A guy I work with was closing out his work day
yesterday. Let’s call him Jerry. His supervisor nervously called him into the
office. The conversation was
awkward. “Um, Jerry, uh… I have to talk to you about something… Ahhh…
This isn’t about your performance but ahhh….” At this point Jerry starts to freak out. What is going on? Why is the supervisor so nervous? Is he about to get fired? What could he have done? His mind raced through possibilities.
“Jerry, we received a complaint that you went to the
bathroom earlier this week and didn’t flush.
Apparently a co-worker reported that you urinated in the stall, washed
your hands, and then ran out of there without flushing.” At this point Jerry is stumbling all over
himself trying to remember the incident in question while apologizing profusely
with some sort of explanation combination of toilet sensor failure, absentmindedness,
and/or being in a hurry. It couldn’t
have been easy to think up on the fly. He had no idea this had happened. This
resulted in the supervisor attempting to make Jerry feel better by passing
along embarrassing work incidents in his own past. “Jerry… I too have had embarrassing things
happen at work. One time my boss sent me
home to change shoes because he said I looked like I worked at Foot
Locker. And then another time I got this
stain…” The whole thing was very
tense. Jerry wondered if the incident
would end up in his employment record.
Who the hell had done this to him?
I like to think about how the incident got to that
point. The original “non-flush” incident
happened and the unknown co-worker became upset. Undoubtedly that guy went back to his department in
the company and discussed it with his co-workers. Jerry was outed as some sort of serial toilet
non-flusher, as if he was unaware of how the device worked or was no better
than a household pet and just let it rip wherever he was at the time of
need. Then someone must have spoken
up. “You need to tell the boss!” He would have then been urged by the others
to do so. "Yeah, you should say something..." Later that day a knock would
have been made at the department head’s office.
“Hey Chuck? Got a minute?” Sure Bill.
Come on in. Close the door. So what’s on your mind? You don’t say… You don’t say... Jesus.
And he just ran out of there? We
better get Sam in the loop on this.
The supervisor then would have gone upstairs to the General
Manager. “Sam? Got a minute?
We’ve got a real issue going on downstairs on the second floor. It appears that one of those sales guys won’t
flush the toilet. No… No… It was piss,
but God knows if he flushes his shits down.
What kind of person does this?
Look… Mike is really upset about
this. He’s talking about filing some
sort of grievance.” Alright. We need to nip this
thing in the bud. Let’s go talk to
HR. We need to see what our options are
on this thing. We don’t need this
blowing up on us down the line.
At this point the GM, department head, and the "injured party"
would have met with the company HR person.
Forms would have been filled out, as all meetings need to be documented
as per protocol. These would then have
been filed electronically with complete incident detail. “…at this point employee Jerry Smith ran out
of the area, not flushing the stall toilet and leaving the area as if he were
fleeing a bank robbery. This is the first known documented incident though a pattern is believed to be emerging from this employee.”. At this point
is when the sales department head would have been called in to the growing
concern.
“Look, you’re going to need to get your people in line down
there. You just can’t have your sales
guys pissing all over the place and not respecting the other employees. Other departments are talking. They seem to think that this is indicative of
another larger issue, and frankly I’m inclined to agree. This Jerry Smith character needs to be cut
down to size. Next thing you know he
will take a fucking shit in the lobby. I
don’t want to hear another word about this filthy animal. Get him in line or I will get someone in here
who will! Capisce?”. The nervous sales manager would have briskly walked in a panic back downstairs looking for Jerry.
By this point most people within the building know of Jerry
as “that guy that doesn’t flush the toilet”.
This will have spread like wild fire. Jerry will hear whispers as he walks through halls and snickers from
groups. Everyone will give him the eye
when he walks out of the men’s room. By
next week an email will be sitting in my inbox.
“It has recently come to our attention here at corporate that not all
employees are aware of how to best use the restroom facilities at our
locations. With this in mind we will
require all employees to view a “Toilet Re-Training Module” which you will find
on the company website. This will be
required to be viewed and signed off on by the end of the month or harsh
disciplinary action will follow. It is a 90 minute video with multiple choice questions. Plan for two hours to complete the module.
So here I am at the end of the day. I went to the men’s room for the
all-important “pre-drive home piss stop”.
There at the one urinal was Jerry doing his business.
That led me into the stall where I robustly did my duty. Jerry was washing his hands as I finished and
left. I paused and did not flush the toilet. Jerry left the men's room. I quickly washed up and walked down the hall. I peeked my head in the
supervisor’s office. “Hey… This is sort
of weird to bring up, but I was just in the men’s room and Jerry took a leak in
the toilet and didn’t flush. What’s the
deal man? Can you mention to him that
civilized people flush the fucking toilet? Thanks.”.
I can’t wait to see what happens.
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