"Today I Messed Up By Going To A Supermarket Chain And Admitting I Shoplifted For 2 Years" Bored Panda Bored Panda works better on our iPhone app Continue in app Continue in browser Like what you're reading? Subscribe to our top stories Please enter email address By submitting email you agree to get Bored Panda newsletter. We respect your privacy. We will not publish or share your email address in any way. Almost finished... To complete the subscription process, please click the link in the email we just sent you. Almost finished... To complete the subscription process, please click the link in the email we just sent you. Are you leaving already? Are you sure you want to post this? We're asking people to rethink comments that seem similar to others that have been reported or downvoted this warning is a mistake x x Let's fight boredom together! Continue with Facebook Continue with Google or Log In Don't have an account? Sign Up Forgot your password? Creating an account means you agree with Bored Panda's Terms of Service 0, text: error()"> Become a member Sign Up Have an account? Login Forgot your password? Creating an account means you agree with Bored Panda's Terms of Service 0, text: error(), css: errorCssClass"> Password reminder Please provide your email address and we will send your password shortly. Send Have an account? Login Don't have an account? Sign Up Get our top 10 stories in your inbox: Finish 0, text: error(), css: errorCssClass"> Please enter your email to complete registration Finish 0, text: error(), css: errorCssClass"> Activate to continue Your account is not active. We have sent an email to the address you provided with an activation link. Check your inbox, and click on the link to activate your account. I have already activated my account Resend activation link We and our trusted partners use technology such as cookies on our site to personalize content and ads, provide social media features, and analyze our traffic. You can read more about it and change your preferences here. Agree Bored Panda iOS App Available on App Store Continue in App Bored Panda Android App Available on Google Play Continue in App By using our services you agree to our use of cookies to improve your visit. You can change your preferences here. Agree BoredPanda Login Add Post Search ArtPhotographyAnimalsFunnyTravelIllustrationComicsDIYGood NewsParentingChallengeAsk Pandas More Featured Trending Latest Newsletter The Bored Panda iOS app is live! Fight boredom with iPhones and iPads here. Bored Panda “ Today I Messed Up By Going To A Supermarket Chain And Admitting I Shoplifted For 2 Years” Home Partnership Advertise Success stories Jobs About us Contact 35points 8 People, Social Issues2 weeks ago
“ Today I Messed Up By Going To A Supermarket Chain And Admitting I Shoplifted For 2 Years”
Rokas Laurinavičius and
Austėja Akavickaitė
When they got into serious money trouble during their university years, Reddit user Syranog resorted to stealing. And did so for two years at the same supermarket. Eventually, things worked out, they got a decent job and could move on with life. However, the guilt that compiled during the shoplifting didn't subside and Syranog thought the only way to get rid of it was to pay back what they had taken. But when the Redditor went to the supermarket to give them the money they had saved, things took an unexpected turn. A reasonable one, but still unexpected. In the face of financial hardship this person started stealing from a supermarket
Image credits: rawpixel (not the actual photo) After two years they couldn t handle the guilt and tried to pay them back but it didn t go as planned
Image credits: rawpixel (not the actual photo) Image credits: Syranog Many commenters couldn't understand why Syranog felt like they had to admit their crime. But guilt is a common feeling of emotional distress that signals us when our actions (or inactions) have caused or might cause harm to another person. Because it typically occurs in "micro-bursts" of brief signals, we often underestimate the rather significant role it plays in our daily lives. "Guilt is not a nice feeling," F. Diane Barth, L.C.S.W., who is a psychotherapist and psychoanalyst in private practice in New York City, said. "We try to avoid it, and when we can't get away from it we try to get rid of it, sometimes by trying to put blame on others – it's her fault, not mine, we say. I'm really an innocent victim here. Or we look for absolution, forgiveness." We want to know that we're not bad, or at least not entirely. Like so many painful emotions, guilt is actually important to our well-being, and a part of healthy psychological development. "Freud saw it as a signal that an individual had begun to take responsibility for himself, for his feelings and conflicts, and for difficult decisions he had to make," Barth pointed out. "Carl Jung said that development and growth only occur when we are able to recognize and attempt to rectify our transgressions. And Melanie Klein saw guilt as part of the healthy acceptance of the 'depressive position,' which she believed was a sign that a person could manage a realistic mix of emotional experiences, accepting that she is neither pure and always good nor evil and always bad." Guilt is a tool for recognizing that we have not lived up to our own values and standards. It's an opportunity to acknowledge and rectify mistakes, and was completely valid in the Redditor's situation. However, it sounds like they didn't think this all the way through. Here s what people said after getting familiar with the case
Others even shared similar stories to make the OP feel better about their situation
Anyone can write on Bored Panda. Start writing! Follow Bored Panda on Google News! Follow us on Flipboard.com/@boredpanda! Share on Facebook Rokas Laurinavičius Rokas Laurinavičius Writer, BoredPanda staff Rokas is a writer at Bored Panda with a BA in Communication. After working for a sculptor, he fell in love with visual storytelling and enjoys covering everything from TV shows (any Sopranos fans out there?) to photography. Throughout his years in Bored Panda, over 235 million people have read the posts he's written, which is probably more than he could count to. Read more » Austėja Akavickaitė Follow Unfollow Austėja Akavickaitė Author, BoredPanda staff Austėja is a Photo Editor at Bored Panda with a BA in Photography. They have a diverse set of creative skills and a wide portfolio which ranges from photography to digital editing and traditional art. After graduating from Nottingham Trent University in 2018 they have worked as a freelance photographer until Bored Panda. When not editing, they enjoy biking, taking too many pictures of their dog and drawing. Read more » Show All Contributors Get the latest inspiring stories via our awesome iOS app! Download Bored Panda app! 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The store manager said an àsshole, and I really hope they find a judge who dismiss the case or suspend the sentence. Their job should realize they actually have themselves a catch: someone willing to grow and take responsibility. 36 36points reply Becky Samuel Becky Samuel Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago What exactly was the store manager expected to do with this idiot then? It's not as if you can just go to the tills and input a random amount of money under the "numpty who shoplifted" button. If you want to own up to crime, then you need to accept the consequences of that crime, whatever they may be. 15 15points reply Load More Replies... Beck Beck Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago There actually usually is a generic "makeup" "cleaning supplies" "toys" type options on cash registers. If it was mainly food and bathroom items they could add in 200 to "food" and so on. 4 4points reply Becky Samuel Becky Samuel Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago Lol. A nearly $1,000 bucks discrepancy overpayment would raise red flags all the way up the chain. It was absolutely the manager's responsibility to report this to the police and he had no option but to do so if he didn't want to end up either jobless without references or tried for fraud. 4 4points reply Jon scargill Jon scargill Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago Exactly. If he failed to report the crime, he would be complicit in it. The only other 'out' which I can come up with, would be for OP to grab a basket and fill it with all the things he stole, pay for them, and then put all the items back on the shelves. 2 2points reply BJames BJames Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 1 week ago Ring up everything that was stolen, put the money in the till and put the product back on the shelf. This isn't rocket science. 2 2points reply JRequiem JRequiem Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago Theres nothing he could do about it, theres Zero evidence as he Consumed everything he stole 2 years ago. And the manager broke privacy laws by "recording the conversation" with out telling this bad story teller and its not his right to do that. How many Store managers have recording devices just ready to hit play when someone comes in to confess?? Zero. Where I work now if the higher ups want covert cameras or listening devices to investigate an employee (never aloud with just regular people) they have to go through the Board of Directors first as its a Special Case -1 -1point reply Renegade Renegade Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago There's a spreadsheet that was written in real time. All the evidence they need right there. There's a reason contemporaneous notes are important. They're evidence. 2 2points reply Rissie Rissie Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago No, you're forgetting a very important part. Shoplifting is not just the pain of the loss of products. Theft in general is an issue because it shows a lack of understanding to why we have rules. A store or a person's home is not a bank you can borrow and even if you borrow from a bank, you have to pay interest. The crime itself needs to be judged and his behavior of coming clean will be weighed in a decision. But not calling the police and with that leaving this to the judicial system is nothing different from judging a crime when catching someone unwillingly and judging what the punishment should be. 2 2points reply der sebbl der sebbl Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago True. Tbh I doubt he will have to face jailtime given his behaviour. Laws in Germany aren't that harsh 1 1point reply OmBoyGanesh OmBoyGanesh Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago The ethics aside, how jaded must a person be to think the likely outcome in this situation would be anything other than what happened? I’m more concerned for their decision-making skills of keeping a spreadsheet & offering it up whilst admitting to the crime than I am for their choice to steal in the first place. The assumption that a corporate entity functions by the same moral code as does a decent individual, with the same consideration for wellbeing, is so far from realistic that it calls into question the persons basic logic. I get the idea of karma or wanting to make right, but at what expense? Housing, employment and freedom??? 17 17points reply Lemon Beans Lemon Beans Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago I think they're the opposite of jaded lol, it's a pretty innocent view of the world to think that admitting to stealing would end with the company thanking you for your honesty 6 6points reply Load More Replies... Got Banned But Now I'm Back Got Banned But Now I'm Back Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 1 week ago I don't think you know what "jaded" means. This person was waaaaaay too naive!! 2 2points reply Yoga Kitty Yoga Kitty Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago (edited) Honestly, I don't believe this story as it is told - neither is the manager allowed to record the conversation without him knowing, nor could that be used in court. Also, you are not going to jail for such a small amount of money in Germany, especially if you confess or turn yourself in. And why would he lose his job over that? His employer will never even know... Sorry, but to me this sounds either completely made up or very much exagerated. Maybe the manager really called the cops, fine. So they came, wrote a protocol, asked him to sign it and told him that everything will now be processed. Case will be closed in a few weeks time because the amount is very low and there is not even a real damage because he paid for it. If the supermarket can no longer book the money in they will donate it to something useful like Die Tafel or the Flüchtlingshilfswerk or something and have the local newspapers print a lovely story about it to polish their image. 16 16points reply der sebbl der sebbl Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago Perfectly summarised 5 5points reply Load More Replies... Brett Wolfe Brett Wolfe Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 1 week ago On the contrary, here in US, people are far more inept about knowing what can and can't be recorded, and it varies by state. South Carolina, for example, is a one-party state, meaning only the person doing the recording need know for it to be legal. Expectation of privacy laws are pretty logical, though murkier in some states than others. However,anywhere in the US, in a public supermarket, you may absolutely be recorded, audio and video. Surveillance is already doing that. I can't speak for Germany, but nowhere in the US would that public surveillance recording violate any expectations of privacy laws. That would be usable in court the same way any theft surveillance footage would. 0 0points reply Brett Wolfe Brett Wolfe Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 1 week ago On contrary, here in the US, recording, whether in person or on the phone, varies by state. South Carolina, for example, is a one-party state, which means only the party doing the recording need be aware that a recording is taking place for it to be legal. The laws of expectation of privacy are generally pretty straightforward, and follow logic. Still, some states are murkier than others. 0 0points reply Load More Comments POST UpQuarkDownQuark UpQuarkDownQuark Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago They’ve taught this person a horrible moral lesson: if you do something bad, never come clean, and never try to make amends. The store manager said an àsshole, and I really hope they find a judge who dismiss the case or suspend the sentence. Their job should realize they actually have themselves a catch: someone willing to grow and take responsibility. 36 36points reply Becky Samuel Becky Samuel Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago What exactly was the store manager expected to do with this idiot then? It's not as if you can just go to the tills and input a random amount of money under the "numpty who shoplifted" button. If you want to own up to crime, then you need to accept the consequences of that crime, whatever they may be. 15 15points reply Load More Replies... Beck Beck Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago There actually usually is a generic "makeup" "cleaning supplies" "toys" type options on cash registers. If it was mainly food and bathroom items they could add in 200 to "food" and so on. 4 4points reply Becky Samuel Becky Samuel Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago Lol. A nearly $1,000 bucks discrepancy overpayment would raise red flags all the way up the chain. It was absolutely the manager's responsibility to report this to the police and he had no option but to do so if he didn't want to end up either jobless without references or tried for fraud. 4 4points reply Jon scargill Jon scargill Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago Exactly. If he failed to report the crime, he would be complicit in it. The only other 'out' which I can come up with, would be for OP to grab a basket and fill it with all the things he stole, pay for them, and then put all the items back on the shelves. 2 2points reply BJames BJames Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 1 week ago Ring up everything that was stolen, put the money in the till and put the product back on the shelf. This isn't rocket science. 2 2points reply JRequiem JRequiem Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago Theres nothing he could do about it, theres Zero evidence as he Consumed everything he stole 2 years ago. And the manager broke privacy laws by "recording the conversation" with out telling this bad story teller and its not his right to do that. How many Store managers have recording devices just ready to hit play when someone comes in to confess?? Zero. Where I work now if the higher ups want covert cameras or listening devices to investigate an employee (never aloud with just regular people) they have to go through the Board of Directors first as its a Special Case -1 -1point reply Renegade Renegade Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago There's a spreadsheet that was written in real time. All the evidence they need right there. There's a reason contemporaneous notes are important. They're evidence. 2 2points reply Rissie Rissie Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago No, you're forgetting a very important part. Shoplifting is not just the pain of the loss of products. Theft in general is an issue because it shows a lack of understanding to why we have rules. A store or a person's home is not a bank you can borrow and even if you borrow from a bank, you have to pay interest. The crime itself needs to be judged and his behavior of coming clean will be weighed in a decision. But not calling the police and with that leaving this to the judicial system is nothing different from judging a crime when catching someone unwillingly and judging what the punishment should be. 2 2points reply der sebbl der sebbl Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago True. Tbh I doubt he will have to face jailtime given his behaviour. Laws in Germany aren't that harsh 1 1point reply OmBoyGanesh OmBoyGanesh Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago The ethics aside, how jaded must a person be to think the likely outcome in this situation would be anything other than what happened? I’m more concerned for their decision-making skills of keeping a spreadsheet & offering it up whilst admitting to the crime than I am for their choice to steal in the first place. The assumption that a corporate entity functions by the same moral code as does a decent individual, with the same consideration for wellbeing, is so far from realistic that it calls into question the persons basic logic. I get the idea of karma or wanting to make right, but at what expense? Housing, employment and freedom??? 17 17points reply Lemon Beans Lemon Beans Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago I think they're the opposite of jaded lol, it's a pretty innocent view of the world to think that admitting to stealing would end with the company thanking you for your honesty 6 6points reply Load More Replies... Got Banned But Now I'm Back Got Banned But Now I'm Back Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 1 week ago I don't think you know what "jaded" means. This person was waaaaaay too naive!! 2 2points reply Yoga Kitty Yoga Kitty Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago (edited) Honestly, I don't believe this story as it is told - neither is the manager allowed to record the conversation without him knowing, nor could that be used in court. Also, you are not going to jail for such a small amount of money in Germany, especially if you confess or turn yourself in. And why would he lose his job over that? His employer will never even know... Sorry, but to me this sounds either completely made up or very much exagerated. Maybe the manager really called the cops, fine. So they came, wrote a protocol, asked him to sign it and told him that everything will now be processed. Case will be closed in a few weeks time because the amount is very low and there is not even a real damage because he paid for it. If the supermarket can no longer book the money in they will donate it to something useful like Die Tafel or the Flüchtlingshilfswerk or something and have the local newspapers print a lovely story about it to polish their image. 16 16points reply der sebbl der sebbl Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 2 weeks ago Perfectly summarised 5 5points reply Load More Replies... Brett Wolfe Brett Wolfe Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 1 week ago On the contrary, here in US, people are far more inept about knowing what can and can't be recorded, and it varies by state. South Carolina, for example, is a one-party state, meaning only the person doing the recording need know for it to be legal. Expectation of privacy laws are pretty logical, though murkier in some states than others. However,anywhere in the US, in a public supermarket, you may absolutely be recorded, audio and video. Surveillance is already doing that. I can't speak for Germany, but nowhere in the US would that public surveillance recording violate any expectations of privacy laws. That would be usable in court the same way any theft surveillance footage would. 0 0points reply Brett Wolfe Brett Wolfe Community Member • points posts comments upvotes FollowUnfollow 1 week ago On contrary, here in the US, recording, whether in person or on the phone, varies by state. South Carolina, for example, is a one-party state, which means only the party doing the recording need be aware that a recording is taking place for it to be legal. The laws of expectation of privacy are generally pretty straightforward, and follow logic. Still, some states are murkier than others. 0 0points reply Load More Comments Popular on Bored Panda I Used AI To See What These 23 Popular Cartoon Characters Would Look Like In Real Life 30 Y.O. 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