It’s friday, so lets try to end the week in a positive note with a laugh.
My own: got the first compliment of my life after a locker room raid.
I was told I was pretty easy on the eye with no top on, with a smile and a wink to boot, after a few minutes of playing the toss the bundle around game.
what
Yeah, I have no idea what a “locker room raid” is either.
“Embarrassing moment” + “no top on”: OP is very likely a woman because men aren’t likely to be embarrassed by being topless. I’d guess a bunch of other people* ran into the girls locker room while she was changing and either had just a bra on up top, or nothing on up top; and they grabbed her clothes and played keep away for a few minutes. But afterward, they told her she was pretty and mildly flirted with her.
* ‘other people’ could be boys; but it feels like OP is from the Commonwealth, meaning it could also be a boarding school and thus a locker room raid by another house.
Sounds like something that was “funny” in the 90s but is considered a crime now.
Hey, the least I can say was that both locker rooms got mutually raided, so it was an equal opportunity exercise.
No wonder depression and suicide rates are increasing.
I was laid off from my welding job. My boss liked me, so he helped me get a job at another shop. But I was in a really bad head-space in that time of my life in general, so that combined with a few other things, and I quit that new job within about 2 days after starting.
I was totally unable to find a welding job after that. There was a reason the first so laid me off after all - oil markets had crashed, and I lived in a very oil-dependant city. So I ended up working temp jobs to get by, but for a solid 2 years I did nothing but kick myself for being so stupid. To this day, I think quitting that job was one of the stupidest things I’ve ever done.
Anyway, after 2 years of that, I finally decided to change gears entirely. I went to school, got a CS degree, and now I have a cushy, well paying programming job.
I still think it was stupid to quit that job back then, but if I hadn’t, I wouldn’t be where I am now. I often think about how I can apply that way of thinking to other areas of my life.