Grumpy Gramps
68.8K posts




I moved the company to unlimited PTO My wife overheard the all hands from the other room After I hung up she said that was generous Really generous Didn't correct her Here is the part I left off the slide Under the old policy vacation was not free Every day my team earned and did not take, we owed them That sat on the balance sheet as a liability Accountants call it accrued PTO When someone quit, we cut a check for the balance Unlimited PTO has no balance Nothing to earn Nothing to bank Nothing new to accrue The liability comes off the books Nobody worked an extra hour Cash didn't move EBITDA did My wife still thinks it was a gift It was a gift My analyst asked for a Friday off I said let's circle back That was 4 months ago You are welcome Sent from my iPhone








The Root Beer Float Identity Crisis An American friend said, “You have to try a root beer float.” I heard the words. Root. Beer. Float. This was already three problems in one sentence. Root sounds like medicine. Beer sounds like alcohol. Float sounds like something that failed to sink. Then the glass arrived. Dark brown soda. Vanilla ice cream on top. Foam everywhere. A straw. A spoon. Both weapons. I stared at them. If something needs a spoon and a straw, it is not food. It is a custody battle. I smelled it. My brain immediately opened a meeting. Candy? Medicine? Toothpaste? An antique shop? Why does this drink smell like a grandfather’s cabinet learned how to sparkle? I asked, “Is this beer?” My friend said, “No.” “Is it medicine?” “No.” “Is it dessert?” “Kind of.” Kind of. The most suspicious answer in American cuisine. I used the straw first. Cold. Sweet. Carbonated. Confusing. My mouth said soda. My nose said pharmacy. My childhood memories said, “We have never been here before.” Then I used the spoon. Ice cream. Foam. Root beer. Now the dessert was drinking the drink. The drink was melting the dessert. Everyone at the table acted like this was not a public food identity crisis. A kid nearby finished one calmly. That scared me. American children are trained early to accept chaos in a glass. By the third sip, I stopped trying to understand. By the fifth spoonful, I was defending it. “That smell is actually… interesting.” This is how America wins. First you are confused. Then you are sticky. Then you are loyal. Root beer float is not a drink. It is not dessert. It is a cold civil war between soda and ice cream, supervised by bubbles. And somehow, I lost to it. NyanChuu will no longer mock food that cannot choose a category. If America hands me cake soup next, I will not panic. I will simply ask, “Does it come with a spoon, a straw, or emotional damage?”


















