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Does Anyone Else Think This Is Pathetic?

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abbeylee90 | 19:27 Mon 06th Jan 2025 | How it Works
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Ever since my incident with a bulldog down the dogs home the boss has said I'm not to walk any bullies but some of the staff have been given me a bully recently and she is so well behaved I've walked lurchers worst behaved then her. Then when I ask for her last weekend a member off staff said no bullies and when I mention I had recently he said staff shouldn't have given them out to me. 

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If your boss has telt you you're not to walk a particular breed, then that is a reasonable instruction and you must follow it.

That should read, "reasonable management instruction".

Nah do as you are told at work man

Question Author

No member of staff at dogs home boss 

You might say 'bully for you'.

//No member of staff at dogs home boss //

Sorry Abbey, that doesn't make sense.

Surely there's a manager/boss/ someone in charge? 

If boss said you're not to walk bullies, why are you ignoring them?

Seems highly irresponsible. 

As your boss telt you not to walk bulldogs, you should have refused to take one.

It might be some of the staff weren't aware of that instruction but you were and yet you chose to ignore it.

The dogs have to come first.

You put a dog at risk before, and now a rule has been put in place to ensure it doesn't happen again, abide by it or leave. 
At the end of the day if you ignore it then it's the dog that may end up suffering.

Abbey, if your boss told you not to walk bullies, why on earth are you 'asking' staff to give you one  of those?  You are being disrespectful to both the boss and to the other members of staff - it matters not that you've walked lurchers who behave badly! Your previous experience with the bully means your boss doesn not want you walking bullies. You'll have to accept that!

Question Author

I volunteer down dogs home so she not my boss. 

I walked the bully twice and it ran smoothly. 

Abbey, you are the one who wrote 'the boss said..' - do you want us to change that to 'your fellow volunteer who is in charge of your duties'? The other member of staff (the other volunteer) has obviously been told that you are not to be given bullies. You may not like that, of course, but...

Is she the boss of the dogs home?

Question Author

Yes 

//I volunteer down dogs home so she not my boss//

Yes, she is, Abbey.

Abbey, I don't understand - so why is the person you call your 'boss', the person who's the boss of the dogs home,  not your boss?

If you are going against her instructions, you might discover your volunteering services will not be required.

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I never see her. I mean staff down dogs home thier boss. 

Abbey, she is still the boss, even if you are a volunteer.

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