On Tuesday mornings, before the bar opens, my buddy spencer runs a cleaning solution through the draft lines. The chairs are still up. The room smells faintly like a swimming pool. It takes a while, nobody sees it, and nobody will ever mention it.
But every beer we pour that week passes through that decision.
Customers appreciate a lot of things out loud. The bar. The style. The tap list. The beertender who remembered their name. In fifteen years around bars I have never once heard a customer appreciate the lines. And yet if the lines are dirty, the best beer in Wisconsin tastes like a wet basement.
Nobody chooses a bar for clean lines. Plenty of people never come back because of dirty ones.
That gap is worth sitting with, because it’s not just a beer thing.
Gratitude, the way it usually gets practiced, collects the obvious.
Health, family, coffee, sunsets. Fine. But the exercise changes character when you point it at things you don’t normally appreciate.
The person who restocks. The friend who always texts first. (Even better, the friend who calls first. I’m looking at you, Nick.) The unglamorous fix that kept the whole system standing.
The moment you thank something invisible, you have to understand it first, and that’s the trick.
Appreciation of the unnoticed isn’t politeness. It’s a flashlight. It forces you to see how things actually work instead of how they present.
And once you see how things work, everything downstream gets better.
Empathy stops being a soft skill and becomes accurate. Curiosity gets specific instead of vague. You connect with people over the true thing they do, not the visible thing they’re credited for, and people can feel the difference immediately. Ask anyone whose work is invisible how often they get thanked for the real part.
There’s a marketing lesson buried in here too, and it’s the same lesson with a purple coat of paint. Customers can’t tell you what they appreciate until it’s missing. What people buy is the visible thing. What they leave over is the invisible one. If you want to know where your product actually lives or dies, make a list of everything your customer never notices, and appreciate each item until you understand it. That list is your quality. The tap list is just the menu.
It’s worth challenging yourself today to shift your appreciation somewhere it’s never been. Thank the lines. Whatever your lines are.
Stay Positive & You Might Be Surprised What Else You’ve Been Drinking Through
