Since 1953, women in South Korea have been allowed to take one day off a month if they have painful periods.
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fact
Since 1953, women in South Korea have been allowed to take one day off a month if they have painful periods.
The post Since 1953, women in South Korea… appeared first on Crazy Facts.
Losing your job sucks. It can mess with your head and your self confidence.
Getting fired brings so any new worries, at a time when you don’t have the headspace to deal with them.
But it’s even worse, when you’ve already got a lot going on.
Are we talking days? Hours?
A good boss might have suggested a nice fiber supplement.
Why are employers so obsessed with potty breaks?
What do they think you’re doing in there?
This one is so heartless I don’t even know what to say.
They were afraid she’d stay after hours to make amazing new flavors of pie.
Whether or not it’s wrongful termination, you gotta hope karma gets them in the end.
Or to get out of paying short term disability?
It’s nice to actually see one where the good guy wins.
Anti-family, even. Just wow.
I mean, what exactly is a “good excuse” if not this?
That guy can join the other one in The Bad Place.
No, really, do they?
I mean, you can get a doctor’s note for that right?
Somehow I’m in awe of both the worker and the boss.
I don’t think I’ve ever heard such awful reasons–beyond the workers’ control–for being let go from a job.
What about you? Share your story in the comments.
The post 13 Ridiculous Reasons People Lost Their Jobs appeared first on UberFacts.
Losing your job sucks. It can mess with your head and your self confidence.
Getting fired brings so any new worries, at a time when you don’t have the headspace to deal with them.
But it’s even worse, when you’ve already got a lot going on.
Are we talking days? Hours?
A good boss might have suggested a nice fiber supplement.
Why are employers so obsessed with potty breaks?
What do they think you’re doing in there?
This one is so heartless I don’t even know what to say.
They were afraid she’d stay after hours to make amazing new flavors of pie.
Whether or not it’s wrongful termination, you gotta hope karma gets them in the end.
Or to get out of paying short term disability?
It’s nice to actually see one where the good guy wins.
Anti-family, even. Just wow.
I mean, what exactly is a “good excuse” if not this?
That guy can join the other one in The Bad Place.
No, really, do they?
I mean, you can get a doctor’s note for that right?
Somehow I’m in awe of both the worker and the boss.
I don’t think I’ve ever heard such awful reasons–beyond the workers’ control–for being let go from a job.
What about you? Share your story in the comments.
The post 13 Ridiculous Reasons People Lost Their Jobs appeared first on UberFacts.
Some people are born to be go-getters and some definitely are not.
At all. Not by any stretch of the imagination.
But those lazy folks need to work, too!
So what are the best jobs for lazy people?
Here’s what people on AskReddit had to say.
“I worked at a Costco gas station in college.
I was literally just there to hit an alarm if anything bad happened. But it never did.
So I just sat there in an air conditioned shack for 8 hours a day.”
“Security jobs.
90% of the time you do nothing.
9% of the time you respond to false alarms.
It’s that 1% where real sh*t is going down that makes it a tough job.”
“Front desk hotel worker at night.
90% of your time you do about nothing and sit on your phone or computer.
5% of your time is spent talking to like the 5 customers you might see a night
5% of your time spent cleaning or doing paperwork.”
“Drawbridge operator.
They sit in the tower, watching boats go by and occasionally raising/lowering the drawbridge as needed by means of pushing buttons.”
“Process refinement.
A lazy person will find out how to do a complex task with the fewest steps possible.”
“A guy on the surveying crew has the job of watching a surveying GPS unit all day.
He gets dropped off with the unit, sets it up and sits there and makes sure it doesn’t get stolen and that the blue light is still on.
That’s all he does every day…”
“If you can get a job doing Chat Customer Service, nothing I’ve gotten paid for is easier than that.
People chat me about their credit cards and I look up the info and chat them back.
It’s really not difficult at all and it’s nice to be able to help people with their bills!”
“Corporate America, mid range.
Work hard enough to find a job that you can do well, do it better than the worst people, but not so good where you’re the one asked to do all the bullsh*t projects. If anyone asks, always talk about how busy you are…but never miss a deadline or due date. Be consistent, but consistently lazy.
Bonus is that there a ton of jobs like this. Study up on your interview skills so you can slide into a new one when the opportunity arises because the only way you get a real pay increase is by moving jobs.”
“Working for an embassy.
Had to go to the German embassy last year and let me tell you… none of them has ANY risk of running into an burn out.
I was the only one there, had an appointment AND no. 1 on the ticket counter. The embassy opened at 8.30 and it took them till 9 AM to look up from their screens and pressing the button calling my number.”
“When I was a teenager (currently in my 40s), fireworks were only legal to sell in my county for the weeks leading up to 4th of July.
So these vendors would come in and set up a bunch of plywood shacks in parking lots to sell their fireworks.
Now, there are several thousands of dollars of product in these shacks, which can be broken into by anyone who plays little league soccer.
For several years, I got paid $250/night –in cash– for 4 weeks straight to sit in my car in the parking lot watching one of these shacks from 10pm until 8am. If I saw anyone looked like they were thinking about breaking in, I was supposed to call 911.
Easiest money of my life.”
“Representative or Senator.
Great pay and benefits, only work a fraction of the year, and you can keep the job even if you’re objectively terrible at it, so long as you have the right letter next to your name for the district/state you represent, because people are idiots who vote like it’s a sports team, without regard to actual policy or results.”
“I know a guy who does a “call before you dig” type job.
When someone is doing work near his companies equipment, he drives out and watches them to make sure they stay away from it. Just watches.
He thinks it’s the greatest job ever.”
What do you think are the best jobs for lazy people?
Tell us in the comments!
Thanks in advance!
The post What Do You Think Are the Best Jobs for Lazy People? Here’s How Folks Responded. appeared first on UberFacts.
A lot of us have our struggles with human resources at jobs at some point in our lives.
You might think they’re on your side as a working stiff when you’re young and idealistic, but if you’ve ever had a bad experience with them, you know they can be downright brutal.
Folks on AskReddit shared their “HR is not your friend” stories. Let’s take a look.
“Pulled into a meeting with two HR reps in the middle of my shift. Taken to this really nice boardroom, which was confusing because I was just a grunt and this is literally floors above where I should ever be.
They sat me down and said basically what do you have to say for yourself. Me, still confused, tells them I have no idea what they’re talking about. Everyone is really quiet and serious and I’m scared sh*tless. And they say you know what you did, this is cause for termination, blah blah.
I’m literally thinking this is really excessive for being a few minutes late sometimes. I insist I don’t know what’s going on. One of them maybe realized something was wrong and flips open a file and says you’re xxx right? Turns out they got me mixed up with someone else who has the same name.
On the elevator ride down by myself I was still sweating. Don’t know what that other person did but man, HR does not play.”
“I went to HR to report that my team’s manager was illegally shorting all of our paychecks. HR’s response was to adopt a new, company-wide policy addressing the paycheck issue and back-paying most people for a certain amount, and also to frame me for work avoidance.
HR and IT disabled part of my login account to a tool we used, and then fired me a few months later after failing to fix the problem and allowing me to actually do my job.
They tried to deny my unemployment claim afterward. Told the unemployment rep that they “had logs” showing that I did something to break the tool I don’t even have access to break in the first place. They also didn’t think to disable my email access in a timely manner, so I was able to back up all my emails with IT documenting exactly what went down.
Unemployment approved my claim and hit them with a major penalty to their insurance.”
“HR ordered me to downgrade my three excellent employee reviews to satisfactory because management didn’t recognize their names. I got written up for telling my employees this.
HR denied that they told me anything, even though I had the emails from them documenting it. Totally worth it. My employees were excellent and got the raises they deserved.”
“HR hired consultants to run morale building employee input sessions.
Basically saying “We’re not from the company. You can tell us all the things you don’t like about working here and would like to see changed and we’ll put it all into a report for management. Don’t worry, everything is anonymous, we just need material for our report and you guys get to have your say in improving things around here.”
Turns out HR and the consultants recorded all the sessions and played the highlights for management. People were disciplined for criticizing the company or their immediate superiors and any shred of faith or trust in management that the employees may have had was instantly incinerated.
Managers now complain that they don’t know what’s going on in their teams because nobody tells them anything. I wonder why.”
“I worked at a smallish company that grew big enough to hire an HR person. Her office was down from mine so in the mornings I’d swing by and say hi.
That turned into grabbing a cup of coffee she had just made, the into having a pastry and talking about life. I found that if I mentioned someone’s name in passing, a few minutes later she would spill the beans about that person’s life.
What work issues they had, health issues, family issues etc. I learned really quick any issues I had not to take them to her. She made it like 6months before she got fired.”
“I asked my boss for a desk phone with a speakerphone function because sometimes I need it at work to conference people on the phone with people in my office.
We had these old, yellow phones. So he told me to make a request to him and CC our office manager, and he’d send it to the HR department of our region via e-mail.
So I put forth a nice e-mail outlining what I am requesting, and why I need it for HR’s request. My office manager replies all and asks HR “per lazarus870 request, should I order the phone through the same channels I have used before or is there a new policy?”
HR responded livid. She demanded to know why I needed this phone (it was in the e-mail…) and then accused my office manager of going behind HR’s back in ordering phones before without approval.
My office manager told my boss, who called HR and chewed her out and I could hear yelling. My boss came out of his office and yelled at me, “See what you’ve caused?!” He was fired up but I know he didn’t mean anything malicious by it. I just laughed.
HR had to apologize to office manager for accusations. Turns out, after everybody yelled their f*cking lungs out for an hour, the speakerphone I needed was literally free and we had boxes of them in storage. I had it for a month before HR rolled out new fancy phones that were actually expensive and convoluted, requiring training to set up and use…
At the company picnic we had to wear f*cking name tags and I had never met HR lady face to face and she came up and said, “Oh we haven’t met, what’s your name?” and I was trying to hide my nametag but she read it and didn’t seem happy to see me.”
“At my last “real” job before striking out on my own I had an exit interview with the HR lady who was actually just someone who was friends with the company president who was filling in because the actual HR lady with a degree in HR and everything quit.
A lot of people at this place quit. It was a terrible place to work with out of touch management and delusions of grandeur limping along building websites for a business niche that was mostly old people who thought the Internet was magic.
During the exit interview she asked why I was leaving. I told her I liked my coworkers a lot, but hated the company. She got this exasperated look and got genuinely upset, and told me that she’d been getting that same line from everybody else who quit and had their exit interview recently.
It boggled my mind that they could hear the same thing over and over again from so many people putting in their time until they could go on to something better and not stop to think they should change something.”
“I worked in the bakery at a Fred Meyers for about 6 months when I was freshly 19.
There was this like 45 year old guy in meat/seafood who was super creepy and all of the women in my department and even one woman who was previously in my department but was moved to another TO GET AWAY FROM HIM warned me about this man from day 1.
Somehow, any time I was on my break, he would “be on his break too” and he’d follow me into the break room and try to flirt with me the entire time.
Not only did he follow me on my breaks and lunches, but if I had to walk to another part of the store to get anything he would run to catch up to me and walk with me, he followed me to my car a few times after I got off shift and the scariest time was when I was closing by myself and he came into the back of the bakery and kept following me around the long table, trying to grab me while telling me how much he liked me and how badly he wanted to be with me.
I told him no and to leave me alone CONSTANTLY while managers just shrugged and said “that’s just how he is”. My boyfriend threatened him when he got off work one time hell even my father came in and threatened him because NO ONE was doing ANYTHING.
The final straw for me was one night when I was closing alone again he came into the back area and followed me into the freezer and tried to kiss me and he grabbed my *ss. I pushed him and f*cking ran to the closing manager who also functioned as HR. He said he’d “watch the store footage” and talk to me the next day.
Next day comes and he pulls me into his office and says that he saw the video and saw this man stalking me inside and outside of work and that he “talked” to him about his behavior to which the man responded that it was just a “misunderstanding”.
I replied that this had been going on for months and I wasn’t going to take it anymore and he had the f*cking NERVE to tell me that “He just does this to all the new girls. As soon as another girl gets hired he’ll leave me alone.” I told him he was a bastard and quit on the spot.
Turns out the creep was the brother of the stores owner who had been to jail in the past for s*xual assault and R*PE but was now “cleaning his life up”.
“I reported s*xual harassment to HR at a large international company when I was 21.
They notified my harasser (an older VP) before I even made it back to my desk.
I was fired a few days later, despite an excellent performance review the week before he propositioned me.”
“The HR/Payroll manager at a small hospital I worked at had a bad habit of not paying out the sign-on bonus that was paid out incrementally in three payments through the course of a year and sign on bonuses for picking up extra shifts. After repeated request to be belatedly compensated, I took it to corporate who addressed my issue immediately.
A couple weeks later I was terminated on what amounted to a technicality where I forget my badge one shift and my relief was late to take over sitting with a patient, causing me to receive more points against me than if I had called out for that shift.
When I was called in to receive my notification, the director of nursing was shocked but ultimately not much she could do.”
“A co-worker accidentally backed his company truck into my personal car while it was parked. He alerted me and our local manager immediately, we took photos, filled out the incident report, yada yada yada.
Everyone in our office was in agreement about what happened, that it was an honest accident and the company’s insurance should cover the cost of fixing my car.
Then the HR director got involved. First he tried to get me to assume liability since it was my personal vehicle that “caused” the accident. My car was parked in the parking lot and I was inside at my desk when it happened. When I pointed this out he backed down and said he would file the claim.
Next I got a call from a hostile insurance adjuster from my company’s insurance demanding that I provide my insurance information or they would be pursuing legal action. It turns out the HR director had filed the claim saying that I had run into the parked work truck with my car and tried to flee the scene but was witnessed by a co worker who reported me.
I informed the adjuster what had actually happened and emailed her the photos and signed incident reports and witness statements that we had filled out and she changed her tune pretty quickly and said she would get back to me.
The next day I get a “settlement agreement” from HR asking me to accept $1100 for repairs and to sign a form releasing the company from any further responsibility. I had only just dropped my car off at the body shop and hadn’t even gotten the estimate back yet. I declined and was told that I either had to accept their offer or be out of luck.
At this point I reached out to my own insurance and told them what had happened. As I went through the sequence of events I could hear my agent getting almost giddy about all the blatantly illegal tactics HR had tried on me. In the end they processed my claim and pursued my own company’s insurance through subrogation. He also mentioned that they would probably be seeking additional damages due to falsification of statements in the initial claim. Don’t f*ck with USAA.
In the end the damage ended up costing over $4,000 to fix but I didn’t have to pay a cent, not even my deductible. I don’t know if the HR director experienced and consequences, but there was a comment in our finance VP’s year end report about needing to “reduce extraneous costs due to reporting delays and inaccuracies in liability claims.””
Have you ever had any bad experiences with human resources at work?
If so, please tell us all about it in the comments.
Thanks in advance!
The post People Talk About Their Worst “HR Is Not Your Friend” Stories appeared first on UberFacts.
I guess you might want to cut this youngster some slack because they’re only in high school, but still…I’m not sure about this kind of behavior…
A youngster shared their story on the “Am I the *sshole?” page on Reddit to see if people thought they were out of line when they pull a very specific prank at work.
Here’s what they said.
AITA for pretending to get fired when customers get a temper with me?
“I am a high schooler with a weekend job at a coffee shop. My coworkers who work weekends are:
James – the owners son, he goes to my school. He’s a shift manager but it’s not a real formal thing, he’s a friendly guy.
Danielle – A college student who sometimes works weekends too.
So sometimes customers will come in and just be angry about such little stuff. Like literally blow up about nothing. I dunno if theyre in a bad mood already and looking for someone to take it out on or what, but it’s a lot… Like how sad so your have to be to be a grown-*ss man taking your anger out on high school and college kids.
So James and I were joking about having a little fun with them and hopefully getting them off our backs.
So one day I was at work and some guy was having a temper about how we don’t make the coffee hot enough… Which I couldn’t do a thing about because I gave it to him right out of the machine.
So James came in and was like “sir is there a problem here” and the guy started ranting at him too. So he was just like “OP, this is unacceptable, you’re fired.”
I started acting real sad, like “no please don’t fire me, my family needs the money, I need this job, pleaseeee” and he played up being a hard-*ss, telling me to take off my apron and leave.
The angry guy started to backtrack, like “It isn’t that big of a problem, you don’t need to fire her over it. I didn’t mean it” and James was like “No, we pride ourselves on the best customer service”
Of course after all that drama I still had my job, we were just acting. And we’ve done it a couple times, whenever a customer will lose their temper at Danielle or I, James will storm in and “fire” us. And almost every time, the person who had come in angry will apologise and say that they didn’t mean it. It’s kind of satisfying, making people realize their actions might actually have consequences.
Anyway, I was telling my friends from school about this and a few of them thought it was a mean prank, to let someone go away thinking they’d gotten someone who desperately needs the money fired.
AITA for this joke?”
And folks on Reddit responded.
This person said that the kid is not a jerk for his behavior and that some customers are just plain horrible to deal with.
This person said that yes, the kid is an *sshole, and that so are the rude customers.
Another reader said that they also think everyone involved here are jerks, but they think so because it’s just bad business to let employees act this way and get away with it.
I think I agree with this stance.
Another Reddit user agreed and said that the business is going to suffer in the end for these kinds of actions.
Finally, a reader said that this kind of behavior should not be tolerated by the owners of the business because it just looks really bad all around.
Dealing with occasional bad customers is part of the job, but this is not the way to deal with it.
Do you think this youngster is wrong for pulling this prank?
Tell us what you think in the comments.
Thanks a lot!
The post A Person Asked if They’re Wrong for Pretending to Get Fired When They Argue With Customers appeared first on UberFacts.
Let’s revisit the immortal words of Todd Rundgren:
“Take this, every day when I get home from work
I feel so frustrated the boss is a jerk,
And I get my sticks and go out to the shed,
And I pound on that drum like it was the boss’ head because
I don’t want to work
I want to bang on the drum all day.”
This lighthearted tune about an employer head trauma fantasy rings true with most of us, especially with the people who wrote these tweets.
Though I’d rather nobody bang on drums while I’m trying to relax. You can take that elsewhere, please.
Cool, cool cool cool, our society is broken.
What level of capitalism are you at? pic.twitter.com/f3x3V9qsxJ
— Alan MacLeod (@AlanRMacLeod) March 8, 2021
How about mind your own business, Carol?
“why isn’t your camera on?”
me: pic.twitter.com/qDNlYiOpHA
— Maruf (@m3aruf) March 2, 2021
Now THAT’S what I call freedom.
The best thing about working from home is it gives you the freedom to cry anywhere.
— Missy Baker (@TheMissyBaker) August 4, 2020
Now I shall go to heaven.
Good news. Just completed the mandatory Code of Conduct and Ethics training course and am no longer a bad person
— Work Retire Die (@WorkRetireDie) August 18, 2020
It’s the delicate balance that binds us all together.
Doing jussssst enough not to get fired
— Jay (@jayjellybeanz) July 27, 2016
I don’t even need to see the rest of ya’ll.
When we go back to the office, I am going to bring a tiny mirror to work and stare at myself all through meetings to feel normal
— Meredith Haggerty (@manymanywords) February 4, 2021
We’ve been speaking with our voices for millenia, we can just keep doing that.
Just bc we all zoom now does not mean every phone call needs to be a zoom. Stop trying to look at me.
Some phone calls are still phone calls.
A LOT of phone calls really should be emails.
And some emails should honestly be texts.— Amy Miller (@amymiller) February 4, 2021
Let me know if you figure it out.
At the point in the week where I'm Googling how to never work again and still maintain my current lifestyle
— Betches (@betchesluvthis) January 21, 2021
I too have an inescapable guilt complex.
Do you spend days thinking about what you did wrong whenever your boss says “thanks” instead of “thanks!” or are you normal?
— dana (@dmicheleeee) January 13, 2021
Watch your language.
Me, in emails: “No worries!”
Me, in my brain: FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCL FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK FUCK
— Eden Dranger (@Eden_Eats) February 3, 2021
Nobody wants to work. But we gotta. At least we can all tweet about it!
What’s the best job you’ve ever had? What’s the worst job you’ve ever had? What made them unique?
Tell us all about it in the comments.
The post Tweets For People Who Are Sick of Work appeared first on UberFacts.
Nobody really likes to be at work. Well, ok, not NOBODY, there are those weirdos out there who show up to an office every day and legitimately say “I love my job,” but these people are sociopathic and deranged. There is nothing behind their eyes, they may not be human, and they should under no circumstances be trusted.
However, for the rest of us, it’s not so much a matter of loving our jobs as just kinda making the best of the fact that you have to be there. And the internet is absolutely full of examples of great ways to do that, which you can look at instead of doing your job at work.
Here are a few ways to spice up work:
They said I had to wear a mask, they didn’t specify what it had to look like.
The heck kind of job site is this?
Oh cool, the nastiest thing I’ve ever seen.
Oooo, I wonder what’s inside?
Look at me, I’m the king of New York!
You gotta keep yourself entertained one way or another.
If you’re already made of money, that is.
This is just the budget version of it.
He’s really helping out.
Good ol’ reliable Mike.
Thanks, I hate it.
I find your lack of wreaths disturbing.
And hang with a very chill dude.
Now get out here and make work fun again!
What’s the best thing about your job?
Tell us in the comments.
The post 13 People Trying to Make the Best of Being at Work appeared first on UberFacts.
Work. We all gotta do it.
Unless you were like, born rich and have just spent your life skiing around or whatever. Must be nice. Can I have some money, please? Cause see I have to keep going to jobs, and it’s like, can I not?
But then I see funny work memes and I’m grateful for employment. For without my employment, I would no the base of knowledge necessary to comprehend, and subsequently enjoy, these delicious and hilarious memes. And that’s not a world I want to live in at all.
“This will help me do my job better.”
“How?”
“…yes.”
During a commute far, far away…
Both are useful, both are sacred. They might as well just start labeling them this way.
Bless me father, for I have sinned.
Wait for me, my love. I shall return. I’ll come back for you, I swear it.
What did you get caught doing, Dan?
Don’t worry about it, I’m just gonna forget again in five minutes.
They mustn’t know the real me.
“Um…the apocalypse?”
Talk about padding out your timesheet.
Work might suck, but work memes will reign supreme forever.
What’s the best/worst part of your job?
Tell us in the comments.
The post Memes For People Who Are Over Working appeared first on UberFacts.
Waiters and waitresses really have to put up with a lot of bullsh*t, don’t they?
The folks who work in the back of the house in restaurants have their own sets of problems, but those who are out front and center have to deal with all the drama from customers…and you better believe that there is plenty of it.
A waitress shared a story on Reddit’s “Am I the *sshole?” page about dealing with certain customers that frankly sounds like kind of a nightmare.
Let’s take a look.
AITA for refusing to return a tip AND telling a couple that I don’t have time to play mediator?
“I’m a 22 year old, female waitress at Texas Roadhouse. This is one of my two jobs to put myself through college. Most days are fine but other days are a living hell.
Yesterday I was assigned a table that had a husband, wife and what appeared to be a teenage daughter (maybe 17). Everything was going smooth at first and the wife ordered a margarita. The husband then tried ordering a beer. The wife instantly lost her noodles and said “Uh, no. He will not have a beer. He will have a water.”
She then turned to him and said something along the lines of him not needing to drink because he was driving. He said no, the daughter could drive. It was childish.
Anyways, he keeps telling me he wants a beer. She keeps telling me no. In this industry, situations like this are a lose/lose for waitresses. If I get him the beer, wife wont tip. If I dont get him the beer, he wont tip. D*mned if I do, d*mned if I dont. So while they were arguing AT me, I said “Listen, I really dont have time to play mediator here.”
They went silent. I went and got both of them their alcohol. Daughter gives me an apologetic look upon my return, presumably because her mother was acting batsh*t crazy upon seeing me bring a beer in tow.
Flash forward to after their meals. Husband has had 2 beers at this point. Wife has stopped drinking and glares at me everytime I return. Wife and daughter go to the car while husband pays. Husband drops me a $40 tip on a $68 tab. I told him I couldnt accept it. He insisted. Eventually I pocketed it.
Wife comes in an hour or so later demanding that I give her the $40 her husband gave me, stating that I was a terrible host and went against her and I dknt deserve a tip.
She got my manager involved who said “She is not obligated to give you her tip. You left the restaurant and the tip has already been processed. Have a nice night.” She was fuming, screaming at me about how much of an AH I was for supplying her husband alcohol after she said no.
Other guests started chiming in saying that she was being ignorant and that I was doing my job, which is to provide guests with what they want and said that it wasnt MY fault that she was a controlling wife. She storms out.
Given the fact that I was put on the spot like that, I feel insanely guilty. AITA?”
And here’s what people had to say about her story.
One person brought up how bad they feel for the couple’s child.
Another person said the woman did the exact right thing in this strange situation.
This individual said there is absolutely no way the woman was wrong in this situation.
And this person pointed out that she was just doing her job and that she didn’t do anything wrong.
Finally, this Reddit user said that they also feel sorry for the husband in this situation.
The wife sounds like a real treat, huh…?
Now we want to hear from all the readers out there.
Tell us what you think about this situation in the comments.
We look forward to it!
The post A Waitress Asked if She Was a Jerk for Refusing to Return a Tip to a Customer appeared first on UberFacts.