Could be a partner, roommate, coworker, or somebody you volunteered with. They could have stopped for any reason from leaving, getting sick or hurt or even dying to just getting sick of doing that one thing and stopping.

  • some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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    6 months ago

    Someone I worked with (indirectly) managed her team when certain changes needed to happen with infrastructure. After she left, her replacement wasn’t given guidance on why this was important. A routine infra change led to multiple days of chaos because that end wasn’t handled properly.

    I ended up demoted as a result, but not fired nor docked pay. My job is easier because I have less responsibility, so the grass is definitely greener over here. I’m watching my temp replacement struggle with the position and I don’t miss it.

  • WoolyNelson@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Coworker of mine was handling hardware returns for our main data center. There were two issues with this: It wasn’t his job and he never told anyone about it. Work fired him during his vacation because they saw he wasn’t completing his assignments, but never asked him for reasons.

    Six months later, the company got hit with over 200k in service plan renewals for hardware we no longer used.

  • theshatterstone54@feddit.uk
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    6 months ago

    When I started living by myself a while back, I realised how much random housework was being done by my parents. There’s the obvious ones like cooking, shopping and doing the dishes. But there’s also meal planning, cleaning, buying non-obvious essentials like toiletries, and more, which I wouldn’t normally think about.