Malicious Compliance: People Share How They Messed With Others By Following The Rules

August 8, 2019 | Eul Basa

Malicious Compliance: People Share How They Messed With Others By Following The Rules


Some folks are sticklers for the rules while also failing to recognize that the rules really don't favor their position. When you're confronted with such a person, the best response is often to abide by those rules strictly and literally and let the chips fall where they may. On the internet, they call this 'malicious compliance.' That is, compliance that actually undermines the person who is demanding that you obey.

These people recently went online to share the best stories about times they stood back and let the rules explode in someone else's face.

beautiful-woman-embarrassed-eyes-closed-2379235-1-300x200.jpgPhoto by Malcolm Garret from Pexels


30. Good fences, bad neighbors

This was a long time ago but I remember it clearly. We moved in to a community with tight space in between our house and our neighbors, and we didn't like them being able to see into our kitchen. We put up a bunch of plants, costing thousands, but my parents thought it would be worth it.

A week later my parents awoke to the plants completely chopped down. My father was furious, and marched down to our neighbor's house. He told my father the plants were on his property line, therefore he had total right to take them down. He warned that if anything were to go on his property again, he would report us to the authorities immediately.

Later that day my father called the company that put in the plants, and with the warranty we could have them replanted next week for no charge. We made sure there was no way it was on our neighbor's property. However a few days later we caught him chopping them down at 2am. We called the police for destruction of property, and after a chat with my neighbor he decided to call a professional and mark his property line. My father agreed.

A few days later I got home to find orange tape in my neighbor's yard. Apparently, his fence was 11 feet over our property line! We watched as he took down his fence, completely furious. Within the next month we were enjoying our new space and privacy in our backyard, and my neighbor ended up losing a quarter of his backyard. My neighbor ended up having to pay almost $10,000 for the destruction of our property, and we got to plant our plants again.

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29. Ashes to ashes

My father died on Father’s Day 2012. He was divorced and living alone, and I am an only child. So that means that I had to wrap up all of his affairs. This story centers around us trying to get his utilities canceled.

I called in to see what we had to do to get them to cancel. The lady I spoke with on the phone said to send in his certified death certificate. I sent in the certified copy of his death certificate the next day. The next month got another bill. I called again and a new woman answered. She said that because I wasn’t on the account that she had to speak with the account holder. I informed her that the account holder was dead but she wouldn’t budge. I had to make an appointment with a supervisor so she could speak to him herself in person.

I showed up at the board of public utilities with another death certificate and HIS ASHES IN THE CLEAR BAG that they returned his remains in. I plopped them down on the center of her desk and said when she talked to him to tell him that I loved him for me. The woman went pale, flew out of her chair, and called the cops.

When they showed up she claimed that I had assaulted her. And yes my dad's remains were still sitting in the middle of her desk with the death certificate. The cops questioned me as to why I would do that. I told them the story. The supervisor’s boss was called in and they all stepped away from the desk for a private talk. While they were talking the cops came over to talk to me. They said that I shouldn’t take human remains out in public, but there was no laws that were broken. I said that I agreed with them that it was extreme, but she insisted to speak with him in person. By then they were done talking between themselves. The supervisor’s boss kissed up to me and got it taken care of.

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28. The gay grocer

I work at a grocery store. My boyfriend and I both buy our groceries there and sometimes he'll see me and maybe wave or say hi. We don't chat or waste any time unless I also happen to be going on break.

My department manager didn't know I was gay when he hired me and he figured it out when he asked me who the guy that was waving to me was. He made a weird face, not necessarily disgusted but you get the point.

Any time my boyfriend would enter the store after that, he would keep his eye on him. Now if he were to wave to me, my manager would start to berate me and try and make it out like I'm slacking, when I'm just stocking shelves and smiling in his direction, nothing bad at all. He didn't care at all prior to learning he's my boyfriend.

After a week he has a private talk with me saying my boyfriend is causing too much of a distraction and he shouldn't shop here while I'm on shift and that if something didn't change I might be let go.

I was mad, told my boyfriend about it, he was even more mad. I decided to prank my manager instead of getting into legal or corporate stuff. We have other gay friends that shop there; crazy enough we look just like regular people so no one would realize, including my manager.

Sure my boyfriend won't shop there but what about other gay people? That shouldn't matter if he just doesn't want my SO distracting me at work...

So, I mentioned what happened to my five friends who mentioned it to their friends and so on.

My next shift, about 30 extremely flamboyant and openly gay men and women came in, flaunting their sexuality in the store. My manager was trying to hide in the back but every customer needed "the manager's" assistance for the most mundane questions. He ended up going home early but after that shock he actually stopped berating me for the past couple of months, he might just be happy that I'm not very open about my sexuality so he can choose to ignore it.

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27. Dangerous driving

I've been a mechanic my entire working life so far, and this is one of my favorite experiences.

I had a customer come in complaining about a vibration. I put the vehicle on the lift and checked the front end. I found a nearly broken tie rod and a faulty rack and pinion. So basically the passenger side front wheel was not fully secured to the steering system and would soon break and cause the wheel to be completely disconnected from the steering.

I told the customer how much the repair would be and told her it was unsafe to drive. She asked me to put it back together so she could leave. I told her that I could not do that because if it broke after I let her leave, I could be held liable. She started yelling and screaming about calling the cops and suing me and how her cousin's brother knows a guy who's related to the chief of police and I'll be arrested.

She calls the police and they come out. I show the officers the vehicle and they understood the safety concern. They told me to just put the car down and let her leave. I did and even made her sign a statement declining crucial safety repairs.

She left with the most "I told you so" smug grin on her face... Until she left the property, got pulled over, and her car impounded. They also gave her a ticket for reckless driving.

I was so happy seeing her car get towed.

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26. The big scoop

Yesterday I decided to take my kids to an international chain restaurant. In this restaurant, the kids' meal comes with ice cream. But, you have to serve yourself.

That was a problem because there weren't any bowls beside the ice cream machine.

So I thought, "I know what to do. I'll simply ask an employee for some bowls." And that's just what I did.

So he turns to look at the vast array of bowls behind him, some sauce-sized, some entree salad-sized, and many in between. And we realize that neither of us knows what size the kids' ice cream is intended to be.

So he thought, "I know what to do. I'll simply ask a manager." And he says, "Hey boss, what do we put the kids' ice cream in?"

Without turning around, the boss says "a freaking bowl, what do you think?"

"Ya, but what size of bowl?"

The boss, with his inimitable charm, tact, and grace, says "JUST GIVE HIM A BOWL."

The employee looked back at the bowls, and then I saw him get a big grin over his face.

"I apologize about that, sir. I think it's probably these ones," he says, as he hands me two of the largest bowls they have in the restaurant, practically giggling with glee.

My children were similarly delighted.

The manager walked by when we were half way through and made a noise like a startled opossum, but said no actual words. Definitely going back there.

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25. The great recliner

A few years ago I was on a flight from LA to Singapore (takes 16+ hours). I'm a tall dude - around 6'3, so I don't fit very well in economy class seats. On most planes my knees are often very close or right up against the seat in front of me. This makes it impossible for the person in front of me to recline their seat, which usually isn't a problem once the person in front of me sees how cramped I am.

However for this particular flight, the man in front of me was not having it. He tried to recline his seat, but couldn't because my legs were there. He turns around and sees what's happening and asks me something along the lines of, "Do you mind letting me put my seat back?"

I respond with, "I wish I could but I physically can't. I'll do my best to give you as much space as I can, but it won't be much." At this point he starts to get angry and just starts pushing as hard as he can back on his seat. Needless to say, this was not particularly pleasant for me. I ask him to please stop, and he says, "I'll stop when I can put my seat back."

After about 10-15 minutes of this, he calls a flight attendant over and proceeds to demand a new seat. The flight attendant tells him there are no available seats and he will have to deal with it. He demands to speak to the pilot.

So the flight attendant goes up front to talk to the cockpit. After a couple of minutes, the co-pilot (he wanted to speak to the pilot and wan't happy about this) comes back and tries to explain to the man that he can't change seats because there are no other coach seats free. The man continues to demand a seat that is able to recline, making a scene etc.

The co-pilot finally gives in and says while looking at the man, "Sir, would you like to sit up in business class?"

The man stands up and mutters, "Finally." To which the co-pilot responds, "Sir, sit down. I wasn't talking to you." He turns to me and repeats, "How would you like a seat in business class?"

I have, to this day, never seen someone as furious as the man as I walked past him to my new business class seat (with free drinks).

aeroplane-aircraft-airplane-1828940-300x200.jpgPhoto by Alexander Isreb from Pexels

24. The fine print gets you every time

I work in an office and we have an 8 week busy season with mandatory overtime (12-14hrs/day). During this time, the company agrees to reimburse us for dinner, up to $13/meal. We just have to submit a claim with our receipts at the end of the busy season.

Food options around my work aren't great so I usually brought my dinner from home. But sometimes I was too tired to cook after a long day so out of the 8 weeks, I purchased maybe 10 meals. 3 of those meals I spent $13.50, going $0.50 over the limit. This resulted in a whopping $1.50 overage which my manager said was no big deal and that I could include on my expense claim. He signed off on it and everything.

A few days after I submitted my report Head Office emailed me saying they rejected my expense claim and that I could resubmit after I removed the $1.50 overage. I wrote back saying my manager was fine with the $1.50 overage and even signed off on it, and they responded by telling me that they do not allow overages under any circumstances, that the $1.50 must be removed or they wouldn't approve any of my meal expenses. They ended their email with the advice that I should "actually read the company policy next time".

Fine, they were right and I was wrong. So I decided I'd read the policy very thoroughly before redoing my expense claim.

Yes, the policy clearly stated a $13/maximum on purchased meals. Oh, and what's this? The policy also allows a $10 per diem for meals you bring from home.

I very happily removed the $1.50 overage and added an additional $300 for the 30 meals I brought from home.

I should read the company policy more often!

Ful_medames_arabic_meal-226x300.jpgAbdullah Geelah/Wikimedia

23. We could all use a little change

I work in a shop.

Despite the big bold sign written in such a way that even the visually impaired could understand it, almost everyone with $50s and $100s thinks they don't need no stinking bank and will just come to us to get that big bill broken down.

Well, it keeps wiping out our tills when they raise a fuss and eventually they called corporate. Their response was to have us rescind the policy and... carry more money in the tills. Obviously they have never worked a till in their lives otherwise they would know why we don't carry disgusting amounts of money in the register.

But they didn't tell us we needed $20s and $10s. So we decided to start some 'malicious compliance.'

We go to the bank and their mouths twist into a grin when we tell them. We get hundreds of $5s and $1s for the tills. And we wait.

The first dude walks in and smugly places down a $100. his change is $95. Here we go! I start singing the Schoolhouse Rock song. Five ten fifteen twenty twenty five... he gets nineteen $5s. He asks where the $20s are and I tell him "We are out. People keep paying with $50s and $100s and wipe out the $10s and $20s."

Second dude comes in and pays for a $0.50 cookie with a $50. When he gets nine fives he says he wanted twenties. I inform him that he could always go to a bank.

We continue this until people start to get the point.

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22. I quit my job... for 15 minutes

Worked for a medical transportation company that had a contract with Medicaid. One of their many rules was that you could not provide any assistance to the patient INSIDE of their house.

One elderly lady had an old house with a very small foyer where you had to climb three steps to get to the main floor. The only other entrance was around back and up two and a half flights of rickety steps to an old deck that opened into a bedroom. Upstairs. She's in a wheelchair.

Common sense says take her in the front door, up three stairs and she's home on the level she lives on.

Medicaid says take her up the outside stairs, dump her in the bedroom upstairs and let her worry about getting down to the living room level. We ignored their policy and took her in the front door anyway.

A random inspection by a random inspector showed that we were not in compliance.

We appealed, the inspector came out and saw the different options and decided that we had no case for appeal. Take her up the outside stairs.

Nope. From then on, when the driver arrived at her house, he would get her out of the van in the sidewalk, and then get on the radio and tell the boss to shove his stupid job.

Now that he was no longer an employee, he was free to assist this lovely person into her front door and up the stairs.

Once finished, they would come back to the van, tell the boss they'd reconsidered, and ask for their job back.

Boss was ALWAYS understanding and took them back, but very carefully noted the 10 to 15 minute break in their employment, to show that the company remained in compliance.

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21. "Sorry, we don't care about our customers"

I was working at a large national chain restaurant as a manager. I was asked to temporarily re-assign to a location in a city about an hour away, and accepted. They put me up in a hotel.

The first weekend I was there, I discovered that the GM had screwed up and not ordered any change (small bills/rolls of coins) for the safe, and that the local branch of our bank would be closing in the next hour. I also happened to have a personal account at the same bank, and had, in the past, gone and gotten change from the branch back home.

Since time was tight, I quickly looked up the address of the bank, grabbed $800, and jumped in my car. I get to the bank, wait in line, and then ask them to make change ($400 in $5 bills, $300 in $1 bills, and $100 in assorted rolled coins). The teller tells me that the bank doesn't make change. Me, thinking it was because they didn't know me, informed her that our restaurant had an account she could look up. She then told me, "No, we don't make change at all." I left, went back to my car, then had an idea.

I went back inside the bank with my personal checkbook. Got to the front of the line, and (luckily) the same teller. Before she could even greet me, I held out my checkbook and told her, "I would like to close this account, since this bank is no longer customer service oriented." She kind of rolled her eyes, but went about my request. Then she asked how I wanted my cash back. I said, "$400 in $5's, $300 in $1's, $70 in rolled quarters, $25 in rolled dimes, $4 in rolled nickels, and $1 in rolled pennies. The rest can be on a cashier's check." No reason for her to deny it, so I got my change.

And the following Monday, I returned, closed out the other 2 accounts I had there, and I opened accounts at a different bank where I have been banking ever since.

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20. Perfect revenge on a racist

I used to work as a 911 dispatcher and I once took a call from a lady who was complaining about a black man walking down the street. He was doing nothing wrong...except, as she put it, "He's black and walking down the street." She insisted an officer be dispatched to speak with her and we had a policy that we had to dispatch.

So... I sent the only black officer on duty.

It was out of his area, but a computer message to him and the supervisor made it obvious why he was going. When he arrived she went nuts and called again screaming that there was now a black man knocking on her door. I said, "Yes, this is the police officer you requested."

Ultimately I had to send the supervisor out because she refused to open the door and was throwing a huge fit on the phone.

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19. Here's a hot tip

When going over my expense report my company saw I tipped 20% for lunch one afternoon. Lunch was $15, the tip was $3. They told me that is too much "because I wouldn't do that with my money." Heck yeah I do. I just took the better part of an hour of my server's time. The least I could do is leave $3. It's $3 for crying out loud, but rules are rules.

However my company is fairly generous allowing me $75 a day to spend on food, which I never do and that's about to change. For lunch today instead of my usual salad or sandwich, I went for the lobster grilled cheese. And of course upgraded my regular fries to the duck fat fries. Enjoy "saving" that 5% for the rest of my travel meal expenses.

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18. The ultimate "I want to speak to a manager" story

I worked at a Subway that didn't have any authority/managers, just a couple minimum wage base level workers.

I don't remember what this particular customer was mad about but she was arguing with me and didn't like the answer I gave her. She asked to speak to the manager, and there not being a manager I decided to promote myself on the spot and replied with "manager speaking, how can I help you." This did not make her very happy because she realized she was not going to get a different answer and asked for a phone number to call.

The owner has specifically told us never to give his cell number to customers so I gave her the store number. She gives me a triumphant grin thinking about how much trouble she's about to get me in when the phone behind me starts to ring. I will never forget the face she gave me as I answer the phone, look her in the eyes, and ask her "how may I help you?"

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17. What a ridiculous rule

Some years ago, my dad was at a several-day course to earn some additional qualifications for his job. On the final day, there was going to be a multiple choice test to actually pass the seminar.

On test day, everyone got settled into place, and the teacher announced that he would not go easy on cheaters: You had one strike to be caught trying to copy off of someone else or use a cheat sheet, but if you were caught a second time, you would be immediately thrown out and your score made invalid. Now, this teacher was very old-school strict, and treating grown working people like unruly schoolchildren, and my dad does not like that very much.

So my dad proceeds to take the test, and it goes pretty well! When he's through with the questions, there is just one left where he's not sure he's got it right.

And he has a free strike, after all.

So my dad... yells out into the class. Just calls out, "What's the answer to question 14?" Some complete bro elsewhere in the room yells the answer back. My dad fills in the sheet, gets up, walks to the teacher's desk, presumably tries to not trip on the teacher's jaw as it lies on the floor, hands in his test, and leaves the room.

To the teacher's credit, he approached my dad afterwards with some... begrudging respect. I don't know if he changed his policy afterwards, or the tone in which he conveyed it.

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16. Come late, stay later

I worked in an electricity retailer call center. It was highly unionized, but the management tracked login times to the minute.

One incredibly ridiculous thing they did was if you were a minute or two late, they would literally dock your pay by that many minutes. It wasn’t really enough for us to really notice, and I’m sure they didn’t actually save any money -- I mean, if you were 15 minutes late I could understand not paying but 3 minutes late?

Well, eventually the union discovered what they were doing, and were completely furious that they hadn’t been consulted about this stingy move.

The union demanded logon and log off times for everyone in the call center. What management hadn’t counted on was that all of us would often need to wrap up calls and clear the call queue before the call center could officially close. This often meant that operators would leave several minutes after their shift. On bad occasions it could be 15-20 minutes delay before they could clock off, but mostly it was only a few minutes.

The union made management recalculate everyone’s pay for the year based on clock on and clock off time. They also pointed out that staying past end of shift triggered penalty rates. It turns out everyone (and I mean everyone!) had spent more time wrapping up calls at the end of the day than they were late clocking on. Each of us got paid for lost wages, at overtime rates.

It cost them a fortune and they never docked the pay of anyone who was late ever again.

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15. Fihiiiiiiiired!

Years ago I had a thankless labor/service job with a pretty unappreciative boss.

One morning, I roll into the office about 7:25, and get a dirty look from the boss as I head to the dispatcher's office to collect my day's work (supposed to be there for 7:15). I'd actually been working until about 1:30 the night before, and was thinking that only being 10 minutes late wasn't bad.

When I got my stack of papers for the day, I let out one of those low groans, and said, "You've gotta be kidding me!" It was going to be another long day. Boss takes that as his chance to call me out in front of the rest of the office: "Hey, if you're going to show up late and then complain about work, we don't need you around here, you're fired."

Dunno if he thought I would apologize for coming in late and ask to not be fired, but I knew that I could have a new, equally crappy job before the end of the day. So I called his bluff, and handed over my clipboard and walked away. He must have looked through my work for the day, and realized that he didn't have anyone that could do what I could do and with the labor market crunch, he just didn't have anybody.

On my way out to my car, I stopped and started chatting with my buddy and the dispatcher, having a smoke. Boss comes out and tells me to meet him in his office so we can discuss my attitude. I said, "I'm not going to your office, I just got fired." My buddy and the dispatch are shocked. Buddy says: "you know he pulled 18 hours yesterday, and 15 the day before that. Why did you fire him? We've got no one to do his run today!"

Boss is taken a little aback and says: "I didn't say you're fired, I said you're FiHired. So here's your route for the day." I say, "Well, if I just got hired, we should talk about my starting wage." And that's how I got a $2/hour raise.

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14. Ice cream, you scream

Last summer I worked as an ice cream vendor on the beach of my hometown. Best job I ever had. People were nice to me, I got to work on my tan, it payed pretty well, but most importantly, we were allowed to eat the delicious ice cream in our breaks.

One day, I'm serving a man and his son. The man orders a cone with two scoops for him and a cone with one scoop for the little one. The kid wasn't happy about that, and said to his dad that he also wanted two scoops. The dad explains that the scoops are pretty big and that one will suffice for him. I confirm this to help the Dad, even offering to make it extra big. Still, the kid doesn't budge, instead he starts throwing a tantrum, nearly crying how he wanted two scoops.

The dad, clearly not wanting to ruin his vacation mood, gives up and says to the kid he can have two scoops. "However", he adds, "if you can't finish your ice cream like I said you wouldn't, no more TV for you, for the rest of the vacation!" The kid happily agrees, claiming he could eat a whole tub of ice cream.

Big mistake, kid.

Me, being the petty person that I am, wanted to teach this brat a lesson. I proceed by scooping one of the most gigantic scoops I've ever scooped in my entire scooping career. I put it on the cone, the kids eyes widen in shock. My scoop goes back for more, I see the kid tremble in disbelief. I scoop the second most gigantic scoop a scooper could scoop, and graciously add it to the first one. I hand the monstrosity I've created to the kid, who by now realizes he won't watch TV again this summer. The dad seemed pretty cool with it, he even tipped me a little which was very rare. All in all a pretty good day.

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13. Meet the teacher

So my friend Talon's dad died about 5 years ago. They got him cremated, so Talon has an urn with his dad's ashes in it.

One of our teachers was mad at Talon about something (I'm not sure what) but the teacher demanded to meet Talon's father. He tried multiple times to tell our teacher that his dad, was in fact dead. But Mr. McJerk wouldn't listen to him.

So the next day, Talon shows up to school with his dads urn and plops it on the teachers desk and says, "You wanted to meet my dad, so here."

I have never seen a teacher so mortified in my life.

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12. Call me/don't call me

I work as an emergency dispatcher and 911 operator. The other night we got a call about a pickup truck parked at a tire store, loading tires in the back. Deputies responded and found that, yes, a theft had obviously occurred and asked if I would call the owner to see if he wanted to come out and file a report.

The owner was obviously annoyed with the 1:30 phone call, as people tend to be, but once I explain the circumstances, they tend to react appreciatively. But as I began, "This is [County] communications. We have deputies out at your-" he snarled, "YOU DON'T CALL ME AT THIS TIME OF THE MORNING!" and hung up. Well. He obviously didn't care that much, then, did he?

I radioed the deputies. "Made contact with the owner and he advised we do not call him at this time of morning." "[County], did you add that to the notes?" "10-4. I did." "Show us clear, then!"

A few days later, my supervisor told me the owner, after filing a report the next day for the stolen tires, complained that we should've contacted him when it happened. The complaint made it down to my supervisor, who kicked the notes and a recording of the 45-second phone call back up the chain. The owner was basically told where he could shove his complaint.

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11. Where the boss goes, we all go

My dad was one of the three partners at one of his former companies (about medium sized). One day, he and his company went to a drinks party. I don’t think it was exactly a company party, but it was more than an after-work drink at the pub.

Anyway, the bar was serving aperitifs, and my dad asked for his without ice, as he hates ice tainting his drink. The landlord, who was behind the bar, refused, and said the ice was mandatory. So he served my dad’s with ice. Dad accepted it, took the ice out, and laid it on the drain rack that goes under the beer draughts.

The landlord ordered him to leave.

My dad was half expecting it, but asked him to repeat himself. The landlord once again told him to leave.

My dad said “okay,” and started to leave.

And his company all started to file out after him.

The landlord protested, “No, no, you don’t all have to leave. Only he has to leave.”

One of the other staffers said something along the lines of, “Sorry mate. He’s the big boss. We all go where he goes.”

So they all left and went to another bar.

They had made a reservation at the bar they were leaving, but they hadn’t put down any deposit for it, and hadn’t bought any drinks yet. The aperitifs had been complimentary, so the landlord didn’t even get paid for those.

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10. The seat and the porcelain throne

Bit of a backstory before we jump in - I've been in India for the last two weeks on a course with my university. Just a day before I flew out I must've eaten something dodgy because I got the infamous "Delhi Belly".

As someone who likes to think ahead, I decided to book aisle seats for all my flights, knowing I'd probably be taking multiple trips to the bathroom.

As I made my way to my seat, I realized an older woman had taken it for herself. I pointed at the number above but instead of moving to her middle seat, she got up and motioned for me to sit in it. At this point I thought about telling her what the deal was with my colonic calamity but decided to just let my actions speak for me.

As soon as the seat belt sign went off after takeoff I got up to take the first of many dumps. She had actually fallen asleep at this point so I had to wake her up so she could get up (grumpily).

20 minutes later I had to go again.

A total of 4 dumps later and we're still 1.5 hours from landing, she's getting irate. Finally, after my 5th and final defecation she offers to swap seats.

Cherry on the top - I didn't even get up again until we landed.

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9. A pizza is never late, nor is it early

I deliver food for a major company for a living, and while most of our customers are very nice we get the occasional person who drives us crazy.

One customer requested her food be delivered at 5:30PM. I left the store at about 5:20PM, knowing it'd take about ten minutes to get there. I ended up getting stuck behind slow drivers and arrived at 5:34PM.

This woman flipped out. She was yelling at me and telling me that when she requests something for a specific time, it had better be there AT that time, no sooner, no later! No tip.

The following week, the same woman ordered again for the same time. This time around, we had more help in store and I got the order out earlier than normal. I thought "screw it" and went to get something to eat. I parked on the next street over and ate my food slowly, then delivered her food at exactly 5:30PM.

This time around she was on her phone and didn't say a word to me. No tip again.

This process repeated, but I came to enjoy having some quiet time to eat, even if I wasn't getting tipped. One day I was in a particularly mischievous mood and decided to just sit outside her house and eat my lunch. When I finally rang the doorbell at 5:30PM, she immediately whipped open her door and yelled, "HAVE YOU BEEN SITTING OUTSIDE MY HOUSE THIS WHOLE TIME WITH MY FOOD?!"

"Yes."

"WHY DIDN'T YOU BRING IT TO ME THEN?!"

"Because you said when you ordered something for 5:30, you wanted it at 5:30. It's 5:30. Didn't want to bring it to you too early."

No tip. Worth it.

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8. More delivery delights

Years back, I drove a truck/delivered furniture. My helper and I got along great and we worked very well together. The warehouse manager was kinda a douche-bag that really got off on the power trip. He was always so serious, like he believed that you couldn't have fun at work.

He instituted a "Two Hour Window" policy for deliveries. I'm sure most of you are familiar with this now, but it was new to the company. He would create our route for us, time everything in his head and create a schedule. He would then call the customers and let them know what two hours we would be expected at their house.

The first day the policy was in place my partner and I kicked butt. We got so we were ahead of our window, So I called the next customer and asked if they minded if we came early. The customer was very happy that they didn't have to wait. I did that for the rest of the deliveries that day. We ended up back to the warehouse before our last delivery was even scheduled.

Did we get a GREAT JOB!!? Did we hear,"Maybe I messed up on the scheduling". No, we hear, "You broke the rules by going to the customer's house before I said you could be there. If it happens again you will get written up!"

OK.

We would start out our day working really hard. We would fly through the deliveries until we reached a time where would just stop for an hour or two. I live in New Jersey, there is a lot you can do. We went to arcades, museums, the beach. All paid time because we wouldn't want to break the rules and get written up.

beach-buildings-city-412681-300x225.jpgPhoto by Tyler Lastovich from Pexels

7. It pays to carry a thesaurus

So my roommate's sister is some kind of religious tyrant and apparently doesn't let her kids say common words and phrases including "oh my God", "oh my gosh/goodness", "awesome", "good", or "great". Because only God can be those things.

Cue me being a bit of a jerk.

My roommate and I went to his sister's house to drop something off and I made sure to use words like "venerated", "sacrosanct", "sublime" and "pietistic" when talking about the most mundane things. I got a couple of half-awkward smiles, clearly showing she had no idea what I was saying.

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6. They really should have hired her back

My employer decided to convert all of a certain class of our records from paper based files to digital. There were three immediate problems. Our company was not going to buy a generic system, but develop our own unique, tailored system. It was to be done on the cheap, with net savings for record keeping from Year 1. The guy in charge (let’s call him Genius) always (and I mean ALWAYS) thought he was the smartest guy in room. Believe me, he wasn’t.

Anyway, one of the girls I worked with took on the project on the condition that she could have the next July off for her wedding and honeymoon. She worked hard, and the project was actually making progress. One of her duties was passwords, none of which could be written anywhere because Genius knew this was ‘bad’. She periodically reminded Genius about the July wedding and he told her it’d be fine, but never signed off the paperwork.

Come mid May, the project is WAY behind, mainly because Genius told management it could all be done in house at negligible cost, and Genius kept changing the design every time he read a new magazine article on IT. My friend was then told 6 weeks out from the wedding that her leave was cancelled. The project took priority and she’d just have to reschedule her wedding, honeymoon, the works. Genius could not see that this might be a problem. So she did her job, updated the passwords as required, never recording them anywhere, as required... and resigned without notice the last day of June.

On her honeymoon she gets a frantic call from Genius demanding all the passwords. “Sorry, I don’t work there anymore." Click.

That’s why a decade later our company still has a few hundred electronic case files we can’t access.

feature-wedding-disaster-300x150.jpgPhoto by Bin Thiều on Unsplash

5. Four = four

Rather minor, but cashiering doesn't offer many opportunities for malicious compliance.

One of those very loud customers came up to the counter and tossed a round battery onto the counter. "Hey! You have that battery?" I check the size, and confirm that we do sell 2032s. "Well, are you gonna go and get it?" I walk over to the battery rack, pull one out, and return to the register.

As soon as I step back there, and no earlier: "I need four of those!"

I go back out, and instead of putting it back and grabbing the four-pack, I pull down three more single packs and once again return. All together they cost about twice as much as the multi-pack, but you can't put a price on shaving ten steps off your shopping trip.

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4. If you say so, dad

My younger brother has just been helping my dad with his computer. As is often the case, an argument ensued and my brother withdrew his IT services. In an act of spite, my father instructed my brother to turn off everything in his bedroom. If he won't help with my dad's computer problem, then my brother can't use his own PC. There's some logic there, I suppose.

However, he seems to have forgotten that the router is located in my brother's bedroom. He's been in the study for 10 minutes. We don't know what he's doing on his laptop without an internet connection but my brother is practicing his grin for when he eventually emerges.

hands_old_typing_laptop_internet_working_writer_old_person-770100-1550557068459-300x200.jpgPixabay

3. Sibling rivalries

I'm home on spring break, and Saturday night after we finished watching movie, I turned on the shower, got ready to get in when it sounds like the KGB were going to break down the bathroom door. I open it expecting my dad to yell at me about something, but it's my teenage sister screaming at me to let her use the bathroom.

So I get out, let her use the bathroom, she comes out again, screams at me some more about how I need to let her know when I'm going to take a shower, goes into her room, slams the door.

I take my shower. I'm on a college sleep schedule so I go to bed at 1am, so the next night I'm doing some work and I start to get ready for bed around 12. My sister has high school the next morning so she's in bed. Before I take my shower I open her door and say in a loud voice that I will be taking a shower now.

 

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2. Dress codes are for fascists

This boss has since been fired, which makes this story so much sweeter, but this man was a Grade A jerkwad while he was there. Fired a coworker who's been there for years over petty nonsense. Constantly reminding people he was their boss. Asked me to do nonsense work and when I questioned it he just said he was in charge. Threatened to fire me multiple times for being "disobedient". Luckily I was trained to do a job only 3 people were trained to do and the coworker he fired was one of them.

Anyway, he called everyone for a meeting about the dress code and said there were people not tucking their shirts in. Whatever, I always had my shirt tucked in so I thought I'd get left alone for a day.

Nope.

He comes over with the dress code printed out and says we have to talk. I asked what was up since I had a tucked in button up on. He said my undershirt was light grey and the rules say it has to be white or navy blue. You've got to be kidding me. So I looked through the company rules and it said you can have 2 top buttons undone and if an undershirt is worn it must be white or blue. If.

So the next day I came in without an undershirt and the top 2 buttons undone. I forgot to mention, I'm a hairy dude. And I fluffed up my thick ass chest hair so it was poofing out like an Italian mobster. I sat directly across from him at the meeting and kept leaning forward. He looked visibly uncomfortable and after the meeting I saw him frantically looking through the rule book. He must not have found anything cause he never mentioned it again.

adult-checkered-shirt-fashion-69212-300x200.jpgPexels

1. Oh, I'll edit it alright

I was going to buy a car from a small used car dealership. We agreed on a price and a day to meet. The morning of he sold it out from under me right before I was there with no courtesy call or text or anything.

I wrote an accurate review reflecting my experiences with the dealership online. A couple days later he calls and threatens me with a lawsuit claiming my review is slander. He warned me everyone else that gave a one star review was sued for slander and had to pay court fees and remove their review. He said if I edited the review everything would be fine and he wouldn't take me to court.

Well I obliged and edited my review stating he threatened me over the phone with a lawsuit since I gave a negative review and that my review was in fact 100 percent accurate of my experiences.

The icing on the cake... I text him right after I edited the review and said, "Hey man edited the review as requested hope there are no hard feelings." I guess he didn't read my edit before replying with, "thanks man I appreciate it. No hard feelings!"

car-909528_1920-225x300.jpgImage by


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