If we were having coffee, I would welcome you to #weekendcoffeeshare, which is hosted by the lovely Natalie of Natalie the Explorer. Let’s grab a drink and have a chat!
This will most likely be the final weekend with some decent warm weather, so let’s outside to the benches!
This week’s Harvest
I harvested these daikon radishes from the garden earlier this week, hoping to give some room for the daikon radishes to size up. For those who are not familiar with daikon, it’s a Japanese radish typically used in soups and pickles. Daikon means “Big root” in Japanese. I think you can see why, right?
They are a short season radish and will only grow after mid-summer. This vegetable is like spinach, it will only grow when the day-length is getting shorter. I grew quite a bit this year and will be pulling them out before the deep freeze.
I feel the garden is quite prepared for winter this year. I’ve ordered the proper sizes greenhouse plastic for all the beds with hoops so plants will be protected from the cold. I will be running experiment to see if I can overwinter pepper plants in the front garden with the southern exposure sun and 6-mm greenhouse plastic. Per my estimation, the temperature difference between the front and back garden can be 5-10 degrees.
Future Harvests
This weekend, I’m hoping to finally clear the sweet potatoes out of the front garden. The cold weather is supposed to be arriving on Thursday, and I’m not sure if I want to spend one of the weeknights doing such thing of harvesting sweet potatoes since quite a bit of clean up will be involved.
I also still have a cantaloupe that still need to be harvested. I’m not sure if this is fully ripened. I think I’ll try to give it until Wednesday before pulling it.
A Rant about Bias

A customer soured my mood at work this week. He demanded a call after ranting in an email ranting that someone from my team never returned his email. Well, how can we reply to an email if we never received it in the first place, I asked him on the call.
That’s when he asked, “Are you calling from a call center?”
“I’m sorry?” I said, surprised. He repeated the question, this time, slowly and enunciating each word like he was talking a deaf person. “No,” I answered.
“It sounds like you are,” he said. Why? I wanted to ask, because of my Asian accent? He wasn’t the first person to do it and most likely won’t be the last.
If there’s anything I hate the most in the world, it’s people being bias – making assumptions without getting a clear picture. That and my mom forces me to speak Chinese at home so I don’t lose my language. Unfortunately, my English-speaking skill had gone down the drain in the last few years because I don’t get to speak English anymore. So when I do speak English, my accent comes out heavier than it should be.
Nothing got resolved on the call. The guy whined about having to do everything including handing an invoice to the guy in his company that pays the bills despite me suggesting twice to add the appropriate email address to the account.
Well whatever!
Change of Title
Finally, I have a different title at work this week. There’s nothing extra that comes with this change other than a clarification of what I do now. I’m just glad I’m no longer an “Accounting Specialist” but a Billing/Accounts Payable Specialist. Everyone on the team now have an unique title.
I appreciate you stopping by. Until next we chat. 🙂



That was just so rude of him. I don’t understand how some people can be so stupid. Our accent is a part of our identity, and it is beautiful and unique.
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Men, that’s probably why. I’ve noticed a lot of men are like that, especially those with an inflated ego.
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Oh i agree 💯
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I’ll admit that I’ve sometimes asked where my call was directed, usually at the end of a call… just out of curiosity. But I always try to be courteous and thank people for their time and effort. I save the hurled insults for the automated systems that respond to issues with things like, “I’m sorry, but I can’t understand your request.” …which is usually that I really need to talk to a human.
Back in the days when I had an actual office in the vast halls of some huge mega-corporate maze, I put in for a name plate that said my name with the title of, “Surfer Girl”. Never did get it.
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I always try to remain calm until the customer service representative starts repeating the same information over and over with nothing useful to add.
Haha, name plates, those were the days. I’ve moved cubicle earlier this year and the name on my new cubicle is still my boss’s name. 😀
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Biased.
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Being a specialist anything when it comes to accounting is quite spectacular in my book.
The South African accent is the most awful one, I think, but it is what it used to. I’m sure you sound lovely.
Customers are not always nice. I always thought that the nice ones should get acknowledged somehow. A person and the door gives you a hug for being nice. I wonder how many hugs that would be a day?
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Thank you. I’ve only ever heard the South African accent a few times in movies and TV shows. It wasn’t that bad, in my opinion.
It often surprises me that the customers who are rude are emergency dispatchers who are supposed to remain calm in panicking situtations and the nice customers are administrative professional.
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Fancy that. Who would have thought.
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Wow, that customer’s attitude sucks big time. I admit I sometimes judge people based on their accents too (particularly if their accent is so heavy it makes understanding them hard for me). Then again, my spoken English is horrible too. English is my second language and not a main language here, but if it were, I’d probably be judged for having a very thick Dutch accent.
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I’ve encountered quite a few customers like that but none ever judged my accent. I don’t think I’ve ever judged a customer service representative by their accent, not to their face, and only when I’m frustrated after the call.
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