razorblunt wrote: » Stop bringing cake, bring Rich Tea.
pgj2015 wrote: » As if you would trust a beggar with your debit/credit card.
punisher5112 wrote: » I use plastic so have no change..... The beggars are missing out on a trick there, suppose they will have card readers so you have no excuse.....
odyssey06 wrote: » 3 euros... and I know the exact denominations: a 2 euro coin and a 1 euro coin. Mainly reserved for shopping trollies!
arctictree wrote: » Stinge test - Do you know how much in change you have in your pocket? I have a friend who knows down to the cent.
MikeOxsgreen wrote: » I've inlaws up the country, if you called, they'd offer you tea and sandwiches. But ask you how many sandwiches you want. They'd end up being easy singles. Also, if you brought a cake or something nice (for the tea) , you'd be offered rich tea biscuits from stock.
the purple tin wrote: » Miserable old shíts like that tend to live on for ages. They are pickled in their own negativity.
Stevieluvsye wrote: » Don’t sweat about it, he’ll be dead before you know it
ohnonotgmail wrote: » I hope you reminded him that your son was also his grandson. miserable git
pgj2015 wrote: » I was listening to 2fm a few weeks ago, some woman rang up for a quiz and answered a few questions, (we will call her Ann) she did well. after the quiz the radio presenter asked her where she liked to eat in cork. she mentioned a restaurant. the radio presenter said ok so if anyone at the restaurant named can hear this, then maybe you can give Ann a voucher for your restaurant as a prize and you can get good publicity. How stingy is that like, why didn't 2fm give her a voucher, why guilt a restaurant into giving Ann a voucher. I thought it was very cheeky and cheap of 2fm.
fleet_admiral wrote: » I've posted here about my father in law before but he is getting worse with age. He recently stayed with us for 5 weeks as he was waiting on an operation and had to be near the hospital. He ate a fine breakfast every day, dinner, supper, gallons of tea/coffee, all the fruit he wanted, sandwiches if he was feeling peckish and let me or my wife treat him to chipper every Friday...all without 1c towards anything. He would remind me if things were running low, eh, your low on milk there, eh, there's very little bread left and so on with going to the shops to replenish what had almost run out. It got to a head so I said to my wife that your dad needs to contribute towards the cost. Eventually he literally threw €20 at me which fell on the floor. I handed it back saying its fine I don't need it but look after yourself from no on for everything, including toilet paper. He told my wife then that he was never more insulted and wouldn't be visiting as often. I'll add that in the time he was staying he didn't give my son, his only grandchild €1 of pocket money. We were parked outside centra one day and I went to the bank. When I got back to the car he said 'I paid for the lucozade for your son, its ok but if you have the €2 ill take it'
Princess Calla wrote: » Was it a genius move or was it immoral theft
Dodge wrote: » And the thread went on for days
Obvious Desperate Breakfasts wrote: » Not quite. Somebody bought shoes at full price then noticed that the shoes were on sale a few weeks later. Both them again on sale and returned the ones bought on sale that same day using the receipt from the full price pair, pretending they were the pair that were bought at full price. Boasted about it here.
Antares35 wrote: » I had to read this four times!
the purple tin wrote: » What's it all about?
Lady Haywire wrote: » If I remember correctly, shoes were bought full price, then returned unworn a couple of weeks after & same shoes were bought at a sale price.
Dodge wrote: » This reminder made me laugh. What a time that was. Ha
Princess Calla wrote: » Jaysis this is beginning to feel like "the return of the shoe" saga all over again!