the plexiglass with his right hand while angrily displaying his wristwatch on his left forearm. Distracted by this new adversary that obviously needed it's blood and guts spilled upon the gray lobby floor, the demon hissed it's retreat back towards it's steaming lair. Back towards the poor sap who was yet unaware that he had just initiated his own demise at the hand, or stub, or claw of the Pig Faced Demon Lady.

   I stood for a moment, not quite sure what to do. In the previous instant I had been face to face with certain postal death and yet here I stood, still breathing, still with a fighting chance. I gathered myself as best I could and turned my attention to Clementina who had been standing there quietly the entire time. I won't say I pleaded, but I felt I did as I asked Clementina "Could you measure that again for me?  It measured 76 inches at home. All of my boxes are very close to maximum but they all measure under 79 inches".

   I held my breath as she tightly stretched the measuring cloth against my package and counted off numbers "lenght, 20 inches" "girth, 57 inches" "total, 77 inches". This last part, the "total, 77 inches" part, she spoke while turning her head in the direction of the Pig Faced Demon, shaking it imperceptively from side to side as if to say "tsk,tsk Pig Faced Demon Lady. Tsk, tsk"  God bless you, Clementina. A thousand blessings on you and your family.

   And, Clementina, a special place will always be in my heart for you, for not even bothering to measure the remaining two boxes that I shipped today. Especially the last box, the box I had purposely saved for last, the box that no matter how I wrapped the tape or squashed the edges down still came up measuring 79.5 inches. Sweet, sweet Clementina. Thank you.

   Visions of the Pig Faced Demon Lady digging through boxes after closing time, searching for my helpless pristine white boxes with a measuring tape clenched tightly against her wretched bosom still haunt me as I type this. I know victory can not be claimed until those boxes arrive safe on Terry's doorstep in Mill Park. But as I opened the door and entered the sweet Springtime air, leaving behind the confines of dark, dank Piedmont post office I found these words ushering forth from my lips, at first quietly but growing louder with each step I took away from that evil lair...

 "Eat me, Pig Faced Demon Lady, eat me. Eat me until you can eat no more and then EAT ME SOME MORE! And when your guts expand and explode and spill on the ground in steaming, fetid pools of filth and you wallow and writhe in your own ruin......eat me. Until next week when I come back with Terry's JPNS-1 seat, EAT ME!!!!!"




Terry, the stuff for paint is on it's way. :)
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Offline Terry in Australia

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Re: A tale for anyone who has shipped from US to Australia via USPS
« Reply #1 on: March 24, 2007, 10:59:26 PM »
Ha ha, that was a wonderful story Sean, I got a mental picture of that Pig Faced Lady from the pit, magnificent! With luck your paint stuff will arrive just before Ester when I'll have a few days to make a start on it, and a few other jobs I need to catch up with. It rained the last two days (more rain than we've had for the last few months) and as much as I know we need the rain, I hope it stays fine over Easter, ha ha! Cheers, Terry. ;D 
I was feeling sorry for myself because I couldn't afford new bike boots, until I met a man with no legs.

So I said, "Hey mate, you haven't got any bike boots you don't need, do you?"

"Crazy is a very misunderstood term, it's a fine line that some of us can lean over and still keep our balance" (thanks RB550Four)

Offline kghost

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Re: A tale for anyone who has shipped from US to Australia via USPS
« Reply #2 on: March 25, 2007, 12:07:55 AM »
I should write a story about the invisible bureaucratic demons that haunted the last package I sent terry.

They whisked it off to their own sweet purgatory for about 2 months.
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Offline SD750F

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Re: A tale for anyone who has shipped from US to Australia via USPS
« Reply #3 on: March 25, 2007, 08:22:33 AM »
Yes the government employees at the US Postal Service can be a strange bunch. My personal experience with them is once you learn all about the customs documents (more than they know) and have a report with them, things go a lot smoother than my personal experiences with UPS and FedEx especially when it involves international shipping.

I did have one demon faced employee who told me that my business credit card was not valid and would not accept it for payment on a Canadian shipment because the back of my card besides having my signature also stated "Check ID" printed. He said that "defaced" the credit card and I would have to have another one issued... Ah, well, NOT! You stupid *&#%#@$! Banks even suggest this to prevent card fraud! Oh well, I stepped away from the counter, and looked at another agent who I know and she processed the package that same minute... Go figure. It is a good example of what happends when little minded people are handed any bit of self assumed power...

Scott
« Last Edit: March 25, 2007, 05:30:28 PM by SD750F »

Offline scondon

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Re: A tale for anyone who has shipped from US to Australia via USPS
« Reply #4 on: March 25, 2007, 08:49:06 PM »
Ha ha, that was a wonderful story Sean, I got a mental picture of that Pig Faced Lady from the pit, magnificent! With luck your paint stuff will arrive just before Ester when I'll have a few days to make a start on it, and a few other jobs I need to catch up with. It rained the last two days (more rain than we've had for the last few months) and as much as I know we need the rain, I hope it stays fine over Easter, ha ha! Cheers, Terry. ;D 

  I won't mind a bit of "orange peel" if it means yer dingo's will have a mud puddle or two to drink out of ;)    Didn't half your country catch fire this year due to drought?  Must have been the upper half,eh :D
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Offline Terry in Australia

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Re: A tale for anyone who has shipped from US to Australia via USPS
« Reply #5 on: March 26, 2007, 02:23:25 AM »
Ha ha, that was a wonderful story Sean, I got a mental picture of that Pig Faced Lady from the pit, magnificent! With luck your paint stuff will arrive just before Ester when I'll have a few days to make a start on it, and a few other jobs I need to catch up with. It rained the last two days (more rain than we've had for the last few months) and as much as I know we need the rain, I hope it stays fine over Easter, ha ha! Cheers, Terry. ;D 

  I won't mind a bit of "orange peel" if it means yer dingo's will have a mud puddle or two to drink out of ;)    Didn't half your country catch fire this year due to drought?  Must have been the upper half,eh :D

G'Day Sean, no, we copped most of the fires this season, wiping out thousands of acres of "bush", but luckily, very few lives were lost. I think the rain we had have given our firefighters a well deserved break, we even had some American firefighters out here for a while, and we appreciated their efforts!

I've been doing my share of trying to save water by drinking as much imported beer and bourbon as I can swallow in any one sitting, and I haven't washed for so long now, my neighbours invite me to all their barbecues, just to keep the flies off the meat! Ha ha, Cheers, "El Stinko" Terry.  ;D
I was feeling sorry for myself because I couldn't afford new bike boots, until I met a man with no legs.

So I said, "Hey mate, you haven't got any bike boots you don't need, do you?"

"Crazy is a very misunderstood term, it's a fine line that some of us can lean over and still keep our balance" (thanks RB550Four)

Offline CrisPDuk

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Re: A tale for anyone who has shipped from US to Australia via USPS
« Reply #6 on: March 26, 2007, 03:07:37 AM »
They did get a bit close to the old townships this year didn't they Terry :o

Last time I was over your way, me and MrsD rented a car (Commodore obviously ;D ) and drove down from Sydney to Melbourne, cutting through the Snowy Mountains. It was about two months after that year's bush fires, and the scenery, with all the skeletal trees and blackened soil, was totally other-worldly :)

Back on topic, I can reliably inform you all that unfortunately the USPS does not have the monopoly on officious jobsworths :(
The Royal Mail back in the UK has it's fair share, especially in the Parcel Farce sector >:(
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