The 2 new people quit at work. We should have at a bare minimum 8 sales associates (not including the cosmetics sales women). Currently we have 5. And 1 person who can work weekends only. Well 5 and a half because there is a new manager type who also works on the sales floor.
We have 4 keyholder/manager types which sounds like a lot but it isn't when dealing with opening and closings ,etc
A new person starts tomorrow but I don't have high hope and I don't think people are applying.
I have no idea what is going to happen
I think they are going to have to pay more. And we need permission from corporate for overtime so the most anyone can work is 40 hours and not a minute over.
On the plus side I get weekends off
I always take Halloween week off, partially to avoid the awkward partying. (Plus it's the closest thing I have to an actual religious holiday, and I get tetchy)
Ibuprofen works okay for me and acteminophen works great for fevers for me. But really, naproxen is the one true OTC painkiller. Is it killing my liver or my kidneys?
Not a big opioid person. When I had demerol after the c-section it just made me sleepy.
Meara, go easy on yourself.
I'm pretty sure ibuprofen is only dangerous for your kidneys if you already have a kidney condition, or indicators that you're likely to develop one. (Not a doctor but used to work on End Stage Renal Disease programs for Medicare.)
Go Theodosia!
Ibuprofen was my drug of choice back when I had cramps. Now that I'm past that, it seems to work for headaches and such. The only thing that helped when my knees were acting up seemed to be CBD oil.
I've had opioids after minor surgery, and they seemed to do their job. When I stopped hurting I stopped taking them. But clearly, different people react differently to various meds.
As a person with migraines, I depend on Ibuprofen (makes it easier and more tolerable, does not take away all of the pain).
Naproxen is my favorite, also.
I had prescriptions for Percocet and Ibuprofen after my back surgery. After the first week or so, I'd take one Percocet first thing in the morning (to get through the day) and one last thing at night (to help me sleep), with Ibuprofen as needed during the day. I found it a good balance between management of mild pain and concerns about addiction. (Obviously, your pain may vary.)
I find naproxen only slightly more effective than Tylenol. Oh, how I miss being able to tolerate ibuprofen; it gives me massive feedback headaches now.
Naproxen is my go to for the long-lastingness, but for breakout pain that that doesn't touch, I find Tylenol more immediately effective. Once I remember that there are things you can take for pain, which usually takes me a while.