dawnell
dawnell
dawnell

There are bags available at both Aldi and Costco, though you are supposed to bring your own and you might get charged if you don’t (and depending on where you live that might be for all stores). I don’t remember if Aldi had concrete floors or not, as that isn’t a bad thing, and not something I really look it. And you

That does so much make me feel better.

I would like a relatively painless mind-numbing $80K job. How do I qualify if you change your mind and quit?

I’m trying to think how an Aldi resembles either a Walmart or a Costco, except for the low prices. The stores are very small (though mine is expanding), so nothing like a Walmart or Costco. They don’t sell big bundles of things or giant size things, so not like Costco again. The on sale produce usually beats everyone

This is an odd question.

Okay.

Yes. But that isn’t from Burger King.

Depending on how far away he is moving and how much stuff he has, this could help him as well, if the roommates are willing to pay.

Unless you have to wear a uniform or something that needs to be washed often, there’s so much else that I’d rather have than that washer and dryer. I like having them now, but I did get along okay for many years without them.

My dad and several people he worked with were sent to live in the Twin Cities area for a few years to work on a project. The company paid for a bunch of stuff, and they rented unfurnished apartments and then paid money to rent furniture and stuff to go in the apartments. About halfway through they asked to end the

You can rent stuff for a couple of months, but it’s usually expensive.

Cokes didn’t work. How about just a caffeine pill?

My favorite movie

I make deliveries for Uber Eats. I had a lady tip me in change and then apologize for it and say it was hot and maybe I should buy a Slurpee or something. Mostly what she gave me was like eight quarters. I was just happy someone remembered to tip me. I’d much rather have a $2 tip in change than have no tip at all.

No, but it sucks if I don’t get any. I usually get a couple of deliveries an hour. If all goes well, $3 plus 65 a mile, usually from McDonalds or something else that is a mile or two away from the customer. Then there’s all the little things that they don’t pay for (you already know the big things like insurance that

I did once think that the fee for valet parking actually went to the driver, that it was either playing whatever or tipping if it was “free”, but now I’m thinking I was supposed to tip either way, cause the fee probably went to the restaurant not the driver. I only did that the one time, but it made me feel bad.

Oh, I have tipped at lots of buffets, just not when I was in school, and not enough for ten years later because I assumed that they were not waitstaff because they didn’t bring me anything. I had no idea that was legal.

But delivery has also been around forever, just not this particular company that deliveries for different restaurants. Why did you think all the reasons for tipping delivery people went out the window? Or were you young and didn’t know you were supposed to tip delivery people? You probably can’t see from your end how

I just have these conversations once in a while, and I’ve admitted that I didn’t know how to tip when I was younger, and I’ve admitted that I either didn’t tip enough or didn’t tip at all at places that somehow involve buffets because it is confusing, and so feel a bit bad about it and try to do better in the future.

This is easy. Since I do not drink alcohol, I’d say you’ve made a mistake and send it away. And then I’d read the check and make sure they didn’t charge me for it anyway.