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They Made A Hilarious Display Of Themselves

, , , , | Right | August 25, 2023

I work in the digital camera department. We’re actually the closest store to a lot of the nice ski towns — Breckenridge, Aspen, etc. — so it isn’t uncommon to get people making a couple-hour drive down into town to go shopping.

A customer comes in wearing items linked to a specific ski resort and slams down a camera.

Customer: “The screen is broken!”

This camera’s main selling point is its ease of use, and she was obviously frustrated.

I looked at the camera, hit the “Display On” button, and watched the color drain out of her face when she realized that she had driven four hours just to have me press a button.

When Someone Asks If You’ve Read The Contract… You Should

, , , , , , , , | Working | August 25, 2023

My workplace has its normal pay scales for each position publicly released. You can just go online and find that information, and the organisation has worked this way for many, many years. Most staff work under these pay scales, but you can try to negotiate separately. It’s just uncommon and usually only to attract or retain staff for fairly unique roles that would be hard to come by.

I am one such person in a unique role, so I have an individual agreement for a varied pay scale on top of the standard corporate agreement. 

I worked happily at this workplace for several years before a new director came to my area. In an effort to cut costs immediately, this director decided that he was going to cancel all the individual agreements, forcing me and others to revert to the lower payscale of the corporate agreement.

When the director informed me of his decision regarding my individual agreement, I asked him to reconsider. I warned him that this was going to be more costly for him in the long run. I asked him if he had read my agreement in full and spoken to my manager about why the agreement was put in place.

He did not listen.

Upon his cancelling my individual agreement, the cancellation clause I’d requested to be added kicked in: all the flextime I had earned while in the individual agreement that I had not yet spent was to be cashed out, at the higher rate.

I had more than 2,000 hours of flextime built up from the last eighteen months alone, to say nothing of what I’d earned during the height of responding to the global health crisis. 

I had a new job within a month. I understand the director had much more difficulty finding new work.

The Bar Is Low, But This Is Ultimately A GREAT Interaction With The IRS

, , , , , , , | Working | August 24, 2023

Several years ago, during the paper filing days, I prepared a tax return for a widow. I filled out estimated tax payment forms for her to pay $600 each quarter.

The following year, I prepared [Client]’s income tax and entered the $2,400 credit. A few months later, she got a letter from the IRS (Internal Revenue Service) stating that she owed $594 plus a penalty and interest. I asked her if she paid all four payments, and she said she did, so I had her bring me the canceled checks to prove she didn’t owe this.

It turned out that the IRS only gave [Client] credit for $6 for the June 15th payment because she wrote the number $600 without a decimal and two zeroes for the cents. The bank gave the IRS credit for $6. But the legal cursive writing on the check was spelled out as “six hundred dollars and no cents”.

I sent a copy of the check and a letter requesting the removal of the penalty for underpayment of estimated tax, along with a new check for $594 plus the interest.

A few months later, [Client] received a check for over $620. We sent the check back, explaining that the IRS was confused and forced the $600 into her account.  

IRS sent the same check back with a handwritten note telling [Client] to cash the check and not to send it back again.

IRS never found their mistake.

We’d Be More Worried If That Music Store DID Have That Section

, , , , , , , | Right | August 24, 2023

Unfortunately, it was my mom that produced this gem.

Mom: *Angry* “You made me look like an idiot! I went to the record store to get that album you said you wanted for Christmas, and they all laughed at me!”

Me: “Oh! What did you say to them? You asked for the Metallica box set Live S***: Binge And Purge, yeah?”

Mom: “Something like that! And they said that it didn’t exist! You played a prank on me!”

Me: “Mom, I assure you it’s a real thing. When you say, ‘something like that’, did you ask for the exact same thing, or did you do that thing that you do where you’re only half listening, and when you try to remember it comes out as something else?”

Mom: “I asked for that Puke And Eat Me music you asked for!”

Me: “I think I know why they couldn’t find it…”

Nailed It (The Foot, Not The Clinic)

, , , , , , , , , | Healthy | August 24, 2023

When I was in college, my biology class took a day trip to a local watershed — in this case, a creek that drained into a larger river — to conduct a wildlife study. The procedure was simple: stand in the water and use special nets to capture and count the number and type of animals to determine how healthy or polluted the creek was. 

Naturally, I wore water shoes for this outing. Unfortunately, they were rather thin-soled, so when I stepped on a rusty nail that had somehow made its way into this creek in the middle of nowhere, it went right through my shoe and an inch into my foot. 

Because it happened during a school-sanctioned activity and it had been over a decade since my last Tdap (tetanus, diphtheria, and pertussis) vaccine, school policy required that I report to the campus clinic when we returned. [Professor] told me he’d speed things along by calling ahead to alert the clinic that I was coming and why. So, armed (footed?) with nothing but a holey shoe and the possibility of infection brewing in my extremities, off I traipsed to an unfamiliar two-story building at the edge of campus. 

The layout of this clinic was slightly unusual. Downstairs, there was a reception desk in front of a long hallway, which led to a small radiology unit on one side and a separate waiting room for anything to do with needles (vaccines, blood labs, etc.) on the other. The first-floor reception desk served as a gateway for those units but was NOT a check-in point; each unit had its own nurse to do check-ins and make sure you were in the right place. The main floor receptionist mostly provided directions and new patient paperwork that would be turned in elsewhere. The actual doctor’s offices, as I discovered later, were upstairs and behind a second set of receptionists, who DID do check-ins before appointments. (In theory.) 

But as this was my first time at this clinic, I didn’t know any of that.

Apparently, neither did the final-year nursing students who worked there. 

I approached the first-floor receptionist, [Receptionist #1], and explained that I was there to get my Tdap after stepping on a rusty nail during a school-sanctioned outing and that [Professor] should have called ahead.

Receptionist #1: “I haven’t received any such call, unfortunately. And all of our vaccine slots are booked for the day. But given your circumstances, I’ll squeeze you in for an appointment at [time].”

That time was right after my next class. I confirmed my appointment, handed over my student ID, watched her clack around on her computer, received my ID back, and then went to the next-door building for my mythology class. 

Two hours later, I returned to find that [Receptionist #1] had been replaced by [Receptionist #2].

Receptionist #2: *Smiling* “What are you here for?”

Me: “I have an appointment for a tetanus shot.”

She helpfully directed me to the waiting room down the hall. I trodded off, told [Nurse #1] behind the computer at the door my name, and sat down in the incredibly full waiting room (about thirty people) to wait.

And wait.

And wait. 

And wait. 

After almost an hour and seeing several new arrivals be called before me, I finally approached the nurse — again, a different one than the one who’d nodded me along when I entered the waiting room — and asked how long it would be before I would be called. She looked down at her computer and frowned. 

Nurse #2: “What’s your name again?”

Me: “[My Name].” *Presents my student ID* “I’m here for a tetanus shot because I stepped on a nail during [Professor]’s class today.”

She frowned and clacked around her computer for a minute. And then a minute more. She kept glancing between my ID and her computer screen with an increasingly confused expression on her face. 

Finally…

Nurse #2: “I’m sorry, but we don’t have a record of you in our system at all. Have you been here before? Which doctor ordered the vaccine?”

Me: *Now thoroughly confused myself* “I wasn’t seen by a doctor. [Professor] told me to come to the campus clinic. He said he’d call ahead to confirm that I just need a Tdap vaccine. I made an appointment with the front hall receptionist just a couple of hours ago.”

Nurse #2: *Sounding confused and apologetic* “I’m sorry, but all students are required to see a clinic doctor before receiving any treatment, even vaccines. [College] policy.”

In my state, pharmacies could give walk-ins Tdap boosters and other vaccines without authorization from a doctor. Hence, it hadn’t occurred to me that I’d need an appointment.

Me: “…ooookay. So, what should I do? [Professor] said it’s school policy that I get this shot today, and the receptionist made me an appointment, soooo…”

When [Nurse #2] replied, she sounded even more apologetic, if that were possible.

Nurse #2: “Again, I’m so sorry, but that reception desk doesn’t… actually… make appointments? That computer doesn’t even have the ability to access the schedule. I don’t know who checked you in, but you’re not in our system at all.” *Looking down at her screen again* “Unfortunately, we’re all booked today, but… Hmmm… You know what? Given your circumstances, I’m going to squeeze you into the clinic upstairs as an emergency appointment anyway.”

She scribbled a note on some official-looking paper and handed it to me.

Nurse #2: “Take this upstairs and check in with that reception desk. They should be able to help you. After your appointment, the doctor will send you back down here, and we’ll get you your shot.”

Confused and annoyed, I sighed, smiled, nodded, and found my way upstairs, waving to [Receptionist #2] as I passed. And that was that, right?

Oh-ho-ho, no. That would be too easy. 

When I reached the second-floor waiting area, it was empty. There was not a student, receptionist, nurse, or doctor in sight — just an empty, dark waiting room full of chairs, a line of what I presumed were reception desks, and a closed door. 

So, I went downstairs, explained the increasingly (and unnecessarily) long saga to yet a THIRD receptionist (where #1 and #2 went, I’ll never know), who accompanied me back upstairs, picked up a phone on the wall, and called back to the clinic. 

She explained my journey all the way from punctured foot to confused [Nurse #2].

Receptionist #3: “She has a paper here with [Nurse #2]’s signature on it saying she needs to be squeezed in today.” *Pauses* “Great, thanks.” *Hangs up*

Two seconds later, the door next to us swung open, and [Nurse #3] marched out. She and the receptionist greeted each other, I reiterated why I was there, and [Nurse #3] ushered me into the clinic where I was promptly dumped into the tiniest room I’ve ever seen. She asked what medications I was on and if I had any history of allergies, informed me that “[Doctor] will be in shortly,” and left, leaving the door wide open. 

And thus, I waited. I heard the sounds of nurses chatting on break, completing other patients’ intakes — apparently, the upstairs waiting room reopened shortly after my arrival — and generally doing nurse-y things. 

Another half-hour or so later, a harried-looking man in a white coat walked by the room, saw me, and did a double-take. 

White-Coat Man: “Are you waiting for a nurse?”

Me: “Honestly, I don’t even know.”

I explained the saga yet again.

Me: “A nurse took my history and left. I’m waiting for [Doctor].”

White-Coat Man: *Scrunching up his face* “I’m [Doctor].” *Checks the clipboard in his hands* “You’re not on the schedule at all. You say you’re here for a tetanus appointment?”

Me: *Nods* “The downstairs lab said I had to see you first, so here I am.”

Doctor: “…excuse me. I’ll be right with you.”

He scuttled off, and I settled back in my chair for another wait. Then, I heard a MASSIVE uproar in the front room. Thin walls or strong lungs — it’s anyone’s guess. 

Doctor: *Yelling* “WHAT THE H*** IS GOING ON OUT HERE?! THERE’S A PATIENT HERE WHO’S BEEN MYSTERIOUSLY ‘SCHEDULED’ FOR A PROCEDURE TWICE AND SOMEHOW STILL ISN’T ON A SINGLE SCHEDULE! AND WHAT THE H*** IS [RECEPTIONIST #1] DOING ‘SCHEDULING’ PATIENTS FOR LABS WITHOUT AUTHORIZATION IN THE FIRST PLACE? THAT’S THE THIRD TIME THIS WEEK! NOW BOTH [CLINIC] AND [LAB] WILL BE AN HOUR BEHIND FROM ALL THE F****** INCIDENT REPORTS I HAVE TO DO! HOW MANY TIMES DO I HAVE TO SAY IT? NURSING. STUDENTS. ARE. NOT. NURSES! [NURSING SCHOOL BIGWIG IN CHARGE OF CAMPUS CLINIC] WILL HAVE OUR HEADS FOR THIS S***!”

The yelling continued for another moment or two along those lines, and then there was blessed silence.

[Doctor] returned, gave a curt apology, and ordered me to remove my shoe so he could see the wound. Just wanting this saga to be over with — and not wanting to piss off the bulging vein in his forehead any further — I obeyed. He looked at my foot, seeming very unimpressed with the tiny hole — again, I was there for a tetanus shot, not the foot wound — scribbled something on his notepad, handed it to me, said a nurse would be in soon, and left. 

Seconds later, a very cowed [Nurse #4] appeared, gave me a bandage for my foot, handed me a paper authorization for my shot, and ushered me back downstairs. This time, I was seen immediately, given the hastiest vaccine I’ve ever received in my life by [Nurse #5], and all but pushed out the door. 

The kicker? When I tried to access my online transcript two months later, I received a notification that I had to pay an unpaid clinic bill — $90 and change — before the school could release it. That’s right: after all that drama and yelling, no one had written down anywhere that my visit should have been covered by the school as an in-class incident. 

Rather than try to argue my case, I paid the bill, got my transcript, and f***ed the h*** outta dodge. 

And that’s the story of how it took one doctor, three receptionists, and five nurses for me to get a single $90 tetanus shot.