Well it could be worse. I have a friend who’s daughter is so bad at life she’s on the verge of criminal charges for writing bad checks. She can’t seem to understand there has to be money in the account for her to write checks.
I’d recommend YNAB to her
Seconded. 80% of Americans have never done a written budget.
I don’t know what’s stressful about knowing how long something takes and operating around that knowledge.
Someone that shows up too early is just as frustrating to me as someone who shows up late.
First thing I pay attention to in a job interview is what time they walk in the door. I like to see precision to within 30 seconds or so.
I’ll tolerate five minutes early because some people think it’s a good thing. I really don’t tolerate fifteen minutes early. I consider that disrespectful...if I wanted someone to show up fifteen minutes early that’s when I would have scheduled the meeting.
Personally, for any meeting, I aim to walk in the door not a second before the arranged time but not 30 seconds after either. It’s not hard.
Hahahahaha that’s a tad much, even for an engineer, man.
This is why buildings have waiting areas. Don’t worry about it if they show up early, just tell them to sit there and wait.
Personally I’ll show up early if there’s a mess of traffic or something realistically possible that would make me late, and then sit in my car. That way I’m not bothering any of these newfangled companies that don’t bother hiring a front desk admin person and guys like
@jesse freak out because “everyone must be escorted at all times”, especially since most of my clients over the decades have all had draconian and annoying escort rules.
Which, for the most part, were summarily ignored about five minutes after they issued me a temporary badge and told me to get to work loading my equipment, test gear, or whatever crap I had along THIS time in, and getting to work. Came and went as I pleased the rest of the week.
Other than Walmart. That company is the most secretive paranoid group of businesspeople on the planet outside of DoD.
But at least I didn’t get locked inside the conference room with automatically closing window shutters at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s NOC when the alarms went off that there was a loss of nuclear material event, like my boss did... on the way out of the building.
They left him locked in there for a couple of hours so he wouldn’t see or hear anything. Hahahahaha. Poor bastard. Tool bag in hand, was headed out of the place and he missed his window by 60 seconds.
He managed not to miss his flight. Come to think of it, DOE was paranoid too.
But I’m not sure they were as paranoid as Walmart.
One of our techs pulled up a floor tile in Walmart’s data center to start working on the install after the “escort” disappeared for two hours on him. The security guards saw it on the closed circuit cameras and he was escorted off the property and told never to return, and it caused a stink all the way to our CEOs office. An utter pain in the ass, Walmart was...