On 2013-05-16 20:16:03 +0100, Jake said:
> On Thu, 16 May 2013 16:05:07 +0100, Sacha <
not...@nowhere.com> wrote:
>
>>>
>> What utter rot! This is a regular customer who comes here, with her
>> husband, at least once a month and had *booked* the tea for her and her
>> family two months before the event. They usually buy some cake to
>> take home, too. We don't ask our customers why they choose to pay
>> their bills as they prefer.
>
> I discovered that my Mother was doing the same thing in supermarkets.
> So sister and I worked alternate months, taking her shopping (she
> lived about 3 hours drive away from either of us) or ordering online
> and arranging delivery for her.
>
> I often see older people pulling out slips of paper with their PIN
> written clearly and then asking someone what the number is as they
> cannot see well enough to read it. For that matter, I often see
> younger people referring to codes stored on their mobile phone and
> even reading them out loud as they type them in!
>
> So your story is perfectly feasible.
What can I say? It happened and she's a regular customer not some
wannabe geriatric Bonnie! She'd somehow confused something 'the woman
in the Post Office' told her about some number or card or something
that was nothing whatsoever to do with her PIN and her credit card.
Our staff member tried explaining to her that her card was nothing to
do with the PO and that she absolutely mustn't hand over her PIN number
to *anyone*, ever. But she kept saying that if she didn't give the PIN
number, we couldn't put the card through the machine. I can only
imagine she was confusing the long number and the PIN number in some
way and had in any case got the PIN wrong. Her husband was saying
goodbye to 14 family members and had to come inside again to extricate
her from the muddle which was distressing her, poor soul. To follow
on, about 5 years ago, Ray took someone's card, did all the business
bit and said to her, can you put in your PIN number and she promptly
reeled it off to him. He suggested she contacted her bank to change
it! If people have their PIN number written down in a place where they
keep their card, they're not insured against theft. For some reason to
do with my brain's hard-wiring, I remember numbers for years but forget
names almost instantly. But at least my PINs are lodged where nobody
else can get to them!