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The Student News Site of Sacramento City College

The Express

The Student News Site of Sacramento City College

The Express

Carrie Chambers: Student uses bestselling book to juggle school and workload

City College student Carrie Chambers, liberal studies in elementary education major, poses for a photo inside of Bistro 33 in Davis, California. April 27, 2016. Hector Flores, Staff Photographer. | hectorfloresexpress@gmail.com
City College student Carrie Chambers, liberal studies in elementary education major, poses for a photo inside of Bistro 33 in Davis, California. April 27, 2016. Hector Flores, Staff Photographer. | [email protected]

Ellie O’Boy | Guest writer | [email protected]

Dressed professionally yet stylishly, Carrie Chambers waltzes around Bistro 33 in Davis as if it is easy to manage a restaurant. Smiling and greeting customers, dealing with an array of peculiar situations that arise when managing a restaurant and catering to the needs of employees — she does it all.

Little do people know that she also has schoolwork in her office downstairs awaiting her when she gets off work. Approachable and confident, Chambers juggles many responsibilities and makes it look easy. She says she’s managed to balance all the parts of her life with grace based on what she’s learned from her “bible”: “Yes Please” by Amy Poehler.

“Every individual has a certain skill set, and you have to do the best with what you’ve got,” Chambers says. “Be the best at what you do, and run with what you do have.”

Twenty-six-year-old Chambers, a City College student, says she works with what she has to achieve her goals in life. She says she takes a lot of lessons from Poehler’s bestselling book.

Chambers uses “Yes Please” to ease the stress that comes along with a demanding schedule. She describes the book as uplifting and motivating, while still being realistic. Some books that are meant to inspire have countless messages, but they are not realistic and are not easily applied to real-life situations. That is the beauty of “Yes Please”, Chambers says, and why it is a key source of stimuli in her life.

Chambers moved to Davis in 2011 and has since worked her way up at Bistro 33. She started as a hostess and exceled from there. Host, cocktail waitress, server, bartender and now manager. She has always worked full time while also being a full-time City College student.

Her confident and kind attitude stuns people and makes employees and customers at the popular Bistro 33 in Davis feel welcome and taken care of.

“Carrie is a great manager because she is supportive and there for her employees if there is an issue,” says Elizabeth Pausic, a Bistro 33 hostess. “She is very easy to talk to and approachable and makes me feel comfortable during my shifts.”

Chambers refers to Poehler’s book as her bible because of how much it has driven her to succeed. The importance of knowing your strengths and playing on them is a strategic weapon in the work world.

“The book has made me look at things in a new light,” Chambers says. “You shouldn’t wish for strengths that you don’t naturally have. You should focus on the ones you do have and work them in your favor.”

She has bought the book eight times because she is always giving it away to friends. She wants to share her enthusiasm and eagerness for life and have it rub off on others.

“It’s a write-in-the-margins kind of book,” Chambers says. “And I never write in the margins of other books.”

Chambers started school to become a massage therapist, but changed her path to share her approachable yet motivational character with others. She is now in school to become an elementary school teacher. She is passionate about teaching and knows that passion can benefit the education system and help it grow.

She says she wants to see reform in education so that it is based more on student achievement and success.

Chambers says she has learned through her time at the restaurant, in school, and during everyday occurrences that things don’t always go as planned, but you must adapt and keep the hustle going. One day she will share this attitude with students, as she shares it with employees and others in her life now.

College, managing a restaurant, and striving to have a career is a lot on one person’s plate. Most people have busy lives and are juggling responsibilities, but how Chambers accomplishes this all at once can inspire others.

“Carrie is the most helpful manager I have ever had,” says Kendall Swanson, Bistro 33 employee. “She is also one of the most well-rounded and kind women I’ve known.”

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