Crime Cases Still Using Cassettes
Technology7 mins ago
I volunteer at a charity shop in my spare time and have been putting a few extra hours in during my study leave as a constructional break from working and to let my manager have some extra holiday time.
Today a man came in with a handful of posters for the MoscowStateCircus and said that if we displayed the poster in our window we would qualify for two free tickets(worth �20 each) I replied that I could not give an answer either way as my manager was having a day off, he looked very busy and handed me a poster and two tickets and rushed off. I was the only staff member in the shop at that time and there were no customers. I've never been to the circus and as my boyfriend and I have no money( he was diagnosed with cancer in November and hasn't been working since, and I've been focusing on exams) and I thought it would be a good way of escaping life for a short while at no cost. I pocketed the tickets without thinking. Then I started to feel very guilty.
I don't get paid to work there, however, neither do any of the other volunteers, I don't 'deserve' them any more than any of them. My manager is paid and she would be the one to inform, and benefit, and they were meant for her at any rate(insert feelings of duty here) She works very hard she goes past the call of duty sometimes to keep the shop running.
There was no one there when the man left the tickets, so there was no one to judge my actions - that is the main determinate for the majority of my moral choices How does x action reflect on me and my image as a person. I do not believe in an omnipresent, omni prescient god and it brings up the question: if you do a wrong when there are no witnesses and no victims is it really a wrong?
No best answer has yet been selected by Avocado. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If you just tell your boss that the chap left these tickets and explain exactly what you have said to us. Surely she would agree especially if you've been putting in even more time than usual, wouldn't she?
I say that re the 'guilt feelings' here (which I understand as I think I would feel the same) otherwise do, as I am sure many people would do, and that is keep mumm!
tell us if you enjoyed the show...
Does the circus involve animals?
If so, take a moral stance and bin the tickets, therefore, you wont have a dilema on your hands and you wont be supporting a rather horrid way for an animal to spend its life.
If on the other hand, the circus is animal-free I would hand the tickets over and pay to go and see the event if its causing you to think about your actions.
The Moscow State Circus does not involve animals, It comes here to Newcastle and it is a great night out. Enjoy your tickets, the boss can hardly object. What is the worst they could do? Sack you? I think not, as you are a rare person, a volunteer. You are not being dishonest, you were the lucky one to get the tickets.
The circus will come again, and then it will be someone else's turn for the free seats!
It would have been the manager's decision to make if she'd been there, but she left you in charge. That means it was your call, not hers.
I'd also disagree with chompu that tickets are the same as �40; I think there's a legitimate distinction to be made between big gifts and small ones. Sometimes it can be hard to draw the line - but not in this case. After all, if the seat wouldn't otherwise have been filled - which sounds as if it's the case, from Scarlett's post - then the gift is actually worth nothing to the giver, because the show would go on even if there was no-one in the seat. The only cost incurred by the circus is the extremely marginal one of taking your ticket at the entrance and cleaning up round your seat afterwards.
To answer your question directly: yes, wrong is wrong even if no-one knows about it. But as I've said, I don't think you did wrong. If you feel badly about it anyway, offer the tickets to the manager, or make a donation to the charity; but I think if you just went to the circus and enjoyed yourself, you would have nothing to reproach yourself with.
avocado, you are asking 2 or three different questions herewhich I understand as:
1 Should I keep the tickets anyway?
2 Am I more entitled to keep them than other people in the shop because I am broke and my boyfriend is ill (deserving case)?
3 And the old tree in the forest one, have I really done something wrong if no one knows about it?
The answers as I see them are
1 Don't know. What will you do if someone says oh I see you have a poster, the shop down the road got tickets with theirs, what happened to ours?
2 Possibly. Do you know that all the other people in the shop are not as badly off as you?
3 If you believe by your moral code that something is wrong then it is wrong whether or not anybody else knows. On the other hand, if it is not wrong then it doesn't matter who else knows. There was someone there to judge your actions when the man left the tickets and that someone was you!
I can't judge you, only you can do that and over a pair of tickets to a circus at a time when you have a lot of misery on your plate, I don't think that anyone should judge you too hardly, but please rid yourself of this dangerous idea that you can do what you like so long as no one knows!!
Avocado there is only one person that is judging you and that is you. By posting here it can already be seen that you are feeling very guilty about your thoughts. You need to decide for yourself whether you can live with that guilt. I presume that you will work in the shop in the future. Think of how you will feel working there in the future. This isn't meant to send you on a guilt trip, just to remind you of how you may have felt about similar circumstances in the past.
Personally I would hand the tickets over and pass on the message from the circus. You never know the manager may let you have them.
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