“My cousin works at Pizza Hut. They took this order with no payment, and it was a prank. I got 14 pies.”
“My job is wearing down my fingerprints to the point scanners don’t recognize them anymore.”
“My job involves a lot of walking, so I have to buy new shoes every year. The old shoe is on the left.”
“At my job, we have 2 of these foam things hanging, specifically for people to poke, so that the other ones don’t get destroyed.”
“Just landed my dream job... to teach people about dinosaurs and prehistoric animals at a natural history museum!”
“I work in a library. Stop doing this to remember which books you’ve read!”
“I am a remote worker. I chose this desk to work from today.”
“I work at a paint store. This ledge is where we wipe our thumbs after we test paint colors.”
“Me restoring a painting.”
“My job has a room for taking a nap. The room also has a gigantic roll of paper towels in case you have a cold.”
yes, it is.
You lend a thing, that it is not your property. For free.
Either you take care of it, to keep that thing nice for the next person or you are the reason, why books have to replaced after only 20 customers.
Where is the red line?
Making dots ? Spitting in the book? Writing on the pages? Ripping out pages?
just to make it clear:
If I' keep going to public libraries (preferred those, that are run by the cities), I have a 100% guaranty NOT to meet you?
thank you for your help!
It's destruction / damage of either public or library owned property. As Lula wrote above: where do you draw the line? Worst thing I ever found in a library book was a slice of salami as a bookmark. Maybe I am old-fashioned, but I treat borrowed things the way I want my own stuff treated when I lend it to someone.