Cheers
Anonymous - 05/06/2024 00:00 - New Zealand - Auckland
Anonymous - 05/06/2024 00:00 - New Zealand - Auckland
ghgfd - 06/03/2013 14:53 - Canada - Barrie
Anonymous - 14/11/2022 18:00
lamortdeshommes - 28/06/2011 17:03 - United States
hellishome - 29/09/2019 00:01
anon - 14/06/2021 08:01
pathetic - 06/11/2013 13:04 - United States - Lincoln
anonymous - 17/09/2010 08:19 - United States
crazygirl - 15/12/2010 02:18 - Canada
secretdeo - 24/08/2009 04:48 - United States
Anonymous - 29/07/2019 15:00 - United Kingdom - Oldbury
Put the baby milk powder in hot water or in your coffee for a nutritious drink. Or if you're feeling generous, give the milk powder with the tampons to some women's charity.
Did someone mix up the care packages, or do they take a one-size-fits-all approach? (I really hope it's not the latter.) I feel like you should be able to decline/return the items you can't use so they can be redistributed to people who actually need them. There's no way your support worker doesn't have clients who use tampons or clients with formula-fed or formula-supplemented infants, and blithely handing tampons and formula to a cis man with no kids is both thoughtless and wasteful.
Put the baby milk powder in hot water or in your coffee for a nutritious drink. Or if you're feeling generous, give the milk powder with the tampons to some women's charity.
Did someone mix up the care packages, or do they take a one-size-fits-all approach? (I really hope it's not the latter.) I feel like you should be able to decline/return the items you can't use so they can be redistributed to people who actually need them. There's no way your support worker doesn't have clients who use tampons or clients with formula-fed or formula-supplemented infants, and blithely handing tampons and formula to a cis man with no kids is both thoughtless and wasteful.