RE: The thread for flipping shits (and tables)
04-04-2013, 04:09 AM
Someone very hungry. They must have been starving to even detect the spaghetti while it was in your bag. But now you are the one who is hungry. :C
The first and last time my mom bought me expensive clothing was a 300$ winter coat ideal for hiking, that was going to last many years. That was stolen from me, along with the 20$ bill and iPod that were in one of its pockets (Fyi I don't have my own iPod, iPhone, iPad or even a smartphone at all, to this date). It was stolen from me in the middle of winter, and I waited cold outside for the bus, for a rather long time, at less than -20 degrees Celsius. That was kind of cruel of the thief. Also, I would not have left that stuff in the back of the classroom to be stolen if not for the fact that there was an evaluation and the teacher made everyone do it, no exceptions allowed.
And then a year later, I saw a girl wearing my coat sitting with other girls. She looked scared when I approached the table. I simply said hello, and asked her where she got her coat. She and her friends all pretended not to speak english- even though they were all sitting around at an english school. They were bad at pretending, too. That... was obviously suspicious. I then switched to french, and the girl came up with the right store where I had gotten the coat. I thanked her and left. There was no way I could ever get proof or get it back from her, and the coat wasn't even her size but she was still wearing it, so nothing could really be done.
Would be nice if people could just ask when they really need something instead of stealing, though.
The first and last time my mom bought me expensive clothing was a 300$ winter coat ideal for hiking, that was going to last many years. That was stolen from me, along with the 20$ bill and iPod that were in one of its pockets (Fyi I don't have my own iPod, iPhone, iPad or even a smartphone at all, to this date). It was stolen from me in the middle of winter, and I waited cold outside for the bus, for a rather long time, at less than -20 degrees Celsius. That was kind of cruel of the thief. Also, I would not have left that stuff in the back of the classroom to be stolen if not for the fact that there was an evaluation and the teacher made everyone do it, no exceptions allowed.
And then a year later, I saw a girl wearing my coat sitting with other girls. She looked scared when I approached the table. I simply said hello, and asked her where she got her coat. She and her friends all pretended not to speak english- even though they were all sitting around at an english school. They were bad at pretending, too. That... was obviously suspicious. I then switched to french, and the girl came up with the right store where I had gotten the coat. I thanked her and left. There was no way I could ever get proof or get it back from her, and the coat wasn't even her size but she was still wearing it, so nothing could really be done.
Would be nice if people could just ask when they really need something instead of stealing, though.