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Employee Notices Her Food Going Missing, Installs A Nanny Cam And Catches The Shameless Thief
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Employee Notices Her Food Going Missing, Installs A Nanny Cam And Catches The Shameless Thief

Employee Catches Office Food Thief With Nanny CamOffice Mystery Ensues After Employee Finds Her Snacks Constantly Missing From Her Desk, So She Sets Up A Nanny Cam'I Had An Office Food Thief': Employee Buys A Nanny Cam, Finds The CulpritWoman Buys A Nanny Cam To Capture Office Food Thief, SucceedsEmployee Thinks Her Pregnancy Brain Makes Her Forget How Many Snacks She's Eaten, Later Finds Out It's Actually A Food ThiefEmployee Notices Her Snacks Missing From Her Work Desk, Buys A Nanny Cam To Catch The ThiefEmployee Notices Her Fancy Snacks Missing From Her Work Desk, Busts The Thief After Seeing Him Stuff His Face On Nanny CamEmployee Catches Her Office Snack Thief With A Nanny Cam, Has The Creep FiredEmployee Gets Revenge On Office Food Thief After Catching Him With A Nanny CamEmployee Notices Her Food Going Missing, Installs A Nanny Cam And Catches The Shameless Thief
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You may wonder, what kind of sociopath would think of taking a colleague’s lunch? Well, let me tell you, stolen food mysteries at the office are really part of the package you get when signing that blessed and very cursed contract.

In fact, a survey has shown that a whopping 47% of workers have been a victim to a lunch thief, and 33% of workers admit to “having a bite, or two, or the whole lunch box” of coworkers’ food without permission.

But one Reddit user with “a lot of food allergies,” little free time thanks to a newborn at home, and even less sleep has had enough of her stolen snack hoard. The woman who shared her story on r/ProRevenge has been keeping nonperishable food at her desk, but after a while, she started noticing the sweet and savory goodness going missing.

From boxes of candy to bags of chips, you name it, “I genuinely thought I was just losing my mind,” she said. So she went on Amazon and got a nanny cam, “Not for my baby. For my snack hoard.” The results were instant, and the mystery has been resolved with a shocking discovery.

RELATED:

    One office worker has had enough of getting her snacks snatched from her desk, so she installed a nanny cam and made a shocking discovery

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    Image credits: hamandeggerfiles

    Image credits: unknown

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    To find out about the psychology behind why people steal their coworkers’ stuff, Bored Panda reached out to Arthur Markman, a professor of Psychology and Marketing at the University of Texas at Austin and Founding Director of the Program in the Human Dimensions of Organizations.

    “Most people want to think of themselves as generally good, so most lunch thefts involve taking food from a communal spot like an office refrigerator rather than from someone’s desk,” the professor said and continued: “That said, it is common for people who bring food regularly to work to report that some of their food gets eaten by someone else without permission.”

    When asked where temptation to take food from one’s coworkers comes from, Arthur named several reasons. “Some people feel like they are mistreated at work (underpaid, overworked) and see taking food as a way to even the score. Some people feel like other people who put food in a communal space know the risks that some of their food might get eaten. Some people are just hungry and looking for a quick bite.”

    In some cases, “a few people are just not nice people, but most people who steal their colleagues’ food think of themselves as doing something relatively harmless,” the psychology professor explained.

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    Interestingly, people who steal food from their colleagues find ways to minimize the sense of guilt or shame. “They typically do something easy (like taking food from the refrigerator or taking something from an open package). They often do something they hope won’t be noticed. So, they rarely open an unopened package or take the last of something.”

    Arthur said that “They also look for other justifications. If you think you’re being mistreated at work, then stealing food is just ‘leveling the playing field’ rather than being something you’re doing wrong,” he concluded.

    Bored Panda also spoke to Alison Green, a professional work advisor and book author who runs the hugely popular “Ask A Manager” project. She believes that some people are willing to take food from their coworkers “because at some level they see what’s in the office fridge as communal resources—like the way the mustard might be! Or they think the person won’t miss it.”

    Another reason may be that “they’ve seen that Lean Cuisine in the freezer for two weeks now so they think it’s been abandoned and no one will notice or care if they take it—which of course will end up being the day its owner goes looking for it.” In some cases, Alison said it’s “is just antisocial behavior—people taking something just because they want it and think they’ll get away with it.”

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    If someone is taking your food at the office, Alison suggests “labeling it with your name or a note, but that won’t always work if you have a determined thief,” she said and added: “I did once hear from someone who put her lunch in a brown bag in the fridge labeled ‘breast milk’ and no one ever touched it again.”

    And here’s what people had to comment on this office mystery

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    Denis Tymulis

    Denis Tymulis

    Author, Community member

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    Denis is a photo editor at Bored Panda. After getting his bachelor's degree in Multimedia and Computer Design, he tried to succeed in digital design, advertising, and branding. Also, Denis really enjoys sports and loves everything related to board sports and water.

    Read less »
    Denis Tymulis

    Denis Tymulis

    Author, Community member

    Denis is a photo editor at Bored Panda. After getting his bachelor's degree in Multimedia and Computer Design, he tried to succeed in digital design, advertising, and branding. Also, Denis really enjoys sports and loves everything related to board sports and water.

    Liucija Adomaite

    Liucija Adomaite

    Author, Community member

    Read more »

    Liucija Adomaite is a creative mind with years of experience in copywriting. She has a dynamic set of experiences from advertising, academia, and journalism. This time, she has set out on a journey to investigate the ways in which we communicate ideas on a large scale. Her current mission is to find a magic formula for how to make ideas, news, and other such things spread like a virus.

    Read less »

    Liucija Adomaite

    Liucija Adomaite

    Author, Community member

    Liucija Adomaite is a creative mind with years of experience in copywriting. She has a dynamic set of experiences from advertising, academia, and journalism. This time, she has set out on a journey to investigate the ways in which we communicate ideas on a large scale. Her current mission is to find a magic formula for how to make ideas, news, and other such things spread like a virus.

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    N G
    Community Member
    3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Can anyone explain the mentality of thinking you can just help yourself to anything that takes your fancy? This got brought up in the airline post about people wandering into the galley and helping themselves to the air stewards' lunches as well! WTF is going through these people's tiny minds?

    Susan Trevaskis-Owen
    Community Member
    3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    They don't think, that's the problem. Paraphrased conversation I had with a thieving roommate: Me - "Why did eat the chicken that was in the freezer?" TR - "I was hungry." Me: Did it ever occur to you that the person who BOUGHT the chicken might get hungry, too?" TR - "No."

    Load More Replies...
    Carol Emory
    Community Member
    3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    We had a sandwich thief in our office who thought it was really great to eat my turkey sandwiches. Sourdough with turkey breast, havarti, lettuce and mayo. This kept happening over and over again. The final time it happened, I left a surprise for him. A nice slathering of Wasabi that, on the sandwich, looked like avocado. I heard havoc in the break room and someone bolting towards the bathroom. When I asked who it was, the first shift lunch crew pointed out a young accounts rep. I told my supervisor who called him into the office and told him if anything else went missing in the fridge, he'd be fired.

    Gen L
    Community Member
    3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    There's a woman who has had her food taken, a lot. She brought in a spicy dish that was perfect to her, apparently way too hot for the thief. She got accused of trying to poison said thief. Such bull****

    Load More Comments
    N G
    Community Member
    3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Can anyone explain the mentality of thinking you can just help yourself to anything that takes your fancy? This got brought up in the airline post about people wandering into the galley and helping themselves to the air stewards' lunches as well! WTF is going through these people's tiny minds?

    Susan Trevaskis-Owen
    Community Member
    3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    They don't think, that's the problem. Paraphrased conversation I had with a thieving roommate: Me - "Why did eat the chicken that was in the freezer?" TR - "I was hungry." Me: Did it ever occur to you that the person who BOUGHT the chicken might get hungry, too?" TR - "No."

    Load More Replies...
    Carol Emory
    Community Member
    3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    We had a sandwich thief in our office who thought it was really great to eat my turkey sandwiches. Sourdough with turkey breast, havarti, lettuce and mayo. This kept happening over and over again. The final time it happened, I left a surprise for him. A nice slathering of Wasabi that, on the sandwich, looked like avocado. I heard havoc in the break room and someone bolting towards the bathroom. When I asked who it was, the first shift lunch crew pointed out a young accounts rep. I told my supervisor who called him into the office and told him if anything else went missing in the fridge, he'd be fired.

    Gen L
    Community Member
    3 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    There's a woman who has had her food taken, a lot. She brought in a spicy dish that was perfect to her, apparently way too hot for the thief. She got accused of trying to poison said thief. Such bull****

    Load More Comments
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