Monday, November 19, 2012

My Sweet Addiction



This opens with Haiku:
Drink every day; evening too.  Sweet spring never ending. That’s my Dunkin.
I love Dunkin Donuts.  Where I live we have six within four miles of home. However, I use the Broad Street Dunkin every day. Sometimes at the drive up, a voice asks, “Welcome! What can I get for you today?”  As usual, I say, “Yes, please, one medium coffee, cream and ….” Then the voice cuts me off and says, “and two Sweet & Low. Pull around please!”  At 4 am, my first coffee of the day, my buddy,  Meena, who’s originally from Egypt, is behind the counter. He doesn’t even let me get that far before he says “Pull around!” Sometimes he even gives me a free donut, and even though it may be a little stale, I always thank him profusely. I like going to a place where they know you and what you like. It reminds me of the Broad Street Diner a block away, where I have breakfast every morning around 6:30. As soon as I sit down, Julio, Dottie or Melanie will bring me my small orange juice and coffee without asking, then take my order. Cheers never had it so good, and it’s a lot cheaper than alcohol.
There are roughly 30 Dunkin outlets in the Mercer County area.  Three are in the Princeton area; and one at the Princeton Shopping Center on Harrison. That’s the closest one to center-city Princeton. However, there’s plenty of other coffee shops like Small World Coffee on Nassau. But that’s not Dunkin. There’s one on US 1 at the Carnegie Center also. This compares to four in Lawrenceville, and a whopping 15 practically within Trenton city limits. I don’t know about you, but they must be doing pretty well financially, ‘cause I’m always in line with other cars when I’m there, unless it’s the early morning hours. Three of these Dunkin's have Wi-Fi, and I can see that as a fast growing trend. Almost all open at 5 am unless they open 7/24. There’s no question I’d open a franchise, but the Dunkin website says I’d need $150,000 in liquid assets, and I just don’t have that laying around right now. Otherwise, I’d do it in a minute.
You can see I'm loyal. For the past two years, I've used my DD Perks Reward Card when buying stuff at Dunkin.  It’s easy to refill the card by logging on to Dunkin’s website, clicking Manage Cards, selecting the amount, and hitting Confirm. My credit card is charged automatically, and I’m good to go for another week or so for each $25 I put on. I’ve found that by using the DD card, I'm able to cut down on tips quite a bit.  However, I leave a dollar occasionally to compensate, which always gets another smile. After Janet started seeing the monthly Dunkin bills consistently, she asked me for her own Dunkin card, which was easy to get online.  She loves their Coffee Coolattas with low fat milk. Ugh! although I do like their regular Coolattas, especially with whip cream. The whipped cream is the best part for Janet.  Also, we can’t overspend our DD cards because they’re debit cards, which is a nice protection from my excesses. Plus, we always know our balance after each purchase, which is printed on the receipt.
Besides Dunkin coffee and other goodies, particularly their Everything bagels, I also love their receipts. And you should too! The receipt says “Go to www.telldunkin.com.”  You’d be doing yourself a favor if you did, especially if you like their donuts! An $.89 value, and tasty one at that, for free! (Before September 2012 - now you have to buy a coffee first.) Just take the online survey rating your recent experience there. It’s 21 simple questions. I’ve done this probably 50 times, and the donuts taste much better! It only takes two minutes per survey. For Frequency of Visits, I always answer seven times a week or more, but that doesn’t really matter. At the end of the survey you get a validation code. Just write it on the receipt, order your (coffee and) donut next time you go, hand in the receipt, and enjoy your favorite. I love Boston Crème, just like the Boston Crème pies I enjoyed as a kid. I’ve even handed out a dozen free donut receipts to my memoir classmates!
Finally, going to Dunkin has another advantage, especially at my age. Actually, any Senior,  55 or older, gets this benefit in addition to good taste and free donuts. All you have to do, at most Dunkin stores, is ask for the Senior Discount when you order. Immediately, 10% gets subtracted from your bill! I really like that benefit. For me, it offsets anything I may give in tips, plus some. For you, you may just find that you enjoy Dunkin that much more.
So what are you drinkin’? That expensive, bitter, Starbucks stuff? Dunkin is half that price. And I really enjoy their Donut Shop coffee taste. Fresh every day, Dunkin is my sweet addiction.

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Welcome to A Blessed Life in America!

Hi, my name's Rod and I love writing, especially memoir. Are you writing or have you written your memoir? If so I'd love to hear from you. I also love America. I'm biased of course, having been born here, but we all love our own country, right? And even though I'm a naturalized U.S. citizen (but who cares as long as your a citizen somewhere), I consider myself a citizen of the world as well. Do you? We can debate the relative benefits of citizenship and countries in future blogs. Let's just say, I'm extremely blessed and always have been. Every one deserves world citizenship and a happy, safe and wealthy life.

I am a technical writer by profession, boring procurement stuff like Requests for Proposals, i.e. bid documents, that were sent to potential bidders who sent back their sometimes low ball, sometimes just right, and sometimes outrageous bids, then I helped evaluate and award them. Among a lot of other dull procurement duties were buying hardware and software, services, and energy. But I loved it all, especially the writing part, and now with free blogs, I can write what I want, again publicly. Only this time its whatever I want to write, and not what the State of New Jersey needs or wants. I did their procurement and contracting writing stuff for over thirty years, and, like I said, I loved it. The best part of that of course was that I had a good paying job for thirty years plus.

Now I'm happily retired, not young but still young enough, and my mental faculties are all there, just slowing gradually. I'm accompanied by my wife of over 40 years, my beloved redhead Janet, who retired in 2011 after teaching elementary school for twenty-five years. She is still just as energetic as the day we had our hippie wedding outside, and is a fount of enthusiasm, creativity and information. I say all this because I wasn't ready to retire in 2008 when the State offered its buy-out package. But it was so good, I couldn't pass it up, and reluctantly left after an eight month extension. And because of the poor economy, my slot didn't open up to a younger worker, or any slots for that matter. Still haven't (2012). That's sad because the State of New Jersey, like all states, needs all the help it can get.
I won't bore you with life details here; at 62 my autobiography is now over 400 pages, and needs to be cut drastically -- so I'm working on that.

So I'm hoping to be open and just share - thoughts, opinions, emotions and personal insights, and would love to hear yours. You might also try my other blog Good Ideas for NJ, also on Blogger. That's a little more established than this new one.

Oh, and did I mention I have a blessed life? I'm thankful for that and I would have to admit that I could die any day, and be joyful about it -- but that's a new post.