Native American Blood.

Native American Blood.

Share

06/12/2026

Just finished a DoorDash delivery and I’m honestly sitting here shaking my head. Like do people seriously think $20 is some life changing tip where you gotta leave me a note along with the tip saying “hope this was enough” 🤦🏽‍♂️

Drove across town, dealt with traffic, waited at the restaurant while they took forever finishing the order, and then had to find this person’s apartment in one of those complexes where NONE of the buildings are labeled clearly.

Finally get the food to the door… and the customer left a $20 tip.

Now before everyone jumps down my throat yes, I saw it. Yes, I know some people think that’s “good.”

But when you actually break it down with gas, time, wear on your car, waiting around at restaurants, and driving all the way across town… it really isn’t what people think it is.

People think throwing $20 on an order automatically means the driver should be doing backflips with gratitude, but they don’t see the hour it took to complete the delivery or the miles put on the car just to make it happen.

Meanwhile people ordering food expect VIP service, constant updates, perfect timing, hot food, and their door found in a maze of apartment buildings but drivers are supposed to just smile and accept whatever comes through the app like it’s the greatest thing ever.

Maybe I’m the only one who feels this way, but sometimes it feels like people don’t realize how much actually goes into these deliveries.

Next time maybe tip accordingly and leave out the little sorry note

06/12/2026

Earlier today at Walmart I noticed a guy just asleep in his car in the parking lot, taking up one of the regular parking spots.

I ended up mentioning it to a couple of the associates because people were clearly trying to find parking and go into the store. Meanwhile this guy was just sitting there passed out in his vehicle.

I honestly don’t understand how that’s allowed. Parking lots are meant for customers who are coming and going — not for someone to park there for hours and treat it like a place to sleep while everyone else drives around looking for an open spot.

It’s kind of ridiculous that store management even has to deal with stuff like that, but something needs to be done because it really shouldn’t be considered acceptable.

06/12/2026

I found $100 in a tiny shoulder bag I thrifted, and now the store owner is demanding I give it back.

I posted a photo of the cash in a local thrift group just to share the excitement—you never expect to actually find anything in those pockets. But the owner saw my post and messaged me immediately. Said I should return it because it belongs to the store.

Here's the thing: when I asked him to describe the bag, he couldn't. Didn't know the color, the size, the brand, nothing. Yet he's insisting that "returning it would be the right thing to do." As if vague moral obligation outweighs the fact that I paid for the bag fair and square, as-is, with no signs anywhere saying "if you find money, it still belongs to us."

Multiple people who work in thrift stores commented that items go through sorters, pricers, and hangers—several pairs of hands that could have checked pockets. The bag was processed, tagged, and sold. One woman said she found eight hundred dollars in thrifted pants once, didn't say a word, but donated two hundred to an animal rescue to balance the karma.

Now I'm torn. It's not like I stole it. I bought the bag. The money was inside. The owner can't even prove it's from his store specifically, yet he has the nerve to guilt trip me about "doing the right thing" while simultaneously admitting he has no idea what bag I'm talking about.

Am I wrong for wanting to keep the money since I purchased the bag as-is with no conditions, or should I give it back to a store owner who can't even describe the item I bought from him? What would you do?

06/11/2026

Everyone’s standing there with their mouths open like it’s a crime, but look at the parking stall. These AT&T lots are clearly designed for tiny imports, not a truck that actually has a purpose. You put a Tremor in a spot with zero clearance and this is what happens. It’s not even driver error, it’s a blind spot issue with the factory sensors. Honestly, it’s a safety hazard to even be a customer at this location. I’m canceling my plan effective today, I’m not giving my money to a company that doesn't accommodate their own vehicles.

06/11/2026

walked in and right there on the counter—big sign talking about “tipping is part of my rent” and minimum 25% expected… like hold on, BEFORE I even order?? y’all already telling me what I gotta pay extra??

I stood there reading it twice cause ain’t no way. tipping used to be if the service was good, you show love. now it’s basically mandatory just to exist in the place. that don’t even feel like appreciation no more, that feel forced.

and don’t get me wrong, I tip. I’m not cheap. but this right here?? this feel backwards. why am I responsible for covering rent through tips instead of the job paying right in the first place?? now I’m walking in already feeling pressured before I even taste anything.

whole vibe was off after that. felt less like “come enjoy” and more like “pay up or don’t bother.” I almost turned around right there cause ain’t nobody about to tell me what I HAVE to tip before I even get service.

Want your business to be the top-listed Clothing Store in Fort Wayne?
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.

Category

Telephone

Website

Address


Fort Wayne, IN, United States
Fort Wayne, IN