Give all your shirts, jackets, etc. to homeless people.
Any other ideas?
Give all your shirts, jackets, etc. to homeless people.
Any other ideas?
I am keeping mine and wear them all the time. No regrets, put in my time and was paid well. It was not a bed of roses but work. A job. Sorry for those of you who struggled. Good luck to all of you.
@sc, with that information I guess no one needs to question you being $hit-canned.
I am keeping mine. I absolutely loved my first 20 years at Chevron. I worked with a family. I felt valued and and challenged. Chevrons pay and benefits over the years will allow me to have a great life in retirement. It has changed a lot in the last few years, but what hasn’t.
This week my boss wanted me to put all my important files in a shared directory and organize everything appropriately. I put about 10% of my work in there and called it a day. Half those files are corrupted any way.
@r9 Great Idea
Never share your knowledge. When asked to train, only turn over vendor docs.
@mx+1jq70b10t
The address for the ENGINE office is in the directory, you should send the shirts to India....
sending those to china
I threw everything in the trash with the dog po-p. Feel free to come get it.
Jokes on them, I don't have a single Chevron shirt, hat, or anything else.
I gave everything with a Chevron Logo to either Goodwill or the garbage. I burned the certificates and photos. I kept the email so I could contact or verify names, but really never used it.
I’ll be for sure wearing my chevron shirts when I’m homeless. What a perfect advertisement for this he-l hole.
Donate your car and house to them also, I'm sure they could use it. After all, the company enabled you to be able to buy them.
Give away your laptop, company phone to homeless folks too.. they need it
I left last year and gave all my stuff to the Salvation Army. Just seeing the logo makes me exhausted and I just go to Exxon now.
I wear all sorts of different clothes from companies that I have worked for over the years. Yard work, fishing, whatever. No animosity toward any of them and some of the companies no longer exist or merged. Not sure why companies would want homeless people wearing their clothes. It would most likely end up on a thrift shop sales rack anyway. That's what happens with most donated clothes.
I attended training session when I was laid off from a previous employer and that was of the things they told us to do in the session. At the time. I did not think it was a good idea but I followed their recommendation. The idea was to purge yourself of any connection to the company and therefore animosity toward the employer. It actually worked and I was glad I donated the clothes.
I've always used the various Chevron T-shirts (like "we agree" and all those) that I would never have worn in public as shirts for doing yard work.