Auf Wiedersehen, Good night, Peace Out!
Sadly, Maggie’s need for balance in her life means saying goodbye to her Maggie Rants blog.
I think by far the most challenging aspect of my job is the personal interaction required. My job is not merely comprised of the physical act of performing services, but complicated by the need to effectively

I think by far the most challenging aspect of my job is the personal interaction required. My job is not merely comprised of the physical act of performing services, but complicated by the need to effectively communicate with people. I have to understand what they are asking for — which often requires translating what they ask for into what they want. Once I’ve managed to find the wavelength that each client operates on, and feel relatively confident that I understand what they expect from their actual service from me, I then have to find the right wavelength to converse with them.
This means that on any given day I have to play Zelig to six to 12 different personality types that parade through my life.
At least I have my little solo studio now, leaving me to deal with only — usually — one personality at a time to bend and shape myself to. But doing the chameleon act several times a day can be exhausting. Especially since it’s not as simple as putting on a smile for a stranger who will be gone in five minutes — like the incredibly cheerful folks manning the local Starbucks drive-thru. No, I have to sit face to face and hold hands with each individual.
This leads to a very intimate type of interaction. I get to know each person, and they get to know me. I’m sure they often feel they get to know too much about me. I assure you that I often get to know too much about them. It’s like some sort of long, slow Vulcan mind-meld.
For the most part, I genuinely appreciate the experience. I think that human contact is important for people. I’m glad to be able to offer my clients a hand to hold (literally) and a patient, non-judgmental (I truly do my best on that) ear, balanced with honest input. And I think that, in the long run, I am a better person for all the people who have bent that ear and given me personal insight into perspectives and belief systems that might have otherwise gone unappreciated by my personal experiences and background.
But some days require shifting between so many different ideologies, it can get a little dizzying and downright exhausting.
At this point, I wouldn’t be able to tell if I’m schizophrenic. With a job like this, who can tell who the voices in my head belong to at the end of the day?
Sadly, Maggie’s need for balance in her life means saying goodbye to her Maggie Rants blog.
Maggie recalls the time she tried to figure out how to dispose of her salon chemicals.
With a vacation approaching, Maggie can’t wait to put some distance between herself and the drama of the salon.
Maggie doesn’t hesitate to confront clients about past sins.
How sick is too sick for a nail appointment?
Maggie is fed up with clients who won’t get off the phone.
Maggie needs to remind herself that she has options.
Maggie is trading in one writing genre for another.
Maggie knows too much about sanitation to get excited about a strange Jacuzzi tub.
Maggie is no longer certain nails are in her long-term future.
Maggie is learning about the downside of success — scheduling is a nightmare.
Maggie contemplates the limits of her charitable impulses.
Maggie is not too keen on clients bringing in their own nail supplies.
Just because Maggie isn’t with a client doesn’t mean she’s not working.
Twenty-two years of doing nails takes a toll on the hands.
Maggie doesn’t want her product reps dropping by.
Maggie enjoys other people’s drama — up to a point.