Updated!

I'm blogging more regularly on the Pizza for Good book blog these days, but I have made a number of tweaks under the hood of WillPollock.com:


Hope you enjoy! Feedback welcome.
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Linda Ellis' Poem 'The Dash'

In 2009, my blog incorrectly posted a copy of "The Dash" by Linda Ellis. We attributed it to her, and linked back to the poem—and the context was indicated that WP.com nor any affiliates own that poem.

The post was intended as a personal account of a visit I had to the Spiritual Living Center in Atlanta, where the poem was read aloud. I was in no way claiming ownership of it.
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Despite Earlier Snark, I'm Excited for 'Star Wars'

I had some choice words for Abrams after he agreed to take on both Star Wars AND Star Trek. Now that he’s not directing ST III, I can focus on being stoked for this:

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Blogging @ Pizza for Good & ARTvision for the rest of 2014

I won’t be posting much to this blog page for the rest of the year. So make sure to jump over to these links:

Pizza for Good by Will Pollock
ARTvision Atlanta to benefit Positive Impact.

Hope you have a wonderful holiday season!
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Whole Foods: 'What Do You Need' vs. 'How Can I Help?'



I recently posted
a review of Whole Foods on my Yelp! page that got some buzz on Facebook, so I decided to post it here, too. There is a good lesson in customer care that all retail places can learn from. The review follows in full below—you can also see and interact with it on the Yelp website.



Whole Foods is really not a place where one goes as a "need." Can we agree on that? Judging by other reviews of this location, everyone raves about the products and selection (accurate), but laments about the prices--also true, but its in-house brands are usually cheaper.

I wrote a line on my joke page, and I think it actually came true recently: "If Whole Foods' customers don't completely crush your soul, its employees will finish the job." Although not true in all locations, THIS location--about which I've written here before--has gotten. just. terrible.

On two successive visits to Whole Foods (referred to as "Food Hole" between friends), employees asked me the "need" question. After waiting for help in the meat section a few minutes, a guy dashed over and said: "what do you need?" I was taken aback. "I don't *need anything," I said in by best Manhattan attitude. "I'd just like some chicken cutlets."

A few days later, I was in the shopping center buying dog food so I ducked in The Hole. I really like WF's in-house gelato, so I went to the counter. Nobody there. I waited. Still nobody. I finally flagged someone down and asked them if they could help me, and she said she'd get someone.

A few minutes later, a gal with an apron came up to me in a rush. She didn't go behind the counter to assist, she just walked up to me and asked, "what do you need?" "I'd just like to taste the pumpkin gelato" I said. she walked behind the counter, dug out a taste with one of those plastic dollhouse spoons and started back to what she was doing. She left the counter, even though I was ready to buy.

These two experiences culminate in a check-out experience I had last week that was, in a word, surreal. The bagger and cashier had zero interest in me, what I was buying or how it should be packed to go home. Bagger Joe was retelling a story about his girlfriend and how she wasn't behaving right and how he was gonna set it all straight later. It was one, long, sordid, misogynistic, run-on sentence. The cashier said nothing, and I'm not sure he was even listening to him. (Bagger dude started to put the frozen stuff in the not-frozen bag, so I had to interrupt him.)

Mindfulness seems to be a bragging point of Whole Foods in general, with magazines at the check-out counters that urge you to become a vegan, cross-legged Shaman who only eats hemp, lettuce and twigs with an occasional organic fennel tea. But mindfulness and courteous behavior amongst employees at this location is not there, and I'm starting to lose hope it ever will be.

Will I still go for the product selection? yes. will I be ready for the "need" question? feels like I'll always need to be ready for that.
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The Crossfit We All Know

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From 400 to 1,300: 4 Simple Rules Still Holds True

Back in 2011, I wrote a blog post because I was so stoked about reaching 400 followers. Cut to fall of 2014 and I have a new handle (@bywillpollock) and I’m up to 1,300 followers—based on a lot of research and practice and advice I’ve weaved in along the way. But it all sits on the same foundation I had back then. Click over to my op-ed section to read the post and the update. Enjoy!

Cheers to my awesome followers, and those who are still to come. Happy

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Robin Williams: A Death Hits Home


My good friend Leesa Brown has agreed to have her op-ed—originally posted to Facebook—appear on WP.com with a few enhancements. Click over to “
A Death Hits Home” for more, and here’s an excerpt:

“I honestly wish that doctors and therapists would work more on healing, and less on just slapping a bandage on something to cover it up. Medications for depression may truly help some, but too often they're just a way to shove the problem under the rug so we can pretend it doesn't exist. Building self-esteem and repairing emotional injuries would go a long way. Therapy is often a lifesaver - literally.”

I am a huge proponent and supporter of mental-health services. ARTvision has
raised more than $50,000 for Positive Impact, a critical agency that provides critical care for those affected by HIV in the Atlanta area. Leesa single-handedly earned $950 last year for PI with her piece, “Riding the Light.” We are grateful to her for that amazing donation of creativity!

Depression and other related ailments can be lessened if we look out for each other and try to get help to those who need it. As we close out 2014, please consider supporting PI and any other groups or agencies who help those suffering from depression, PTSD and other ailments.

Leesa’s personal experience is a wonderful read.
Click over now and have a look. - WP

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