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The OP of that thread had tranny in their name. The OP of this thread is Charles22, those don't appear to be the same people unless the OP also posted on that thread too and I missed it.
yes, I misunderstood when the other poster put that link up. I could have sworn I checked it though, weird.
It's not the job of the changing room staff to clean up after a bunch of slobs who throw clothes all over the place. When I try on clothes, I put them back on the rack if I am not going to buy them.
i don't really understand this. Clothing is VERY easy to put back on a hanger. I have never understood why people don't put clothes back on the hanger when they leave a dressing room. I take it off a hanger, I try it on, I take it off, and I put it back on a hanger/fold it/put it back in the box etc. before I leave the room.
I've never assumed it was their job to clean up after me in a dressing room. Sure it might be their job to unlock a room, grab a different size for me, take my rejected clothes back to their spot in the store etc. But leaving clothes on the floor or purposely hanging them up messy just seems weird to me.
Well, it's pretty clear which posters are self-entitled and weren't raised properly and which ones were, here.
To say it once again - any adult cleans up after themselves. The sales staff at the store are NOT your Mommy (who apparently did a pretty bad job of raising you) and if you are going to try on clothes in a store you should as a matter of course put them back on the hanger. I read ONE good reason for not doing so in here - the injured wrist. Being "in a hurry" is not a valid reason - if you're in that much of a hurry, shop another time or try on fewer items. 20? Really? Most stores have a limit just because of people like you. Here's a question: how many of those 20 items did you actually purchase, or do you treat shopping as entertainment with no intention of actually purchasing?
There is no need to criticize others so harshly for needing their Mommy, Texas. I think you could use a vacation somewhere to cool off.
I can't remember the last time I used a changing room.
But if stores gave customers a chance to win very small rewards (say, a $5 gift certificate) for hanging up clothes after trying them on, the problem might lessen. In an ideal world, staff wouldn't have to hang up many clothes.
I can't remember the last time I used a changing room.
But if stores gave customers a chance to win very small rewards (say, a $5 gift certificate) for hanging up clothes after trying them on, the problem might lessen. In an ideal world, staff wouldn't have to hang up many clothes.
You know what would happen?
People who had no intention of buying any clothes would line up to try something on just to get the $5.
Um, it's a $5 gift certificate, not $5. Maybe allow it only toward a minimum purchase of a $25 item, for example. People prefer arguing about problems over solving them, I see.
Every dressing room I go in to is loaded with clothes left behind. Macy's, Nordstrom, Target doesn't matter where filthy, lazy women galore. Never mind that most stores have a rack right outside of the dressing room to hang up things you don't want. Or, a sign on the dressing room door asking you to return what you don't want. Just look at how gross women's public restrooms are. Why should anyone expect better?
I went in to a dressing room at a store loaded with clothes including an open pack of panty-hose. I don't mind helping out and taking a few items out of the dressing room but if it's loaded that's on the employees. After I left an employee went in to the dressing room I just left and went on a rant of "Are you freaking kidding me!, are you FREAKING kidding me! I can't believe the nerve of some people, yada yada" I went back in there and gave her a piece of my mind and then complained to a manager.
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