‘The Horrors of Kwiksave’ is a candid recollection of my memories working at Kwiksave (the now-defunct discount supermarket chain) as a 'Stock Lad'.
I wasted over FOUR years of my life in this maggot-infested hellhole and still occasionally wake up drenched in sweat after enduring a nightmare in which I am working there still.
Some of the names have been slightly changed simply to save my arse in case anyone takes offence at some of the details regarding my facts or opinions.
Many of the people mentioned are now dead as this happened so long ago, but their siblings are not.
This is the 'HIVE Special Edition' of a multi-part autobiographical story (with a little over-embellishment on some of the details) I posted on STEEM over 2 years ago.
It contains a LOT more detail and content than the original and will fill in many gaps that were missed the first time around.
Chapter One: A Prelude to the Best Job in the Land
Chapter Two: The Job Centre
Chapter Three: The Interview
Chapter Four: Christmas is Coming
Chapter Five: The Changing of the Blades
Chapter Six: The Staff
Chapter Seven: The Auxiliary Staff and The Load
Chapter Eight: The Sugar Maniac
'WARNING: BAD LANGUAGE BELOW'
The life of a stock lad was hard manual labour and that created a voracious appetite. I was hungry all the time, and being paid £40 a week was not cutting it.
My parents were being completely unreasonable and since I started work they were demanding something called ‘board’.
I had to give them around £5 a week for food, lodgings, and for them to keep me in clean knickers. It was fucking outrageous, but they wouldn’t listen to reason.
At the time I was spending my entire wage on records, so had little left for work-time food, and why spend when you can eat for free?
The back shop was used to store ‘damages'. Damages were damaged goods. Smashed jars of jam, opened packets of biscuits, out of date Mr. Kipling cakes, packs of sugar that had been slashed open… you get the picture?
I was warned early in my Kwiksave career by Carrot, not to eat damages as being caught would result in instant dismissal.
During the summer months, these damages started to stink very quickly, with maggots springing from them and countless fruit flies buzzing around everywhere.
I wouldn’t want to eat this stuff, lest I end up in hospital with salmonella or worse. It was a collective mess of sticky boxes and taken away by "The Load" on an intermittent basis.
There was also a walk-in fridge that contained the overspill stock of pies, pasties, cheese, yoghurts and basically any other perishable foods.
I took some incredible risks sneaking in the fridge to snaffle a pastie on quite a regular basis which became my mid-morning snack.
If Mort had walked in I would have been caught red-handed, and that would have been curtains to my illustrious Kwiksave career.
The lesson from Asda had still not been learned at this point.
Mort used to offer to sell me out of date cakes for a few pence lower than the original value. I did buy them sometimes, but I can’t quite shake the feeling that the miserable bastard just pocketed the money himself.
As well as regular goods deliveries, frozen goods were part of the stock at Kwiksave. They arrived in a separate consignment.
Handling large boxes of frozen goods is not fun at all. For example, a box of frozen peas contains around 24 large packets of the goods and a load of ice which makes them solid and heavy.
Unlike most other goods, the frozen goods were not kept in boxes, they had to be emptied and placed in nice piles so the customers could access them easily.
Without any gloves, I was expected to empty a full pallet of frozen goods into one of around 12 large chest freezers on the shop floor.
I hated this job, my hands went numb, turning first red and then blue.
Mort kept well away from the freezer goods as that would have meant work. On the positive side, I didn't have him loitering around me, to ensure I was 'working hard enough'.
The excess items had to be stored in a walk in-freezer next to Sid’s place. It was a lit room and could be locked from the outside quite easily resulting in a slow death over time.
It didn’t cross my mind at that age, but the me of now thinks that Mort could have easily murdered me at any time knowing I was in there freezing my bollocks off every week.
Worst of all was the Sugar delivery. I used to literally shake with fear and dread when Mort called to me, “Sugar delivery…, get on with it now", in his customary curt manner.
Unlike the ‘Load’, the one with ‘Kwiksave’ written on the side, the sugar truck was an independent operator and delivered by a driver from the depths of hell.
Most delivery vehicles have a platform; you place the pallet full of goods onto the platform, the driver presses a button and the hydraulic vehicle loading platform goes up or down.
Not so with the sugar truck. This vehicle even by standards of 1981 was positively ancient and did not possess a loading platform.
Sugar is packed into thick brown paper for transportation. In this paper there are 24 x 1kg bags, so that’s 24kg per brown bag.
I am quite sure Mort and sugarbloke had some deal going as I caught them both whispering more than once.
‘Here’s a quid, throw those bags hard…’
sugarbloke was some kind of hellish psychopath and relentlessly threw these 24 bags pack bags of sugar at high speed while humming "Sugar, Sugar", the 1969 lovey-dovey song by The Archies; I was dealing with a maniac.
60 bags later, I was bruised and red-faced with the sheer effort needed to keep up with singing grinning sugarbloke who would every now and again chime in…
“Come on wimp, it’s not that bad… here.. CATCH.”
My arms and chest got a weekly ritual bruising due to that fucker and his 'deal with Mort'.
Mort was not going to murder me in the freezers; he wanted to torment me, for as long as humanly possible.
To be continued...
Cover Picture is a combination of free sources from here and here, combined and edited with Luminar 4. Any unsourced images are my own.
Ah I remember those times well!
I started work at the other end of the 80's and I too spent all of my meagre wages on records and tapes BUT I decided to go direct to the source and took a position with W.H. Smith, my reason, ah that's simple, to get the staff discount on my music 'habit', thus maximising my impressive music collection as I traded away an ever increasing, unfathomable number of hours of my precious youth.
In a later job where I worked 12 hour nightshifts at £1.73 per hour, in a bakery that supplied bread buns to 'Kwik Save style' emporiums of quality goods, (no worry about M&S audits in that hell-hole), I also worked with a 'Mort' literally what he was known as. He too enjoyed nothing more than a little schadenfreude at the expense of the younger lads.
The good thing about Kwik Save back in the day, (albeit from the other side of the curtain) is that you could buy 12 trolleys of shopping for your Christmas big shop for about £30. Yes some of the origins of the produce shall forever remain a mystery, I imagine that's probably for the best but yup when shopping on a budget which I always seemed to be back then it was cheap and had the added bonus of introducing you to some elements of society with whom you would normally not get to cross paths with, rather like a zoo with 19 aisles of pot noodle in the middle.
Sadly I have found myself on the darker side of my 40's working in enormous freezers handling 20kg bags and boxes of wholesale produce, I wholeheartedly and quite categorically sympathise. I like to think those early days in the world of work shape us, build character and teach us independence, although delving in to my own memories after this hugely entertaining, hysterical and at times painfully real read ...
I wonder, did they just leave us with mental scars that we bury beneath layers of comedy, embellishment, and alcohol, and an ever-present dread, we are ever forced to go back?
Awesome read :)
Thanks for the comment!
WH Smug and Sons, I call them.. much to the annoyance of my daughter. It's a term from the 80's which stuck with me.
£1.73 an hour sounds like an awesome rate, almost twice what I got at Kwiksave.
I hope they were better to work for than Kwiksave. I bought many a computer tape from there, and had several arguments when I tried to return them (after ripping them off) for a refund hehe..
Lugging freezer food around in your forties sounds like a nightmare. I was young and fit then, I wouldn't like to do it now.
I doubt that in a shitty shop like Kwiksave they would sell these wonderfully looking French jam jars!
I'm restricted to using free to use images and this french one fitted the bill.
Jam like that didn't exist then with all the fancy packaging. I can't quite recall the brand they bought, it was in a squarish jar, with thin glass that broke too often.
Sometimes it would arrive broken, as it was stacked up to the hilt on pallets. Bad for me, who always had to clean the mess up.
😂 i remember the sugar load well. tbh i used to stack it myself on occasions, kept me fit. stacked like building with lego, bastard to pull a pallet full in the wet and snow, happy days.
all those breakages segregated in washing powder boxes in an upturned pallet,memories i thought i'd forgotten.
the bread fiddle the yoghurt fiddle, omg. keep sparking my memories !
A Kwiksave manager who did work, impossible! To be fair, there were a few later in my sorry tale that were not tyrants, though it was a rare encounter.
Yes, the upturned powder boxes with damages, I see it was the same in Wales. Nobody wanted to go close to the damages, and pasties in fridges were meant to be eaten by stock lads!
mort has tainted the world 😂
Sugar Sugar! You are my candy girl! :P
Man, this job sounds like it really sucked HUGE balls. I'm glad he didn't murder you - probably because there wasn't a camera in the fridge so he could watch you suffer on film for days on end while diddling himself. But either way, it works out. :P
Thanks for sharing! :) Glad I read.
This was way before camera's, even Mort had a little common sense and knew murder was not an option!
Lol. I know all about the shit that goes on in the back. I know most of the damages is covered by insurance and is expected. A shitty job for anyone but then someone has to do it. I can picture you scoffing the pasties leaving no evidence.
These were tense times, the pastie needed to disappear extremely quickly, the wrapper in my pocket. I never got caught and devoured many a savoury treat.
I bet you did lol. I had a team member who I was in charge off flatten a large box of Ferrero Rocher chocolates on top of a mezzanine out of sight of the security cameras. We only realised when he was nearly finished and had to hide the evidence.
I'm truly loving this. Your:
Reminded me of my time in the NHS. I had the lofty title of Deputy Assistant Portering Services Manager. (Shades of David Brent and - The Office) one of the joys of being able to delegate tasks was the allocation of the job L&R (Laundry and Rubbish). I would look round a room full of Porters all attempting to be invisible by looking away or burying their heads in betting slips and newspapers I would pick between two and four victims "Dave, John, Steve, Bev. L&R" four revenge assassins would shuffle out the room planing a horrible death for me on my way home in the dark. LOLYou technically should not be alive, if there were 4 they could have conspired to torture you or worse! With me, it was just me and him.. at least for the moment. Things were to change soon.
image source
Nature and Behaviour of hands changes after so much Heavyweight work.@slobberchops,
Some experiences are unforgettable and they always stay with us like a Nightmare.
Have a pleasant time ahead and stay blessed always.
It was a nightmare, almost 40 years ago.. and I can bring up all these details. Such things do not leave the mind easily.
Have a pleasant time ahead.
I was lucky enough to not be charged any of that by my parents. I pretty much blew my money on random worthless stuff as well... Not that records are worthless, but you know what I am saying. I hated when we got a new shipment in at Radio Shack. My pasties from the UP looked much better than those. Gotta love those Cornish Miners!
Records were great then, I had hundreds and wasted all my cash on them! I failed to find any pasties in the US, but we've been here before!
I'm amazed you stuck it out for so long. I can imagine filling the freezers without gloves was hellish, but having sacks of sugar chucked at you is just sadistic. Still, you turned out a well-balanced individual.
I had little choice, no qualifications, left school with technically a single 'O' level in Maths and that was a CSE Grade 1. Fired from Asda.., where else could I go besides those horrible factories?
It took a long time to heal the scars of my teenage and early working years. @bingbabe is working in Morribobs now and from what she tells me, things haven't improved much and the employees still live under a cloud of tyranny.
I ate a Cornish Pasty once. In St. Austell no less.
My stomach did not like it.
That should theoretically be the place to buy and consume. You can get them anywhere in the UK, they are a popular lunch time snack. Your body isn't accustomed to them?
Yeah, I had trouble with them for some strange reason.
Maybe it was just bad luck.
I remember being forced to pay dig money. I was furious too, how dare they try and skim off my take!!!
I worked in a timber mill and in there moved to the transport dept and found a high percentage of the drivers to be absolutely fucking psychotic!!
It was most unfair, we should be able to live there forever, for FREEE!!!
I know. Everything free!! Food, washing you name it! The true glory days!
Now there's some classic music. Uuuuugggghhhh
Did I ever tell you that my HS principal (and football coach) had the nickname Mort? It WAS NOT a term of endearment.
At least my Mort was reasonably fair and lighthearted when he spread his shit around.
You can't get any more sugary than that song, yeuch.. as you say!
reminds me of one of my first jobs at the tender age of 16 unloading 50kg sacks of rice for tilda rice from containers. The cheeky fuckers would ask us to work cash in hand (not telling the agency) on a weekend. They used to pay us piece work cash in hand per palet and then get annoyed that we did loads more work than when we rocked up for the agency. We just laughed and said well tell the agency we work much harder cash in hand ahhh you can't can you!
Very nice post. love to read your post. this is for you
I am scared if that situation happens with me in the freezer how the feeling. I feel so cold since I am from the southern part of India.
Thanks for sharing
Old Life was never a reality, it feels like mere a Past Illusion.@slobberchops, Sometimes we feel that
In my opinion sometimes it feels like in this Lifetime we are living different Realities.
Good wishes from my side and stay blessed always.
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