I'm still in high school, and only really use Reddit for browsing memes, my hobbies and other stuff that I'm interested in. This subreddit popped up in my recommended feed a little while ago when I went down a rabbit hole and I initially brushed it off thinking it didn't apply to me (which in a sense is right) but then it kept showing up in my feed. I was born into a very, very, VERY fortunate situation. As the youngest of four siblings I was always gifted and spoiled both in academic ability and extracurricular activities. I didn't realize how much better my life was until the pandemic started and I had to watch classmate's connections constantly drop over zoom calls and my own teachers sometimes not being able to attend them because they had to take care of their kids. My parents immigrated to the US from Poland…
Hello everyone, here's a situation: Jessie the employee who works at Johnny's Pizzeria got back from a paid FMLA and after two weeks working, gave a two weeks notice letter. Meaning, Jessie's last day would then complete the 30 calendar day return to work period. As the U.S. Department of Labor states: An employee who returns to work for at least 30 calendar days is considered to have “returned” to work for the purposes of the FMLA. My question is, can Johnny's Pizzeria recover all of the health benefit premiums and/or salary paid during Jessie's period of FMLA leave?
Getting new federal law to protect workers rights should be the goal. It's nice to see unions getting support but unions are not as always as innocent as they appear on the surface.
I’m upset and need to rant, might delete later. I work at a smoothie place. We’re purposely understaffed, so naturally when people call out, it’s near impossible to find a cover. Despite being a full-time student, I literally make myself available as often as possible and I’m scheduled more than most of my coworkers minus the managers. I don’t need the hours, but my manager asked if I could work more and I said sure. I am the go-to person for covers. I took a 2 month leave of absence because I was bedridden in the hospital. When I came back, I covered 6 shifts in 2 weeks. I worked 13 days in a row. One girl who asked me, told me she didn’t want to ask me because I had just came out of the hospital fighting for my life for 2 months, but our manager told her to…
Hello, I figured this would be the best place to get honest, real feedback. I just got a major promotion at my company. Something that I’ve been working toward for over 15 years. It’s an amazing opportunity and the company is fantastic. Needless to say, I want to make the most of this. A little about myself; I’m 40 which is young for this type of role, and I don’t have the most experience. I’m a likable guy that can work with anyone and I have an absolute passion for problem solving. I was managing “my team” a year before I got the actual promotion and I have a great relationship with them. I hate meetings and mass emails. I prefer to talk to people one on one so I can have a direct connection with them. Everyone on my team has my cell number and I encourage them to…
When I first started this job was actually fun to come to. Then I started to see the quick turnover rate. And management kind of helping less and caring less. There is no work life balance. A few of the employees constantly message each other through the app that we use to communicate to other team members and I have to put my phone on silent just so I don't get PTSD from hearing my phone go off every 5 seconds. I've never been so stressed in these past couple weeks due to being short staffed and just the crappy attitudes of our staff and being basically promoted to a new position that I have no idea what I'm doing and expect it to know what I'm doing within less than a month just completely over it …I'm more exhausted sitting in front of a computer then doing physical work…
Yale University professor Stanley Milgram’s famous shock experiments from the early 1960s on the nature of evil revealed that every day people can be pressured to doing evil. Professor Milgram experiment and the disturbing results have been examined repeatedly and most interpretations over the decades have focused on subjects’ unquestioning adherence to an authority’s commands. The idea that ‘it is not my decision, I am just doing my job’ allowed a lot of people to go all the way through the experiment believing they were causing great pain to others, simply because someone told them they it was required. Corporations are the very embodiment of this social structure. Those who are doing the cutting of benefits for workers, laying off staff, providing a product that is less than it is advertised are doing so at the command of the share holders, who demand they take these actions. The prospect of…
I had this weird sensation that I’ve never quite experienced before. I took my pills that I took everyday, and the INSTANT I swallowed them, I had a slight almost/weak cough/sneeze feeling, and I started feeling head pain. What’s so strange is that it felt like my entire brain was being stabbed by a ton of needles, best way I can describe it. It was unbearable and I’ve never quite experienced that, the kind of pain that feels way beyond what you can even imagine, you just want it to end but you can’t stop it, you’re forced to endure it. I kept hiccuping, and felt extremely nauseous on the way there, and for some reason, extra aggravated/irritated, and even felt like drinking water would make my stomach feel worse. I was also strangely sweating really bad. I worked for a bit over an hour feeling like this, also kept…
Tired and sick
I’ve been working full time since I was sixteen years old. I got married and bought a house. Hubby and I busted our asses in the early years to make a living. No college education but we sure had heart and a strong work ethic (as it was called.) Hubby got sick. He couldn’t work and even though I tried we lost everything. Got foreclosed on and had to start completely over with one income. I changed careers. Started off in a entry level position making about $12.50 an hour with a possible monthly bonus. With my background I performed extremely well and got promoted. Hubby was approved for Social Security Disability. I wanted to go further so I started college at a for-profit university. It was so fantastic, learning with these smart minds even if I was decades older than my peers. I did well and moved up quickly…