Growing up I had this truck that my parents used to throw their loose change in. Every year or two I’d count and roll it up with my mom and usually have nearly a hundred dollars. The odd loonie or toonie was really helpful, but it was mostly smaller stuff and the bag was quite heavy as I brought it to the store. I paid 78$ for a 13 inch tube tv with an RCA connection so I could play my ps2 in my room. Or one year I bought a bike from Canadian tire that I used for years and years.
Jaysonmcleod on December 27th, 2022 at 21:19 UTC »
Growing up I had this truck that my parents used to throw their loose change in. Every year or two I’d count and roll it up with my mom and usually have nearly a hundred dollars. The odd loonie or toonie was really helpful, but it was mostly smaller stuff and the bag was quite heavy as I brought it to the store. I paid 78$ for a 13 inch tube tv with an RCA connection so I could play my ps2 in my room. Or one year I bought a bike from Canadian tire that I used for years and years.
jsakic99 on December 27th, 2022 at 21:20 UTC »
At least Canada has the dignity of not having pennies.
chanlion on December 27th, 2022 at 21:53 UTC »
You know what? It may be a mean move to some people, but if I was still working customer service, I'd be happy to count everything.
My boss after 1 hour would be why aren't you helping others?! Points at all the coins, proceeds to slowly and enjoyingly continue counting.