15 Employees Reveal The Dark Secrets Society Doesn't Know About Their Jobs
Briefly

"A boutique hotel I worked at didn't wash comforters unless necessary. And even then, you really had to push. I was pulled to help with housekeeping fairly regularly in the busy season, found a quilt with blood on it, and sent it to laundry. It was sent back in 5 minutes after being deemed 'clean enough.' My housekeepers told me it was normal. I was horrified. I cringe at staying at hotels and take a blanket when I can." - u/allthecrazything
"Security guard: In an active shooter event, we're not going to protect your ass. We're heading to the nearest safe exit and calling the cops. I'm an unarmed security guard, so I don't know what else people would expect me to do in that situation. I get paid to observe and report, not protect and serve. I'm not even supposed to put hands on someone unless they try to put hands on me first." - SnooChipmunks126
"Book editor: Unless you have a massive social media following/built-in audience already, chances are very small you'll get published by a major house. Chances are even smaller that you'll make money from your book. Just self-publish if you really want to get your work out there: the publishing industry is 95% about making money and 5% about publishing decent books." - u/ergo_slump
"I worked in Housing & Dining at a big state university. Universities cover up a TON of bad stuff to keep a 'safe and clean' image. Not revealing some of this information perpetuates a false narrative that everything is fine on campus, when in reality it isn't."
Read at BuzzFeed
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