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#& had me publicly humiliate myself as punishment for 'neglecting' my job.
orcelito · 1 month
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Took a few months but the situation at work is finally truly blowing up
I may or may not join in a workplace abuse claim against my old boss using old blog posts and discord messages of me venting as proof ☺️
It'd be me burning the bridge of having him as a reference later down the line, but honestly I think I can get by without him.
#speculation nation#my old coworker friend messaged me about how they were planning on doing this#and i was like OH BOY do i have some things i could add!!!#read back thru my messages from the day he gave me an hour long panic attack#& had me publicly humiliate myself as punishment for 'neglecting' my job.#and honestly it makes me so sad to look back on it. it really fucked me up so bad.#but Karma's got its kiss for him. and even if we dont do the suing thing hes still losing all but 4 employees#all of whom are currently teenagers lol#hes apparently so convinced he can bounce back and magically get and train so many new employees#but even IF he can. it would require so much extra work and time from him#which a vindicative part of me is rather happy to hear about that.#if i do join in on suing him it'd mean making my discord and tumblr legally linked to myself in a court of law#but. ykno what. im feeling spiteful enough to not mind it.#show up to the court like Orcelito Is Here to give some scathing accounts of their bitch ass ex boss!!!!!#id love if this went somewhere. i also do still have a picture of the thermostat back during that freeze in january#when the heaters couldnt keep up & it was 53F in the store. but we were forced to keep working anyways :]#which is a health code violation :]#with the metadata on that pic it would link its location and time to the store during open hours#and i think osha would find that just very interesting :]#so many wonderful things we could do to fuck our old boss over!!! karma's got its Fucking kiss for him.
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aphrodites-law · 4 years
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A Bit of Clarity 🍂 (7/?) The visions had started last autumn, a year ago now. It had caused a bit of chaos for some, a bit of clarity for others. Two days ago, Clarke Griffin had been perfectly fine managing both her Café and her stress. But now she was curious - so deeply curious about the vision of herself entwined with the aloof Lexa Woods that it was leading her to complete distraction.
[part 1] [part 2] [part 3] [part 4] [part 5] [part 6]
Clarke usually went straight to the café, but the past few days she'd started taking a detour. Since the article in the Gazette, Finn's Coffee & Bagels had taken a serious hit. Costial was a city with a deep-rooted pride for small businesses; mom-and-pop stores that had earned their success and customers' fidelity. Hard work and honesty were appreciated - shortcuts and lies were not. In just the one exposé, Finn's shop had lost half its patrons. Other outlets had jumped on the bandwagon and word had spread very quickly that anyone who bought his food or coffee might as well buy it in super stores for the same mass-produced quality at half the price. Finn had lost the support of his backers, but, more importantly, the Mayor had publicly condemned his son's business tactics.
To be perfectly honest, Clarke took some joy in the fall of Finn's plans. She had no doubt he would come up with another project very soon, perhaps in the theater sector, but at least his future in restoration was bleak. Clarke knew gloating wasn't a good look on anyone, but she wasn't ready to climb down from her cloud just yet. She was sure something would soon come along to knock her down a few pegs, but these days she was feeling pretty confident.
The café had been busier, which Clarke and Wells planned to capitalize on with the right promotion. Today he'd surpassed himself with some mini marble cakes, one of which Clarke had shoved in her mouth as soon as he'd shown her. It was the perfect time to look more seriously into new hires, which Clarke had pushed back for far too long. Gaia and Harper had been noticeably excited by the news. Wells would vet any additional help in the kitchen, but she could tell it was a relief for him too. Their café was small, but the workload wasn't.
Clarke was drafting the job application at the end of the counter when she heard someone clear their throat. She looked up and closed the laptop with a mischievous smile, her heart doing its now familiar dance.
“Lexa.”
“Clarke.”
Lexa had her dark green raincoat on, hiding the plaid collar Clarke only associated with her now. It didn't seem like she'd ordered anything yet, bypassing the two people in line to find her.
“Have a good weekend?” Clarke asked.
“I did. Had a long chat with Semet actually.”
“And?”
Lexa smiled at Clarke's interest. “You’ll find my observations in the Gazette... eventually.”
"Nothing world-changing though, I take it?"
Lexa shrugged. "I think the world's seen most of the changes already."
"I'd knock on wood if I were you."
"Why? Wary of change?"
"No, but a break for… oh, the next five or ten years might be nice. I miss going about my day not wondering when aliens will come crashing."
Lexa laughed. "I assure you Semet's experience didn't give any indication we might soon meet our celestial neighbors."
Clarke glanced at Gaia and Harper, making sure they still had everything under control with the orders. 
“So um, I had an enlightening weekend too.”
“Oh?” Lexa asked, nonchalant.
“Yeah. I was thinking we could... discuss." Clarke bit her lip. "Maybe over dinner?”
Lexa's demeanor visibly shifted, not as casual as she'd been just a few seconds ago. “Is that really what you want?”
“Trust me, it’s become crystal clear what I want.”
Lexa seemed a cross between reticent and eager, like she was a wild animal in a cage and the door had just opened, but she didn’t quite know what might come from stepping outside- freedom or punishment.
“Clarke. Maybe we should... slow down.”
That was surprising. Clarke frowned. “Slow down from a glacial pace?”
“Just days ago you weren't even sure what to think of me."
“But then we- I thought the rooftop-" Clarke's cheeks felt warm. "I was under the impression we were on the same page."
Lexa looked away and Clarke felt her morning's happiness wither away. So much for staying on her cloud. She took in Lexa's demeanor: tense shoulders and the obvious inability to catch her eyes. Clarke truly didn’t understand her. It was frustrating - bordering on humiliating.
"You've got to be kidding me."
"Clarke-"
"No, no. I don't know what game you think this is, but I'm not playing it."
Lexa seemed panicked. "It's not a game."
"Then what the fuck is it?"
Lexa looked toward the door as two people came in. Harper greeted them cheerily, waiting for their order. This was neither the place nor the time. She looked back at Clarke with pleading eyes, unable to offer an explanation.
Clarke shook her head, tired of the silence. "I told myself I'd stop sitting around and waiting for things to happen, but I won't waste my time on someone who can't decide if I'm worth the chase. You clearly don't want any sort of relationship-"
“It’s not that simple,” Lexa argued.
“It is that simple," Clarke gritted through her teeth, feeling both stupid and angry. She'd fallen for Lexa's charm again only to be disappointed once more. It felt like being doused in ice-cold water. "You either want someone or you don’t. So which is it?”
Lexa shook her head imperceptibly. There was something on the tip of her tongue, Clarke could tell, but she couldn't get it out.
Clarke glanced at the front door when it opened, a family of three walking in. She swallowed her disappointment at the turn in her morning before giving Lexa a hard stare.
"I have to get back to work."
"Clarke-"
��You need to figure out what you want,” Clarke snapped lowly. “Preferably without stringing people along while you do so.”
She took the family's orders with a smile, trying her hardest not to look toward the door as Lexa walked out with hunched shoulders.
* * *
Clarke posted the application on their website and several job boards in the afternoon. Resumes came fast, but Wells wanted to be a part of the process - usually less involved in the business side now that most things were squared away - so they'd set some time aside on Wednesday to reach out to applicants. Wells even planned to speak to a couple smaller theaters over the weekend to expand their partnership program.
And yet, the more good news and exciting plans came their way… the more frustrated Clarke became. Clearly she wasn't incompetent and had a firm handle on most aspects of her life, but for some reason her romantic aspirations had turned into a complete disaster. Was that really all that was in store for her? Had she somehow agreed to a bustling café in exchange for an empty home? Professional success so long as she slept alone? The exchange with Lexa had left a bitter taste in her mouth, like it'd been a cosmic reminder her happiness would always be short-lived.
She kept busy to avoid blowing the lid off her anger, forcing smiles while she chatted with patrons, made coffee, and watched the mini marble cakes disappear one by one. There were so many reasons to be elated, but not even Finn's fall from grace could lift up her mood anymore. He'd get on with his life eventually - people like him always did.
Maybe Clarke had made a mistake with Niylah. She was sweet and charming in her own way. They got along great and were certainly compatible in bed. What they had was easy and uncomplicated - Clarke had never given herself a headache trying to figure out Niylah and Niylah had never chased after her only to run the opposite way. She was straightforward and easygoing; eager to share every aspect of her life Clarke might be curious about. Niylah was a Costialite through and through: honest, hardworking, and kindhearted. She didn't make her heart race or take up her thoughts, but she didn't make her feel like a tightly coiled spring either.
Which meant Niylah deserved better than her. She deserved someone who looked at her like she was the only person in the room. She deserved someone who wanted everything with her. Clarke knew it wasn't their sexual relationship she missed, but rather that period of time when she hadn’t cared as much about her loneliness. She missed the whirlwind of planning and opening the café, the breezy attitude that had carried her through so many problems.
One vision had changed it all, and Clarke couldn't say it was for the better.
* * *
Wells was already gone before closing time, the kitchen immaculate and the next day's ingredients already prepared. Clarke didn't know how he did it - as if he had ten hours more in the day than the rest of them. The last patrons trickled out until eventually there was no one and Gaia turned over the OPEN sign on the front door.
"Go home; I'll clean up," Clarke told her, putting her hair up while Gaia grabbed the broom from the back room.
"You sure?"
"Yeah, give Poppy a good cuddle for me."
Gaia took her coat and purse. "You should come over soon. Give her those cuddles yourself."
Clarke smiled tiredly. "I do miss those big ears."
Gaia had the sweetest beagle she took on long hikes every weekend. She'd been born with one ear much longer than the other, but her lopsided anatomy only added to her personality.
"You haven’t even seen my new place yet," Gaia pointed out.
She'd moved into her mother's second building a few months back, the one on the same street as Lexa's, which only reminded Clarke how poorly she'd neglected all her relationships. 
"One day soon I'll pop in with wine and a pizza and you won't be able to get rid of me," she promised.
Gaia smiled brightly as she shouldered her purse. "Holding you to that, boss."
"See you tomorrow," Clarke said as Gaia walked out.
Clarke dimmed the main lights, wiped the last few tables and put the chairs up. She straightened out the coffee mugs and cleaned the front of the display case, giving herself a few more minutes before she headed home. The rush hour traffic outside was slowing down, giving Clarke some needed quiet.
To hear their small bell ring as the door opened was more than a surprise. Clarke turned around and stilled, watching as Lexa pulled down her raincoat’s hood and looked at her across the room. Her hair was out of its braids, damp and frizzy.
Clarke felt her anger roar back to life and stoke the fire inside her. Her heart pounded, furious that Lexa had had such an effect on her mood today. But she wouldn't back down. She wouldn't look away until it was Lexa who was forced to do so.
"We're closed," she told her coldly. It was so unlike her to be so curt.
Lexa didn't move, didn't even open her mouth to attempt a reply. It was infuriating.
"What do you want?" Clarke asked harshly, echoing her question from this morning.
Lexa's eyes flashed with similar ardor and her jaw locked. Then, in four strides, she was in front of Clarke and kissing her.
Clarke felt her hands on her waist first, and then the heat of her mouth against her own. She gasped, fisted her hands in Lexa's collar and then unraveled. She kissed Lexa back with the force of her anger, pulling and pulling until Lexa had her pressed against the display case and her body flush against hers. Her tongue felt like silk when it brushed the tip of hers, when it took a risk and was rewarded. Her hands felt like embers, leaving a trail of fire wherever they touched her, first on her waist and then lower, on her hips, until they became more dangerous and cupped her ass while she pressed tight against her. Desperate and possessive.
Clarke moaned loudly, overwhelmed by the sudden force of her desire. She needed Lexa to take her, to be inside her, to fulfill her incessant need for release. She couldn't imagine a second away from Lexa's lips, a second where Lexa didn't touch her.
“God, I thought of this,” she moaned between kisses, eyes closing when she felt Lexa's mouth down her neck. She smelled like the rain; felt like a storm.
“I think about you all the time...” Lexa breathed in her ear, almost like she hadn't meant to say it aloud.
Clarke pulled back, cupping Lexa's face to make sure she wasn't imagining this again. After a beat, their next kiss turned hungrier. Clarke wanted nothing more than to pull Lexa in the back room. She didn’t need romance or a bed. She needed Lexa’s fire to consume her and for the world to stop existing for just a moment. At the same time she was content staying there, pinned between glass and Lexa's body while they kissed into the night.
But her imagination was kinder than reality, as a car suddenly honked at another outside, startling Lexa. She ripped away from their embrace with wide eyes, stumbling back like she was dizzy, the reality of the situation catching up to her.
Clarke could read it all on her face: the surprise at her own actions, the realization of where they were and what they had almost done so publicly. She could've cried when Lexa suddenly looked like a deer in headlights.
It was the same expression from this morning. Clarke shook her head at her, begging her not to run. But a part of her knew it was futile - Lexa had already made up her mind. Still, she had to try one last time.
"It's okay."
Lexa's bottom lip trembled. "I shouldn't have done that. I thought I could, but-" She pressed her hands against her eyes in frustration. "I'm so sorry, Clarke."
Clarke's chest felt heavy. "Please don't go. Help me understand."
"I won't bother you again."
"That's not what I want," Clarke replied in frustration, stepping closer.
Lexa shook her head. "You don't want me."
"Why not?"
To Clarke, Lexa seemed broken. Like something in her had finally shattered.
"You started looking at me after your vision," Lexa whispered. "We never spoke until… until you had it. And I never realized it was you in mine until I saw you drawing."
"What does it matter?"
"You don't know me," Lexa told her, voice cracking. "If you did, your vision would never become true. You'd want nothing to do with me."
"Don't you dare put words in my mouth," Clarke snapped.
Lexa stopped short, so Clarke took a deep breath and stepped even closer.
"Lexa. I don't need to be protected. You're right, we don't know much about each other. So let me learn and let me make my own decisions afterward. Please. You can't pretend there's nothing between us - you can't."
"The visions-"
"I don't give a fuck about the visions," Clarke told her stubbornly. "Maybe it opened my eyes, but it didn't create feelings out of thin air. That's not possible."
Lexa still looked skittish, ready to bolt at any moment. Clarke reached out for her hand, relieved when Lexa took it. It was so different than the rooftop, where Lexa had grabbed hers so confidently. How could a person be so torn?
"Maybe you were right this morning," Clarke said softly. "We've skipped a lot of steps. So let's start over."
Lexa finally caught her eyes. "I hurt people, Clarke. I don't mean to, but inevitably it's what I do."
Clarke knew that was all she'd get out of Lexa tonight. Hesitantly, she cupped her cheek.
"How about this? If the rain lets up, I take you to the river this weekend. We bring some drinks, some snacks, maybe some hiking shoes. You can tell me about the Mountain Men and I can tell you about the weird resumes I'll inevitably get this week."
Lexa let out a chuckle, which made Clarke smile hopefully. "Doesn't sound too scary, does it?"
"No. That sounds nice."
Clarke felt hopeful for the first time. "Just two people hanging out, getting to know each other."
"I'd like that." Lexa glanced at her mouth and swallowed. "I do want you, Clarke."
Clarke pressed her index against her lips. "I know. Nobody kisses a friend like that. But…"
"Fresh start?"
"Right.” Clarke still had to speak her mind: “Lexa, you can't keep running away without telling me why. I'm patient but I'm not a saint. I get angry too. I get scared."
Lexa nodded quietly, looking down at their hands before she glanced around the room.
"You were closing up."
"Yeah, did you not notice the chairs on the tables?"
"I was preoccupied. Can I help?"
"Lexa… I think maybe you should go home."
Lexa looked down. "I'm sorry, I must be giving you whiplash."
"Just a little," Clarke smiled.
"I'll see you this weekend?"
"I didn't mean you can't swing by for a quick hello and a cup of coffee. Or not coffee. Wells is baking up a storm, it'd be a pity if you missed it."
"That sounds nice."
Clarke accompanied her to the door, where she noticed the rain had become heavier. It was incessant these days, washing down the streets of Costial and keeping the coffee shops and movie theaters busy. Nothing unusual for the season. She grabbed one of the forgotten umbrellas in the stand by the entrance, giving it to Lexa.
"That's alright-"
"Take it. I don't you want coming in sneezing and sniffling this week."
"Thank you, Clarke." Slowly, hesitantly, Lexa kissed her cheek. "Goodnight."
After Lexa walked out in the rain and turned the corner with one last glance over her shoulder, Clarke stood in the dark for a moment. Then, she walked to the back room and slid down the wall until she was sitting on the ground. She clutched her heart, eyes closing as she let the last few minutes rush over her. Whiplash didn't even begin to cover it.
In the resounding silence, she tried processing what had just happened. She could still feel Lexa's kiss, everything she had imagined and more. But then Lexa had pulled away. It felt like she was two different people, one aching with desire like Clarke, the other convinced it would hurt them both. But why?
Clarke thought back to when she had first noticed Lexa. Courteous, quiet Lexa who had placed her order and sat near the weeping fig tree for hours while she worked. What could have driven her to Costial? It couldn't be the job opportunities - she didn't work in theater and the Gazette was no more reputable than their neighboring cities' newspapers. Family was the obvious guess, but then why not come earlier? What kind of life had she left behind that still haunted her today?
Clarke wasn't sure she'd be able to shut up this weekend, too wrapped up in Lexa's mystery to keep herself from asking questions. She wanted to know everything but knew she had to be cautious. Still, spending time together was a step forward. She was relieved Lexa hadn't run after all, but it would be difficult to forget the pain in her eyes. Despite the uncertainty of their relationship, if it could even be defined, Clarke had a feeling it would be worth fighting for.
-
[part eight]
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prorevenge · 5 years
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Firing an Emotially Abusive First Grade Teacher
I decided to remember some juicy childhood stories of mine, and this one popped out to my head, and oh boy does it fit here.
So, I'll start off with the fact that I was the designated "pick-on" kid back in elementary school. You know that one slightly not normal kid everyone decided would be the one to pick on? Well that was me. I did get my fair share of petty revenge, as I will describe, but there was a case of pro revenge which merits its placement here.
I'll call myself Sion and the teacher Dr. Ehen.
Anyways, Dr. Ehen was a Grand Canyon doctor; that probably says enough of how unqualified she was. She fell deep into the realm of PTA politics, so she gave the kids who had the typical PTA parents a break, while letting all hell break loose on all the kids who were unfortunate to not have PTA moms. Also, she was one of those crappy traffic light teachers, you know, the type that were so bad they had to use a lakeshore cutout of a traffic light to publicly humiliate kids by displaying even slight insubordination.
Dr. Ehen was always particularly mean to me for some reason, but efore I get into the real meat of the story, I'd like to preface some of the things she did to me leading up to the grand pro revenge tale:
-Denying the existence of red pears and gave me a traffic light penalty for claiming they were real. I got petty revenge by bringing one in the next day, which got me a penalty the next day, just because she was upset I proved her wrong.
-Giving me a traffic penalty for snitching on a child who flooded the school urinal. I'd like to add that multiple people have snitched on me before and I got in trouble for their good deeds because they "saw something and said something". I got petty punishment on the kids who snitched on me by claiming they pissed in the trash can, which she didn't dispute it as one of the PTA children confirmed my claims before she could give me the "Sion exclusive snitching penalty." Those kids got a phone call home, nothing after that.
-Traffic penalty for using an erasable black colored pencil since I ran out of pencils to write with. Mind you I would get a penalty for asking my classmates because I would be talking in class without raising my hand.
-Rolling her eyes at me, knowing I wouldn't understand. Had my parents explain to me what it meant after leaving school that day.
-Ripping my assignment to shreds because she knew I was trying to get a perfect fold on my paper. I cried and got a traffic penalty for being disruptive in class.
Okay. I got through all the other mean shit she has done to me, let's get to the part of the story you have all been waiting for: actual pro revenge.
This requires a little backstory. There was this kid we will call Caesar. Caesar was a nice kid in general, but he used to throw these extreme temper tantrums every time he got a light. This would involve ripping the room to shreds, emptying desks, rubbing spit on the floors, breaking down the flagpole for the tenth time, and even going as far to throw desks and chairs across the classroom.
So, one time he threw a chair in music class, and Dr. Ehen was called down. Of course, she asked what was going on, and fingers began to point, all of them were pointing to Caesar, except for one kid (who I may add got beat up in high school for being a Bigshot) pointed his finger at me. Apparently, Dr. Ehen was blind to all the other kids pointing their fingers at Caesar and decided to look at Bigshot pointing at me. I had gotten my first and only red light. This is important.
Of course I always aimed to be a good kid, so getting a red light was like recieving a gut punch with a middle finger instead of a fist. My parents were called in as I was crying on the floor as Dr. Ehen had a poor time trying to explain that I was the one who threw the chair. I'd like to add that my fellow classmates decided to come to my aid and prove her wrong. She was highly frustrated she was being proven wrong over and over again, so, she reduced my red light down to a yellow one.
At this point I was frustrated myself at her attempts to defile me and just wanted to move on to second grade seamlessly.
Was all well and good? NOPE!
Dr. Ehen was throwing a party for kids who received no red lights throughout the school year. By party, I mean have kids who got red lights be forced to watch -in a military-style line- the Low profile and PTA kids eat cupcakes. Assuming my red light was redacted, and even hearing Dr. Ehen say it to my parents, I go to sit down ready for a cupcake.
Instead, Dr. Ehen forgets that little Sion's red light was redacted and she told me to stand with the red light kids while I watched these kids (including the garbage can pissers) eat cupcakes.
I. Was. Furious.
At this point, I knew my parents already hated her and were waiting for the perfect time to get her fired. I gave them exactly what they needed and came home bawling that my red light was still being enforced and how I had to stand ( Did I forget to mention I had balance issues as a child?) while all the other kids ate cupcakes. I cried and was given a yellow light. My parents were in kill mode. Their son had to stand with a redacted red light for being falsely accused by a PTA student.
You may not want to call this revenge, but I actually didn't like her myself, and I knew exactly what I was doing when I got home wailing like a banshee that I didn't get a cupcake. My redacted red light was still being enforced. I also know my parents were waiting for the right time to strike since Dr. Ehen made my first grade experience a living hell, so I knew a juicy story of this caliber with an actual justification that wasn't "entitled 50 times over red kid didn't get his salted caramel cupcake with truffle shavings" (which, I may add, my parents wouldn't fight for me if I were an entitled spoiled brat) while abusing my motor disability while neglecting the repeal of a false punishment was the perfect storm to get justice.
So, one day in mid-late may, my grandmother comes into the room. and pulls Dr. Ehen out. I gave her a bright cheeky smile, but knowing she was gonna get screwed.
She comes back into the classroom an hour later looking as if she were told she was going to be fired. I asked her "how do you like my grandma?" being all innocent. Dr. Ehen has no choice but to say she was a good person.
Next week later she gets me toy cars, hoping I would forget what she did to me in the past. I took the toy cars and stayed silent. Shame, they were nice ones too.
Next school year, she was out of work, and was only allowed to visit my school once. She looked at me with a face of "I fucked up please forgive me," and now actually forgetting what she did to me kind-of, I gave her a dorky smile as if I met her for the first time. My mom let the administrators know of all the shit she has done to me in first grade, and oh I can assure you she was unable to find any form of employment in my school district whatsoever, due to pressure from other schools in the district from hearing my mom's testimonial of how cruel she was to me. According to a family friend from within my district's board of education, she resigned from the pressure and will be unable to get a job anywhere from within my district, and I know because of some connections and the "friends knowing friends" phenomenon, she would be highly unable to get employment in the smaller surrounding districts as well.
If I'm to find any moral to my own story, it will be this: be kind to young elementary students. They are young and don't understand many things, but that doesn't mean you have any right to exploit them. Otherwise, it might come around to bite you in the ass later.
Tl;Dr- Mean teacher gets what's coming for her after picking on the wrong child.
(source) story by (/u/SionCuber)
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