1 day = 90 = quarterly |
| Panty liners or pads? |
Really? With all the stuff that is hacked and on the Dark Web you don't think a kid's name can be associated with his address? I think everyone is thinking about this too much. |
OP here and I can imagine that there are people who wear 2-3 panty liners per day, so a 100-pack per 2-ish months makes sense. I'm not sure why I'm getting into this, but to answer someone else's question (are they pads or panty liners): they are panty liners. |
| So..maybe this is just an accident, if you really want to keep pondering...use the yearbook to look at all the kids in DS's grade and see which have the same last initial (worth a try, no guarantees). Then, consider if any relatives are likely to be glomming on somebody else's Amazon like people do with Netflix. A husband or boyfriend of a younger cousin, for example? Anyone with different last name initials than the relative you might suspect? Finally, if there's a subscription mailing to your child, I think you might have the right to request that it be cancelled by saying it's your intent to return the merchandise at Amazon's expense? By requesting a free return shipping label or some other process that would be burdensome for them to initiate to a non-purchaser? You can also try escalation to a manager and asking for the subscription to be suspended. |
Geez relax. It’s almost certainly a mistake in selecting the address on someone’s auto delivery. Our school does baskets for the fall fair. One parent assembles them and families can order items from a wishlist. I assembled them one year, and you would not believe how many random items I got over the next few months after the fair from moms who had accidentally clicked on my address (since they had inputed it in oct) for future orders. It’s easy to do |
That’s actually pretty common - roughly one/day on auto deliver for every 3 months. |
Someone who wears them daily. There are reasons. |
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I'm into this. Let's wait to see if another one comes.
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+1 |
| I would pull his credit report just in case. There are scams of signing up people for Medicaid amd sending incontinence supplies to them which Medicaid pays for. They might start ordering more expensive supplies. |
No one is wearing panty liners for incontinence. |
Wrong.....!! |
Pads, sure. Panty liners, no. |
Women post-vaginal births to protect against leaks. Absolutely liners. |