Day 2 in oaks is the first day we run the room on our own and I started to help with Michael's room because I don't have any room check out yet before 10:00am. We tried to clean everything which we realized that it is the reason slow us down; instead, we should go through the dirty places first and decided the process that normally goes with garbage --> kitchen dirty trays cleaning --> bathroom chemical spray ---> Bed Making --> Wipe everything dust free --> and go back with bathroom finish --> vacuum at the last. The first room took us over 2 hours to complete so you know we earn less than a waitress in Chinese restaurant. @@ I think the best part about this job is to leave off work still have plenty of time feel the sun and see the sun goes down. I met about 4 or 5 Taiwanese working here and I later knew that only one of them worked here over 1.5 month and she told me that none of them are from Taiwan but mostly Korean when she first came in. The Korean here seem nice and they seem knew more english than Michael does, haha. There is this one girl named Miranda trained with us the first day and she seem nice, polite and well-educated. The supervisors and managers here are all nice, well-tempered, helpful and working ethically. As far as I can see now, they're mostly from India and two of them whom I asked are from Bangladesh. My guess is that Indians arrived in Australia much earlier than some other ethnic, so they took the helm earlier than the rest of us (meaning us from Korea, Taiwan or other Asian regions.) The housekeeping job isn't a easy thing to manage, especially for the physical learning and the hours we work for penny pay. Hard job, I could say. This day, we only made less than 45 AUD per person for doing 2 check out room and 2 daily service in almost 6 to 7 hours working straight. And, with my leg sour and rubbed hands all I could feel is tiredness of my body. Still, we headed to the casino winning some chips compensating our loss for the uneven pay of being a housekeeper.
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