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Fast-food employee teaches entitled mom a lesson by making her dig through the trash bag of the mess her kids left: ‘Teach your kids to clean up after themselves [and] treat customer service workers with respect.’

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  • Mom and young daughter eating fast food, making a mess
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  • "You should teach your kids to 1) clean up after themselves 2) treat customer service workers with respect."

    When I was a much younger man, I worked as a shift manager at a McDonald's in the UK.
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  • One day there was a young-ish mother with 3 kids in the restaurant, probably ranging from 8 to 13.
  • They were running riot, which was annoying but fine. It was only when they left I realised the extent of the state they'd left things.
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  • The girl working the dining area came up to me looking a bit р ed off and said I might want to get someone to come cover her as "this is going to take a while".
  • I went to take a look and told her instead that I'd take care of it, as I felt bad for her.
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  • The entire table was littered with food and empty boxes - that's not a big deal, I never expected people to clear their tables.
  • However, what the kids had also done was smear ketchup all over the seats and the wall.
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  • This wasn't accidental, you could see their hand prints where they had tried to write things in the sauce.
  • I found they had also chewed their fries and then spat it out and stuck it all to the underside of the table.
  • The mother had just watched them do this and not said a word. But there, right in the middle of the table amongst the empty sauce packets, half eaten burgers and shredded Happy Meal boxes was a small purse and 4 cinema tickets.
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  • I grabbed a bin bag and swept the entire lot into it. Food, trash, cinema tickets, everything.
  • I then cleared a couple more tables and added the contents of one of the food waste bins from the kitchen and took it out the back door, subtly marking the specific bag so I'd know which one it was.
  • About 45 minutes later, Mum and kids come storming back into the restaurant, and she's looking a little panicky.
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  • She explains what she's lost, to which I reply something along the lines of "I'm terribly sorry, the table was just such a mess there was no way I'd have been able to spot any personal items amongst it.
  • I cleared this area myself, so I can show you exactly which bin bag it was in." We were much quieter now, so I immediately sent the lobby girl on lunch, so there's be no way she'd be guilted into helping.
  • The Mum was seething with rage and told me I should go through it for her.
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  • I refused, very bluntly telling her it's not my problem. Knowing the movie started soon, I reminded her she didn't have much time to wait for someone else to do it and went back inside.
  • I waited a while and came back out. As she was digging through the trash in the bin area, hands covered in sauce and half chewed food, I said in the chirpiest voice I could: "I recommend in future you not let your kids purposely make such a mess."
  • Baby eating food and making a mess
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  • Good-Note-4042 Just gonna put it out there that you should be careful throwing away purses and stuff. I don't know what constitutes as theft in the UK, but if a restaurant employee in my state threw out someone's purse it would constitute theft and the cops wouldn't care about "petty revenge" for dirty tables. The mom should have had better control of her kids though and was clearly in the wrong. Just be careful doing stuff like that.
  • OP FreshNewAccount24 You think I'd tell the mother or the cops I did it on purpose to get revenge? "It was an accident, officer. There's no way I could have known there was a purse under all that rubbish. Here, take a look at the CCTV footage..."
  • Sandi375 This was so satisfying to read!
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  • Dripping Snarkasm Mum learned a lesson that day: karma will always ketchup with you.
  • FrostiePi I've actually had people tell me not to bother cleaning up after my 14 month old who has discovered throwing things, because it's the servers job. Like.. no it isn't. They didn't birth this mess making gremlin. They went red.. I think they noticed the look of on my face. I absolutely hate leaving a mess behind.
  • z00k33per0304 I babysat for a family for years and their older son was such a joy to watch. Super quiet, was very polite, and just a happy kid. They ended up having their "miracle" kid after him and he was just a menace. The older kid would shut down and shrink when I was there because the world revolved around his brother undeservedly so I'd keep the second one alive but made time for the older one. I eventually got a job at a gas station and the parents jobs had changed so they didn't need me
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  • dehydratedrain Omg, I took 2 toddlers into McDonald's and apologized profusely while grabbing stacks of napkins because one knocked over a kid-sized drink. I cannot imagine letting them finger paint. with ketchup.
  • SpotlessEternal Mind Oh waouh.... There's a special place in h I for people like this. Imagine, she'll raise 3 entitled persons. So, instead of 1 sh*try person, you now have 4.
  • Alexis_J_M That's not just revenge, that's karma
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  • Adventurous-Bee4823 Many, many years ago I worked for a family restaurant. The Sunday's after church (U.S.) were brutal. One family stood out the most. The mother was on a local television news program. She had a gangle of children who were so misbehaved it was astonishing. Pancake syrup thrown onto walls, food smashed into the carpet. And the most deafening fault was that they tipped basically nothing on significant bills (yes service staff still depend on tips) I cleaned up after every visit.
  • sendcodenotnudes On the other side of the spectrum, I was once with a friend at a restaurant (a relatively upscale one, but nothing fancy). A family with 3 children came in (12 to 17 I would say). The children sat. Each of them read their menu in silence. When the waiter came, they waited their turn to place the order. Hello, please and thank you. I did not have children at the time but thought wow, good job. My children always said hello, please, thank you. I wrote not say that they are particu

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