*Breathes in deeply, and exhales slowly*
Ooooookay.
So, at work, some of my coworkers get Chrismas cards for the other employees. We even have a little basket on the break room table so people can just fill them out to everybody, stuff them in it, and we all know to look through it to see if we have one.
It's rather impersonal, and I like it that way.
I've gotten maybe 4 or so cards from coworkers this way, because they make cards out to everyone they work with (it's rather obvious because they use the exact same type of envelope for everyone. Like I said, it's impersonal)
Normally, I take the ones addressed to me home, look at them, and then set them somewhere and forget about them.
But not yesterday.
Yesterday, there were a couple in the basket labeled to me, so at the end of my shift, I took them home.
When I got home, I handed them to my wife, said they were from my coworkers, and let her open them (I hadn't even opened the envelopes yet. I hadn't seen them, and didn't know who they were even from. I was more concerned with changing out of my work uniform to care)
One of the letters happened to offend her.
Because it was addressed "Love, [name]"
Nothing else was written on it. It was just the words that the card already had printed onto it, and the signature. That's it.
This offended her extremely badly that someone would include that, seeing as how it was from a female (specifically, it was one of the people that made biscuits)
I said "You realize they probably wrote that on every single letter they sent to every single person, right?"
But that wasn't good enough. She felt the need to physically tear the letter to shreds.
Now I don't really care about the letter itself. The destruction of the letter doesn't bother me.
It's the fact that it actually had to go that far over something so incredably stupid and pointless, and to derive pleasure out of ripping up something that someone had put money and time into.
And she couldn't get why this made me upset.