Same here, of course. 🙂
]]>I have a badge holder that goes around your neck so I don’t have to pin or clip anything on my clothes, and it is possible to read the name if you are really close… and the light is right… and the print is large.
In general, I agree that if the meeting is important you make a point of learning the names of those attending. I take notes because the act of writing “fixes” things in my memory. It is extremely disrespectful not to make the effort to remember names after you’ve been introduced.
]]>It felt so good! 😀
]]>On one trip they confiscated a small pair of scissors my Mother had but ignored her aluminum knitting needles. It’s not that the scissors couldn’t have done serious damage… to someone’s cuticles… but those needles would go straight through you. There’s no logic to the system.
]]>I don’t know how many uniform shirts and blouses [the military jacket] that I had to replace, because the stuff you had to pin on tore the fabric. The old wool uniforms could stand up to the abuse, but the newer polyester versions seemed to go “holey” in no time.
Actually, Jill, the name tags and flags are necessary for people like the Shrubbery – it helps him remember who he is and where he is.
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]]>Not wearing them doesn’t make me less loyal or less “part of the group.”
I wish someone would retort back to these boneheads who keep bringing up this stupid “wanna-be-gate” if they knew where those flag pins were made and what the working conditions were at the factory and if any slave labor was involved. If not, shut-the-blankety blank-up.
Geez.
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