Busted
By faulty number - 28/01/2013 23:25 - United States - Port Saint Lucie
By faulty number - 28/01/2013 23:25 - United States - Port Saint Lucie
By Anonymous - 28/08/2020 23:01 - United States
By almost governmental - 05/09/2014 22:02 - United Kingdom - Peterborough
By kkkk - 31/01/2011 15:44
By Wrong number - 25/02/2022 21:00 - Canada - Vancouver
By Anonymous - 10/10/2013 17:59 - United States - Wallingford
By gonnabeunemployed - 08/12/2016 21:33
By Anonymous - 25/07/2014 02:04 - Canada - Burnaby
By smidge - 02/06/2009 06:05 - United States
By Anonymous - 06/10/2016 19:01 - United States - Tallahassee
By AgentKoos_99 - 11/10/2016 07:52 - South Africa - Johannesburg
Proofreading is hogwash.
Sounds like your boss took betrayal well.
I think he was happy to get rid of the ditz.
...I'm done with sarcasm. Sometimes it's impossible to make some people grasp it though text.
that was sarcasm? dude..sarcasm, you're doing it wrong.
I was using betrayal sarcastically. As it's not the type of word you usually use to describe job hunting while employed, because it's dramatic and inaccurate.
I understand that betrayal was sarcastic after you stated it was a sarcastic statement, its just not obvious enough to stick out as sarcasm which sarcasm is suppised to do. if it isnt obviously sarcastic, its poor sarcasm
Agree with 33
I disagree, 33. Sometimes (not always!) very subtle sarcasm is the best way to go. If you can make a sarcastic comment (properly) that goes over people's heads, that just shows how skilled you are at it. Because not just anyone can come up with something really obviously sarcastic.
I guess your boss took it pretty well as he told you the recruiter had called !
What you did was uncalled for.
I see what you just did there.
In normal countries you can't just immediately fire somebody for no reason (assuming this is a proper job - with contract and all), otherwise you may get a lawsuit.
21 - If by normal you mean "sane and reasonable." Unfortunately, OP is in neither, being from the state of Florida in the United States. (Hope you still have a job, OP.)
#35, "normal" means civilized country that it has laws that regulate employment. Firing on the spot is most likely unlawful and can result in lawsuit. Whether you'll quickly win the lawsuit depends on level of corruption of your country and is another story. Normal laws also mean that that you can't refuse to hire somebody that meets qualifications, and you can't fire that person for no reason, plus you can't fire people immediately - normally there's a cooloff period before employee actually stops working (2 weeks, for example).
Well OP, did you get the job?
Your boss sounds like a great person. Looks like he doesn't mix business with his personal feelings. He could've not told you about it and fired you.
Not where I live. You don't have to tell anyone that you're looking for work; it's none of their business. You have to tell them if you get the job, obviously, but just applying is irrelevant. Personally, I told my boss when I got an interview so she'd have warning that I might get hired, but I certainly didn't tell her about every job I applied for.
This is why we proofread. Sillyhead.
That's what I was thinking! How do you mess up your own phone number? It's like when I'm at work and ask for their phone number and they tell me they don't know, they don't call themselves. Really?
#13 - Some of us are just idiots with phone numbers and don't know it. I'm one of those, so I always keep my phone number as one of my contacts to I can check! It's rather helpful
I hope you got the job. Atleast your boss was good enough to tell you about it instead of keeping it a secret or firing you!
feel bad for your boss! he sounds like a decent guy but YDI for not checking it over first.
Keywords
I hope you didn't put detail-oriented in your special skills
Sounds like your boss took betrayal well.