The Inadvertent Thief
CRIMINAL & ILLEGAL, EDITORS' CHOICE, HEALTH & BODY, PHARMACY, STUPID | RIGHT | JUNE 26, 2008
Lady: “Do you sell aloe vera gel?”
Me: “No, I’m afraid we don’t, but you might be able to get it at [Store] down the street.”
Lady: “Oh, great, thanks.”
(She leaves and ten minutes later returns wielding a tube, looking irritated.)
Me: “Hello again, did you manage to find it okay?”
Lady: “No! You told me they had aloe vera gel! All they had is the cream! I don’t want the cream!”
Me: “Um… you didn’t want the cream but you bought it anyway?”
Lady: “No, of course I didn’t BUY–”
(She suddenly stopped and looked at the tube in her hand. Her expression turned to horror and she legged it back out the door. My coworkers and I laughed for a good ten minutes at that one.)
Along The Way, You’ll Meet Some Hopped-Up Munchkins
EDITORS' CHOICE, FUNNY, PHARMACY, SARCASM, USA | RIGHT | MAY 23, 2008
(I live in a town where 65% of the people are 65 years old and older. When we were redoing the design of the store, they placed a large white walkway from the front door to the pharmacy.)
Customer: “Hi, I would like to pick up my prescription.”
Me: “I’m sorry, ma’am, but this is the front of the store. Your prescription is in the back of the store, in the pharmacy.”
An Inconvenient List of Truths
HOSPITAL, PHARMACY | RIGHT | FEBRUARY 5, 2009
Me: “Hello?”
Caller: “Yeah, I need you guys to fill a prescription for me.”
Me: “I’m sorry, sir, but we are a hospital pharmacy. We only prepare medications for patients of the hospital.”
Caller: “Well, that’s simply discrimination. You ought to fill for everyone.”
Me: “You see, sir, we’re very different from a retail store. We issue individual, bubble-packed pills in one-day supplies to the nurses to give to their patients. We don’t have bottles, and we don’t do 30-day supplies like a store does. We don’t have a cash register, or any kind of means to ring up customers. We’re also located in an employees-only area of the hospital, near the morgue. You can’t really get to us that easily.”
An Inconvenient List of Truths
HOSPITAL, PHARMACY | RIGHT | FEBRUARY 5, 2009
Me: “Hello?”
Caller: “Yeah, I need you guys to fill a prescription for me.”
Me: “I’m sorry, sir, but we are a hospital pharmacy. We only prepare medications for patients of the hospital.”
Caller: “Well, that’s simply discrimination. You ought to fill for everyone.”
Me: “You see, sir, we’re very different from a retail store. We issue individual, bubble-packed pills in one-day supplies to the nurses to give to their patients. We don’t have bottles, and we don’t do 30-day supplies like a store does. We don’t have a cash register, or any kind of means to ring up customers. We’re also located in an employees-only area of the hospital, near the morgue. You can’t really get to us that easily.”
Insert Butt Crack Here
EDITORS' CHOICE, HEALTH & BODY, PHARMACY | RIGHT | OCTOBER 31, 2008
Customer: “Hi, I’m having a problem with my suppositories. They’re not working at all!”
Me: “Okay, let me get the pharmacist for you so he can help you.”
(The customer decides to just yell the same question over two counters to the pharmacist in front of at least 10 other people.)
Pharmacist: “Ma’am, would you like to come over to our consultation are so we can talk about this privately?”
Customer: “No, I just want to know why my suppositories aren’t working!”
Pharmacist: “Well, okay. Are they melting before you insert them?”
Customer: “No, nothing like that!”
Pharmacist: “Are they breaking up into pieces before you use them?”
Customer: “No, no, nothing like that! They’re all in one piece and the same shape and all that stuff! I know how to follow the d*** directions!”
Pharmacist: “Are parts of the foil wrapper sticking to it at all?”
Customer: “What wrapper?!”
(Note: the suppository wrappers are aluminum foil with sharp edges. Ouch.)
After This, She’s Gonna Need An Antidepressant
IMPOSSIBLE DEMANDS, MONEY, PHARMACY, STUPID | RIGHT | OCTOBER 26, 2008
Customer: “Hi, can I have some of those allergy medications that are behind the counter? The 24 hour kind.”
Me: “Sure thing…”
(I grab one, because law mandates that the computers only allow me to check out one 24 hour medication for a certain period of time).
Customer: “Oh, I wanted four. Can I have four, please?”
Me: “Sorry, I can only give you one. There’s a law that makes me check your ID on the computer. It won’t let me check out more than one for you, at least not in the 24 hour dose.”
Customer: “Well, can you at least try? If you’d TRY once in a while, you never know what you can do!”
Me: “All right, then…”
(I scan one and sure enough, the second won’t go through.)
Me: “Yup, it won’t let me check out the second one. Your total’s gonna be about 20 bucks.”
Customer: “Okay, now try the third one.”
Me: “What?”
Customer: “If the second one didn’t work, maybe the third one will.”
Me: “Ma’am, all four of these are exactly the same. If the second one didn’t work, what makes you think if I rang up another box of the exact same thing would work?”
Customer: “JUST DO IT!”
Me: “Okay… yeah… it’s not working.”
Customer: “Okay, now try the fourth one.”
(Suffice it to say it doesn’t work; after she buys her one box, she comes back about fifteen minutes later.)
Customer: “HOW DARE YOU SELL ME THIS EXPIRED MEDICATION!”
Me: “Err… what? I can guarantee you it’s not. I checked it before I gave it to you.”
Customer: “Oh yeah? Then what’s this? It says FEB 20!”
Me: “Yes… February… of 2020. Not February 20th.”
Customer: “Uh… well, I’m older than you and I probably make way more than you anyway, so I’m right. I’m 42 and I make $[amount] an hour!”
Me: “I’ll agree with you, you’re much older than I am. I’m only 26. But, ma’am, you are talking to a pharmacist. I make twice that. Oh, wait… I’m in overtime now… three times that. Actually, in the time it took me to help you, I just made one hour’s worth of your wage. Is there anything else I can do for you today?”
Even Managers Have A Stupid Quota
BOSSES & OWNERS, HEALTH & BODY, IMPOSSIBLE DEMANDS, MONEY, PHARMACY, REFUND | RIGHT | OCTOBER 8, 2008
(A young, angry-looking woman is standing at the pharmacy counter with a small pile of white sticks.)
Me: “How can I help you?”
Customer: “Yeah, these pregnancy tests are all faulty. I want a refund.”
Me: “Okay. So, what happened? Were they broken or missing pieces?”
Customer: “No, they keep saying positive. I’m not pregnant.”
Me: “Um… okay. So, if you’re not pregnant, then why get the tests?”
Customer: “Get your manager!”
Me: *gets manager*
Manager: “What’s the problem?”
(I wander off at this point, called into the vitamins section. When I come back, security is taking the woman out of the store.)
Me: “What the…?”
Manager: “Twit. She just wanted her money back. I hope she has twins that cause a LOT of pain and are ugly. REAL ugly… and poop a lot!”
MacGyver Becomes a Dad
EDITORS' CHOICE, MEDICATION, PARENTS/GUARDIANS, PHARMACY | RIGHT | MARCH 26, 2009
(A man is picking up a prescription for his infant child.)
Customer: “How much did you say the prescription was?”
Me: “$49.99.”
Customer: “What’s the difference between this and what I can get over the counter?”
Me: “There’s no cough medicine you can give your eight-month-old, sir, other than this.”
Customer: “Well, what’s in it?”
(He picks up the prescription papers and starts rustling through them.)
Customer: “If I can buy everything that’s in it over the counter, I’ll just make it myself.”
Script Stupidity
HEALTH & BODY, PHARMACY, STUPID | RIGHT | MAY 28, 2009
Customer: *holds up two bottles* “What’s the difference between these two medicines?”
Me: “The one on the left is a capsule; the one on the right is a tablet.”
Customer: “I mean, which one would be better?”
Me: “They’re exactly the same medicine, just in different forms. Most people buy whichever one is easier for them to swallow.”
Customer: “That’s just stupid! How can you swallow a bottle?”
Script Stupidity
HEALTH & BODY, PHARMACY, STUPID | RIGHT | MAY 28, 2009
Customer: *holds up two bottles* “What’s the difference between these two medicines?”
Me: “The one on the left is a capsule; the one on the right is a tablet.”
Customer: “I mean, which one would be better?”
Me: “They’re exactly the same medicine, just in different forms. Most people buy whichever one is easier for them to swallow.”
Customer: “That’s just stupid! How can you swallow a bottle?”
Where There’s A Pill, There’s A Way
PHARMACY | RIGHT | MAY 21, 2009
(A customer comes in with a prescription for a narcotic pain reliever. He says that he was at the hospital with his wife and the hospital stole his pills, which is why he needs to get this prescription filled, even though his last prescription was just filled a few days ago.)
Me: “OK, sir, I talked to your doctor and he says I can fill your prescription.”
Customer: “Great, can I wait? I have no pills left and I really need it.”
Me: “It’ll be about 10 minutes.”
(10 minutes later.)
Me: “OK sir, your prescription is ready.”
Customer: “Hey, are those pills the same as this?” *holds up pill*
Me: “I thought you didn’t have any pills left, sir.”
Customer: “Well…I bought this off the street, to be honest with you.”
Where The Sun Don’t Shine, Bungholio
PATIENTS, PHARMACY, STUPID, USA | HEALTHY | MAY 12, 2009
Customer: “These things don’t work! They are hard to swallow and I nearly choked to death.”
Me: “Ma’am, they are suppositories. You don’t swallow them; you insert them rectally.”
Customer: “What does that mean?”
Me: “You unwrap them and insert them in your rectum.”
Customer: “What’s my rectum?”
Me: “Ma’am, please forgive me, but your rectum is your butthole.”
Customer: “Well, up yours, too!” *stalks off*
(This is not the first time someone misunderstood when we explained how to use a suppository. It’s the only time we can tell a patient, “Up yours,” and get away with it!)
Super Absorbent For Those Mentally Heavy Days
EDITORS' CHOICE, HEALTH & BODY, PHARMACY | RIGHT | APRIL 23, 2009
(An elderly man calls up to the store.)
Me: “Thank you for calling [Pharmacy]. This is [My Name]. How can I help you?”
Customer: “Yes, my granddaughter came to visit me, and she bought me a birthday gift. It’s on the kitchen table, but I’m not sure what it is.”
Me: “Okay, well, what can you tell me about the product?”
Customer: “Well, the box says ‘K-O-T-E-X’. Can you tell me what that is, honey? What it’s used for? I just can’t figure it out.”
Me: Well, sir… that’s a feminine hygiene product.”
Customer: “Feminine hygiene? What’s the product for? I just can’t figure it out.”
Me: “Sir… it’s for women on their period.”
Customer: “Why would my granddaughter buy me Kotex?”
Me: “I don’t know, sir. Maybe you should ask her that.”
Customer: “So can I still use them to stir my Kool-Aid with? Because that’s what I’ve been using them for.”
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