Why do you have to use the office fridge for food you’ll eat today?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My former colleagues kept pumped breast milk in the office fridge.


This is normal. What would you expect her to do with it?


Proper offices have a fridge in the pump room.


Wait are you guys trying to imply that breastmilk is gross? What?! It’s baby food! It’s not like pee in the fridge
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My former colleagues kept pumped breast milk in the office fridge.


This is normal. What would you expect her to do with it?


Proper offices have a fridge in the pump room.


Wait are you guys trying to imply that breastmilk is gross? What?! It’s baby food! It’s not like pee in the fridge


Yes it is like pee in the fridge. It’s a bodily fluid.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My former colleagues kept pumped breast milk in the office fridge.


So what? Apparently it was marked well so what’s the problem?


It’s literally a bodily fluid. that’s disgusting and likely violates a lot of safety regs. Plus I wouldn’t put my baby’s milk in a collective refrigerator.

Do you feel the same way about cow’s milk? Also literally a bodily fluid….


It’s pasteurized …
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My former colleagues kept pumped breast milk in the office fridge.


This is normal. What would you expect her to do with it?


Proper offices have a fridge in the pump room.


Wait are you guys trying to imply that breastmilk is gross? What?! It’s baby food! It’s not like pee in the fridge


Yes it is like pee in the fridge. It’s a bodily fluid.


What an ignorant statement. Babies drink breastmilk and there is nothing gross about it. They don’t drink pee. You must be a very immature man.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My former colleagues kept pumped breast milk in the office fridge.


So what? Apparently it was marked well so what’s the problem?


It’s literally a bodily fluid. that’s disgusting and likely violates a lot of safety regs. Plus I wouldn’t put my baby’s milk in a collective refrigerator.

Do you feel the same way about cow’s milk? Also literally a bodily fluid….


It’s pasteurized …


That’s to get rid of bacteria from the barn. Women don’t live in a barn. What do you think happens to newborns who drink their mothers milk straight from the breast? How ignorant are you?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My former colleagues kept pumped breast milk in the office fridge.


This is normal. What would you expect her to do with it?


Proper offices have a fridge in the pump room.


Wait are you guys trying to imply that breastmilk is gross? What?! It’s baby food! It’s not like pee in the fridge


Yes it is like pee in the fridge. It’s a bodily fluid.


What an ignorant statement. Babies drink breastmilk and there is nothing gross about it. They don’t drink pee. You must be a very immature man.


I’m a woman who pumped at work and kept the milk a small fridge in my office. putting my bodily fluids in an office fridge was not something I was going to do.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My former colleagues kept pumped breast milk in the office fridge.


This is normal. What would you expect her to do with it?


Proper offices have a fridge in the pump room.


Wait are you guys trying to imply that breastmilk is gross? What?! It’s baby food! It’s not like pee in the fridge


Yes it is like pee in the fridge. It’s a bodily fluid.


What an ignorant statement. Babies drink breastmilk and there is nothing gross about it. They don’t drink pee. You must be a very immature man.


I’m a woman who pumped at work and kept the milk a small fridge in my office. putting my bodily fluids in an office fridge was not something I was going to do.


That was your choice. Other women who chose to store their breastmilk in the office fridge are doing nothing wrong.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My former colleagues kept pumped breast milk in the office fridge.


This is normal. What would you expect her to do with it?


Proper offices have a fridge in the pump room.


Wait are you guys trying to imply that breastmilk is gross? What?! It’s baby food! It’s not like pee in the fridge


Yes it is like pee in the fridge. It’s a bodily fluid.


What an ignorant statement. Babies drink breastmilk and there is nothing gross about it. They don’t drink pee. You must be a very immature man.


I’m a woman who pumped at work and kept the milk a small fridge in my office. putting my bodily fluids in an office fridge was not something I was going to do.


That was your choice. Other women who chose to store their breastmilk in the office fridge are doing nothing wrong.


Do you really want other people touching your breastmilk? because if your giant cooler is taking up space I am moving it as needed.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My former colleagues kept pumped breast milk in the office fridge.


This is normal. What would you expect her to do with it?


Proper offices have a fridge in the pump room.


Wait are you guys trying to imply that breastmilk is gross? What?! It’s baby food! It’s not like pee in the fridge


Yes it is like pee in the fridge. It’s a bodily fluid.


What an ignorant statement. Babies drink breastmilk and there is nothing gross about it. They don’t drink pee. You must be a very immature man.


I’m a woman who pumped at work and kept the milk a small fridge in my office. putting my bodily fluids in an office fridge was not something I was going to do.


That was your choice. Other women who chose to store their breastmilk in the office fridge are doing nothing wrong.


Do you really want other people touching your breastmilk? because if your giant cooler is taking up space I am moving it as needed.


So you’re not touching the breastmilk. You’re touching the cooler. Details matter moron
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My former colleagues kept pumped breast milk in the office fridge.


This is normal. What would you expect her to do with it?


Proper offices have a fridge in the pump room.


Wait are you guys trying to imply that breastmilk is gross? What?! It’s baby food! It’s not like pee in the fridge


Yes it is like pee in the fridge. It’s a bodily fluid.


What an ignorant statement. Babies drink breastmilk and there is nothing gross about it. They don’t drink pee. You must be a very immature man.


I’m a woman who pumped at work and kept the milk a small fridge in my office. putting my bodily fluids in an office fridge was not something I was going to do.


That was your choice. Other women who chose to store their breastmilk in the office fridge are doing nothing wrong.


Do you really want other people touching your breastmilk? because if your giant cooler is taking up space I am moving it as needed.


That’s not the point and you know it. No, I wouldn’t want anyone touching what my newborn is eating. That doesn’t make the milk gross.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My former colleagues kept pumped breast milk in the office fridge.


This is normal. What would you expect her to do with it?


Proper offices have a fridge in the pump room.


Wait are you guys trying to imply that breastmilk is gross? What?! It’s baby food! It’s not like pee in the fridge


Yes it is like pee in the fridge. It’s a bodily fluid.


Ummm what do you think cow milk is? Isn’t another animal’s bodily fluids even more gross?

And heaven forbid someone has a turkey sandwich in the fridge! A mutilated dead body!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My former colleagues kept pumped breast milk in the office fridge.


This is normal. What would you expect her to do with it?


Proper offices have a fridge in the pump room.


HAHAHAHAHAHA, you know that with the abolition of DEI, that's no longer going to be true
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I only use the office fridge for food I’ll eat in 3 days. I bring all my lunches in 3 days early. That way they’re cold and semi-fresh and I sneak under the radar of the work fridge police who tsk tsk the storage of foods to be eaten that same day.

On a more serious note, I have never read such an inane take. Some foods can go bad in a few hours and need to be kept cold. Not everyone wants to lug ice packs during their commute. Fridge is perfect cool place to store until lunch. Why would anyone care that people put lunches in the fridge?


No food is going to actually go bad in a climate controlled office over 4-5 hours. I assume nobody is bringing raw chicken for lunch. if you are that is a whole different conversation.

OTOH some people may just prefer as a taste matter to have their stuff chilled. that’s understandable.

Girl, no
https://www.fsis.usda.gov/food-safety/safe-food-handling-and-preparation/food-safety-basics/leftovers-and-food-safety


I don’t know what to tell you. Your PB&J can survive out of the refrigerator. otherwise all school children would be dead.

PB&J is not a perishable food. Your ham sandwich is.


Even a ham sandwich is fine for 4 hours. Do you not realize how much sodium is in that shit?

Still wrong https://www.fsis.usda.gov/food-safety/safe-food-handling-and-preparation/food-safety-basics/leftovers-and-food-safety

“Cold perishable food, such as chicken salad or a platter of deli meats, should be kept at 40° F or below. When serving food at a buffet, keep food hot in chafing dishes, slow cookers, or warming trays. Keep food cold by nesting dishes in bowls of ice or use small serving trays and replace them often. Discard any cold leftovers that have been left out for more than 2 hours at room temperature (1 hour when the temperature is above 90 °F).”

(Putting the ham between two slices of bread doesn’t magically make it safer to store at room temp)


all children are dead from boloney sandwiches

Yeah, you’re totally smarter than all the food scientists. Bravo.


Why aren’t we demanding that all schools refrigerate the school lunches?


School starts at 9 and they eat lunch by 11


Not my kids schools
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My former colleagues kept pumped breast milk in the office fridge.


So what? Apparently it was marked well so what’s the problem?


It’s literally a bodily fluid. that’s disgusting and likely violates a lot of safety regs. Plus I wouldn’t put my baby’s milk in a collective refrigerator.


I’m assuming the breast milk was pumped into a sterile bag, which was stored in a sealed bag. And not every office has a separate fridge in the pump room. You’re fine with bodily fluids from a cow (goat, almond…) for your coffee. In a cardboard box. But can’t handle double sealed, well marked milk from a human? New mothers are now in the workforce. Cope. Or better yet, be supportive. — mother of a 21 and 23 year old who switched to formula when she returned to work because of crap like this.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My former colleagues kept pumped breast milk in the office fridge.


So what? Apparently it was marked well so what’s the problem?


It’s literally a bodily fluid. that’s disgusting and likely violates a lot of safety regs. Plus I wouldn’t put my baby’s milk in a collective refrigerator.

Do you feel the same way about cow’s milk? Also literally a bodily fluid….


It’s pasteurized …


In 2025, when raw milk is the trend, are you sure? Also, educate yourself on why milk is pasteurized and why this makes zero sense with breastmilk.

You really need to get over yourself.
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