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Race Is Never A Simple Black-And-White Issue

, , , , | Friendly | June 26, 2021

I am picking up my friend to take her to my house for dinner. I am cooking for several of my friends. The friend in my car has a black mother and a white father.

Friend: “Who else is going to be there?”

Me: “[Vietnamese Friend] and her friend and [Chinese Friend] and her boyfriend.”

Friend: *Laughs* “Oh, wow, so you’re going to be the only white person there?”

Me: “No.”

Friend: “Who else?”

Me: “You.”

Friend: “What? I’m not white.”

Me: “Yes, you are. You are half-white. You are just as much white as you are black.”

My friend speaks as if she is just having an epiphany.

Friend: “Oh, wow, I never thought of that.”

We Want To Cry, Too

, , , , | Right | CREDIT: AwesomeDucky21 | June 26, 2021

I work at a gas station for a grocery store. I love my job, but sometimes… the people.

I watch as a lady stops short on the drive up to an out-of-order pump and steps out to move the cone over to the side — a real feat, as it’s heavily weighted against the wind. She gets back in her car so she can drive up properly, then gets back out, takes the red out-of-order bag off the pump handle, and proceeds to throw it into the trash.

She goes about trying to use the pump, but after a minute, she yells that the screen isn’t working!

Gasp! Shock! And HORROR! The out-of-order pump is… OUT OF ORDER!? How dare it be?!

I ignore her yelling as I would any other crazy person doing such crazy things. She walks over to my window.

Customer: “Sir, the pump isn’t working. The screen’s not on.”

I play innocent like I didn’t just watch her do what she did.

Me: “Really? Which pump?”

Customer: “Pump number eight, I believe it is.”

Me: “Oh! I’m sorry, ma’am, but pump eight is shut down at the moment. It needs repairs.”

Customer: “It needs repairs? I didn’t know.”

Me: “Yes, ma’am. You didn’t run over the cone there, did you?”

Customer: “No. I don’t think so.”

Me: “Good. It could really damage your vehicle if you were to run it over. But it’s there to let you know that the pump is out of order.”

Customer: “Is that what it means? Well, I guess I’ll go to another one.”

Me: “That would be best.”

She leaves. I want to cry.

Anchors Aweigh… And Aweigh, And Aweigh…

, , , , , , , , | Healthy | June 26, 2021

I was a new sailor, getting ready to report to my first ship. My wife and I had driven all the way across the country to the base where my ship was home-ported, so we were totally unfamiliar with the area. We got a hotel room while we looked for apartments, but the next day I got really sick. Two of my teeth on my upper jaw hurt so much I couldn’t sleep, so we grabbed my medical and dental records — this was a long time ago, when sailors hand-carried their records between assignments — and managed to find our way to the local Navy hospital. I checked into the dental office, and they got me in very quickly because I was obviously in a lot of pain.

The dentist, a Navy Lieutenant, poked and prodded a bit, had an x-ray taken, and then told me there was nothing wrong with my teeth. She said I probably had a raging sinus infection and had one of the nurses take me to the emergency room on the ground floor.

An hour or so later, I was diagnosed with a sinus infection, given a paper prescription, and sent to the on-site pharmacy. I grabbed a number and waited, still dazed by the constant pain in my face from the infection. My wife had to tell me when they called my number, and she escorted me to the pharmacy window. The pharmacy tech rattled off a bunch of stuff about the medicines I wasn’t coherent enough to follow, but I did make out that I needed to start taking them right away.

Fine. No problem. We sat back down and I read the labels. The largest bottle said I had to take four pills right away. I staggered to the water fountain in the lobby and swallowed one of everything, plus four of the pills from the big bottle. I walked back to where my wife was sitting, and she started putting the bottles of pills in her purse, giving each bottle a quick look to see if any needed to be refrigerated. Then, she paused and said, “Oh, f***!”

She dragged me up to the prescription drop-off window and hollered for help. An older man came to see what was wrong, and my wife showed him the large bottle and my ID card. The pharmacy tech turned white as a sheet and said, “Oh, f***!”, and then called for a gurney and a doctor.

The next couple of hours were a blur of activity I don’t remember much about, ending with me admitted overnight for observation. It seems the pharmacy tech who’d handed me my pills had also grabbed a bottle intended for another patient — the large bottle. I had taken a quadruple dose of a major blood-pressure medication and my blood pressure was dangerously low by the time the ER managed to get me hooked up to an EKG.

Even in military medicine, almost killing the patients is generally contraindicated. I recovered fine, but there was a major investigation at the hospital, and the pharmacy tech who handed me the wrong pills ended up demoted or transferred someplace unpleasant — perhaps both. The pharmacy at that hospital changed their standard operating procedures to require careful verification of the name on every label and to cross-check every prescription issued with the patient’s medical record.

That’s how the US Navy nearly got me killed before I set foot aboard my first ship.

Bags Of Entitlement, Part 2

, , | Right | June 25, 2021

I’m working at a fast food place as a cashier. I put together someone’s order, and since there are no other customers I move on to cleaning sweeping the front of the counter. I then notice the customer I had just served standing and glaring at me with his bag of food still sitting where I left it in front of him on the counter.

Me: “Is there a problem, sir?”

Customer: *Yelling.* “Close the bag up, you lazy b*stard!”

Related:
Bags Of Entitlement

Why Are You Laughing About This?!

, , , , | Working | June 25, 2021

I am female. A manager, who is also female, has accused me of being pregnant all three times I have needed to take a sick day for the past three years. Each time, she heavily implies that if I am pregnant she will have me fired but never outright says it.

A couple of months ago, my husband got kidney stones and I had to rush him to the hospital because he called me in immense pain and had no idea what was wrong. They did very little for him except diagnose him before sending him home to drink water and charge $15,000 in fees, which led to a few months of stress sorting that out and getting it down to $600.

I have recently started working out again.

Me: *Stretching* “My stomach hurts.”

Husband: *Jokingly* “You probably have kidney stones.”

Me: “I do not have kidney stones.”

Husband: “Let’s take you to the hospital.”

Me: *Laughing* “Oh, God, no. [Manager] will fire me for running up her insurance and she won’t care that it is highly illegal.”

Husband: “Sounds about right.”