Spyke

What was the first thing you ever stole?

I am not advocating shoplifting, but we all did something dumb as a kid. What is your story?

Me, I was 2 years old and at Tim Hortons with my mother and a family friend. This was almost 50 years ago and Tim Hortons still had servers back then, so there was a cutout in the counter for them to go in and out. The donuts are in racks behind the counter. I had had a chocolate donut paid for by my mother, and apparently I decided I wanted another, and I was so little I nipped behind the counter when nobody was there, helped myself to another, and was only discovered when my mother noticed me polishing off a different donut. She did pay for it and everyone laughed, I was just little and it was funny. Sadly the quality of Tim Hortons donuts has gone way downhill over the intervening years, as older Canadians know.

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aussie.zone

Does software piracy count?

Ah who am I kidding, of course it doesn't.

36

I am advocating for shoplifting but the only thing I ever stole was a small packet of seeds from home depot when I was 7

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lemmy.world

I have no problem with people taking what they need and don't care about big box stores. I'm just not wanting to get in trouble with the mods.

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Serinusreply
lemmy.world

It's interesting seeing it from the admin side. Here, at least, they're largely just trying to stay out of trouble. When lawyers or police come knocking at the door, it's already too late, and we're not always sure where that line is.

A couple things we absolutely know will cause trouble. I don't know if/where that line would be with shoplifting.

And of course the mods have their own opinions.

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lemmy.world

I just mean I'm not trying to start off anything controversial. Haha. But I'm not angry at the tent encampment people in my city swiping food from Walmart at all.

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Serinusreply
lemmy.world

Same. Just without talking, people always think the worst. The admins for Lemmy.World are a non-profit in the Netherlands.

They're a bit more professional than Midwest.social, who I absolutely respect. But there's a different level of professionalism here than the guy hosting a server out of his Ohio basement.

On the other hand, they don't have the big corporate backing and structure of something like Reddit. LW doesn't have a team of lawyers if they get into trouble. Do they even have one lawyer? How involved is that lawyer if they do exist? I can't say.

2

Well it's hard to see a grocery store here charge 8.99 for deodorant and care a whole lot about the ethics of swiping it.

1

If wages had kept up with CoL since the 70s, it would be minimum 10× what it is now. The only reason why things are expensive is because of Greedflation. Things could easily be 1/10 the price and companies would still be profitable, it’s just that the Parasite Class wouldn’t be making off with their unearned billions that they stole from the working class.

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sh.itjust.works

Breakroom at my father's office had snack and soda vending machines, and also a change machine. My younger brother and I discovered the change machine was faulty, and would dispense way too much change for a dollar bill. We fed it every single we had (4 or 5 dollars between us) and got back $20 or so in quarters, nickels and dimes. This was in the late 1970s. $20 was a lot of money, especially to a couple of dumb kids. We thought we'd hit the jackpot.

18

Was gonna say maybe they did it on purpose expecting you to dump it all back into the vending machine (which probably way overcharged) but yeah $20 for 5 seems a bit high for that.

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lemmy.world

In first grade? There was this little Hot Wheels style car that could transform into a robot man. I loved that little thing. Top favorite toy in the classroom.

Took it home one day. I was too afraid to play with it, so I just stuffed it into the box with the other toy cars. I was also too afraid to return it after a while. I still have it, and the guilt over taking this thing lives rent-free in my head.

16

When your kid goes to first grade, take it in, donate it, and tell the story.

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lemmy.zip

A newspaper.

Did not know it was stealing... I was ... maybe 7?

Up until that point in my life, I'd only ever been to stores or restaurants that had free flyers or small community newsletters.

First time I was in a similar small store, I assumed full, 30+ page newspapers worked the same way.

After being informed that full newspapers cost money, and I had stolen it, I returned it.

The store clerk did not even realize I had taken the paper, laughed, appreciated my honesty, and gave me a tootsie pop.

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lemmy.world

It was a red and green plastic pencil sharpener shaped like a dachshund. You stuck your pencil in his butt. I stole it from a desk in Sunday School. I stole from God.

13

A bottle from mad dog 20/20 from a gas station. I was like 15. Me and some buddies wanted to get drunk, none of us had fake IDs, and the weed dealer who normally supplied the booze wasn't answering his phone. 5 of us went in, my buddy Brian volunteered to be tribute, and he grabbed a case of beer and just went to walk out the door with it. While the clerk was distracted dealing with that, we shoved mad dog in our pockets, and then went to the register with sodas. Brian dropped the case of beer and booked it. It was a very smooth operation.

Didn't steal anything else for years, until I was like 18, and we were so poor that my mom and I started shoplifting out of genuine necessity, while waiting on her disability to kick in.

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Serinusreply
lemmy.world

I'm sorry you had to go through that. Shoplifting with your kid is a different level.

8

In 5th grade I discovered that my hand and wrist were small enough to reach up into 25 cent bathroom pad and tampon dispensers. I didn't really understand what they were for but I thought it was funny to empty them out whenever I saw them.

9

I used to put things in my vest pocket when I worked at Walmart and “accidentally” take them home. I was a twenty-something but I fucking hated that place and felt like I deserved more.

9

Oh, man, I used to steal all the shit from Walmart when I worked there. I'd go to the freezer section, grab something like a small box of hot pockets, and head to the break room directly for my break, straight skipping the register. Plus just, like, normal shoplifting, because fuck them

6

When I went to malls as a teenager I would often get stopped and searched as if I was shoplifting. Was over 6' at 16 and often wore hoodies. When I started getting into cross-dressing I was too ashamed to go through checkout with it. So I dressed in nicer clothes then hoodie and jeans, and shoplifted women's clothing from every clothing store that ever stopped and searched me incorrectly previously. Part shame part revenge part kink.

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lemmy.zip

I remember stealing small toys from dentists and pediatricians when I was little. Like, you were allowed to pick one toy after the appointment and I took two or something?

Unfortunately, I've also stolen from friends of mine. I was around 7 or 8 and wanted a Tamagotchi real bad but couldn't afford one because I didn't have/get any allowance and my parents couldn't just buy me one since we were tight on money growing up. Ff to us visiting friends and I notice 15€ on my friend's night desk which I just stashed.

Same day, I go to my mother, all proud, and proclaim "Look, I only need another 5€ to get a Tamagotchi!" When she asked where I'd gotten the money from, I confessed, realised what I did was stupid, and apologised to his mother over the phone. I remember crying real bad and promising I'd never do something like that ever again; she was really cool about it and wasn't angry at all which was nice. Felt awful regardless.

I did end up getting a Tamagotchi for my birthday so yay?

7

A prop gift in a store after holiday season. It was just about tiny enough to fit in my pocket. Imagine my disappointment when I tore off the wrapping paper and found a cube of Styrofoam. I was like 5 at the time.

6

When I was a teenager I once started reading a newspaper and walked out of a grocery store, not realizing you had to pay for them. I was distressed and one of my parents called the store and explained the situation and we paid for the newspaper the next time we went in.

When I was a small child, I once ate a gummy between the bulk candy bins. When explained later that you aren't just allowed to take the candy and you have to pay for it, I panicked.

Neither of these were intentional thefts, but maybe they count.

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lemmy.world

LOL not understanding how shopping works as a little kid doesn't make you a thief. I feel no guilt about my donut.

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dandelionreply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

weirdly I still feel guilty, but I think part of it is that I also was shocked by not understanding such a fundamental aspect of society, an aspect that is criminalized and carries such serious consequences. I had a step-aunt who was in my life much later, and she served actual jail time for getting caught stealing a Hallmark card for mother's day from like a Walgreens. Her ability to find a job when she was stuck raising her baby as a single mom was compromised and the legal system really fucks you even for petty stuff like that.

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Serinusreply
lemmy.world

I suspect the Hallmark card is the story you were told.

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not sure why they would lie about that considering the other things they were honest about, lol

you also have to understand that this family tended to not hold back about sharing disparaging details, shame was an important lever for behavioral adjustment and even small mistakes were punished

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sp3ctr4lreply
lemmy.zip

Sonuva... I just wrote almost exactly the same story about not realizing you even can steal a newspaper as a kid.

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lol, glad to hear I'm not the only one - I felt like there was something really wrong with me 😅

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lemmy.world

In the first grade, I was bullied by a popular kid in my school.

Back in those days (early '90s), the cool thing was to have pencil grips. Kids loved to show off an assortment of colors and styles of them. This bully of mine happened to have a single pencil, covered from tip to eraser with pencil grips, which was his prize possession. He was always showing it off to everyone. It was rumored he'd been stealing them off other kids, but no one could definitively prove it.

When he wasn't looking one day, I snatched his favorite pencil with all the pencil grips. It was justice for all the times he picked on me in grade school. I enjoyed watching him frantically turn his backpack inside out, trying to find it.

I didn't get to keep it for long, though. A week later, one of the stricter teachers found it in my backpack and told me I had too many pencil grips for a single pencil, so she confiscated it. I didn't know any better at the time, or else I would've complained about her stealing my property. But it was already stolen, so I didn't really care to fight it.

That was the first and last time I stole something. I actually agonized over it for a long time afterward. I was relieved when the teacher stole it from me because it was finally out of my hands and I didn't have to worry about it anymore. I never stole anything else again; the anxiety of holding onto stolen goods etched itself deep into my psyche.


Also calling out my sister: When I was maybe 6 or so, my mother found a stash of candy in a cabinet of our kitchen; mostly Lifesavers. She asked me where it came from and I just shrugged. She then asked my sister, who was 2 years younger than me, and my sis immediately broke down crying. Turns out, every time my mother went to the gas station, my little sis would grab a couple rolls of Lifesavers and pocket them. She thought my parents would never look in the messy cabinets of our kitchen.

I'm pretty sure she never stole again after getting caught. She was a wreck for a while afterward and almost terrified of candy when offered.

5

I stole so many books as a kid. The library didn't have books on Wicca and Paganism so I stole them from Waldenbooks.

5

Don't remember the exact magazine, but I know there was once, when I was in highschool, where I took over my grandma's room and one day ended up pulling out one of the bedside table drawers and beneath it was a porno mag. Asked my mom if she remembers and she doesn't, but did say that those types of magazines were something my grandma would buy for him for some reason and wouldn't be surprised if he hid it there to hide it from someone like me, his grandkid.

1

M:tG cards back in the late 90s.

There was a local comic book store called (no shit) The Funk Pit, which kept the mid tier cards stored in 3 ring binders full of those plastic card sleeves, and common cards stored in an "Inch Box" where they just charged you by the height of your stack. My friend and I would occasionally sneak a more expensive card out of the binder and slip it into our stack from the Inch Deck that cost $1.25.

There's no way we were the first or last to do it, but I felt kinda shitty about it for years after.

5

Gum. I was maybe 7 yo. My mother took me back to the store and made me apologize.

4

Stole some clothes from Hot Topic; had to remove the ink tags later by hand. I skipped school with my crush at the time and it was a rush.

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lemmy.world

According to my mom, the calcium off her teeth.

"My dentition was so great, but then you came."

4

Not that I remember but apparently when I was 2 yrs old or so I snatched a handful of very expensive wedding cake from a bakery display window while my dad was busy paying at the counter. He noticed when picking me up to leave and godspeed back home because he couldn't afford paying the now damaged cake.

The first and only thing I remember stealing was a monkey toy when I was 3 or 4 yrs. Went to a party or something at someone's house, there were other kids there and I decided I deserved that monkey more than they did so I pocketed it. My parents found out afterwards, they weren't happy about it but didn't care enough to return the toy to the owner. I guess it was a cheap toy.

4

I nicked a LEGO winch brick from primary school and my gran made me take it back. Not a criminal mastermind.

3

In kindergarten, a small suction-cup hourglass. The suction cup has already decomposed, but the rest is fine.

Yes, I still have it.
Unlike the pony from MLP (Twilight Sparkle) I had to "borrow" forever to someone else from family because I was a boy and had no business having a "girl toy". I also stole it in kindergarten. It was small, hard plastic figure coated with some plush-like coating. It was worn off at bottom of the legs.

I still remember it, I didn't forget. Ironic. What I stole was stolen from me.

3

In my teens, I stole some CDs. This was pre-napster. I didn't have money to spend bit it's hard to deny the importance of music to people, especially in those formative years. I only took 2 maybe 3 total, because the guilt of taking it a CD each time wasn't worth it.

To give you an idea of how much guilt, I don't like people offering me food... Because it was theirs and now it's not. The fact they offered it means nothing. (Of course, the reverse isn't true)

3

I stole a snickers bar when I was like 5. My mom knew before I got home. She kicked my ass when I got home.

3

I read a YA book about someone methodically planning, then stealing a computerized chess board (a big deal in the 80's/early 90's). They recorded people saying different words for the audio message telling the clerk to lock themself in the BATHROOM, timed it out, etc. While this obviously wasn't me, it always stuck with me, and I somehow got secondhand guilt from it...

3

I accidentally took a screwdriver from Sears as a toddler. Been stealing screwdrivers every day since /s

3

The first thing was probably a set of earrings when I was a really little guy. I handed them to my mom when we got home and she was shocked at what a smooth swipe I pulled and we immediately went back to return them. So much for my thoughtful gift! Hahaha.

I also recall this thing at my very conserva-religious elementary school, where people set up a little market selling things as gifts and such. I was given some money to go buy presents for people, but nobody told me how to pay for anything, and I assumed it was like a big box store where you pay at the end.

So here I am like, what, 6 or 7 maybe? Going from table to table and just yoinking knick-knacks into my little bag. Nobody stopped me or otherwise corrected me. I still don't see anywhere to "check out"! I end up just leaving, basically.

Cut to me waiting in the lunch line and just getting straight up shaken down and accosted for cash by some authoritarian staff types. I just handed them the bag of spending money I'd been supplied with and I don't really remember what happened after that. Looking back though, those people were very mean to a confused child under 10, treating me like some deliberate criminal mastermind of petty-thievery lol.

2

I think it was something like $30 out of my brother's wallet. Boy did I get in trouble for that one. In my defense, he had just left it lying on top of his bed's side table! You can't expect a five year old to not steal $30 out of a wallet just lying on a side table in a room with a closed door!

I don't even know what I spent it on, thinking back. Probably those little styrofoam airplanes you could put together from the little store out in the country that was nearby.

2

I was like 7 and wanted some disks for a Bionicle, but I didn't want to hold onto it the entire time while looking at toys. So I put it in my pocket... and forgot about it.

1

There was a candy machine at my local grocery store's front lobby, and when I was around 8-9, my friend and I noticed that the top of the machine wasn't attached properly. We removed the top and filled our pockets with candy. Unfortunately, I told my brother about it who told my parents who made me go apologise to the store owner

The joy and boredom of growing up in a small town

1

Cannot recall the first thing, but I at least know my brother got a PSP the one and only time he ever stole money from my parents. Back when those were still relevant.

Edit:

Thinking about it, probably some time off my parents life from before I was even born. Doctors did variously tests and I was supposed to be the special needs child of the family. Worst I got was a case of high functioning autism. They definitely would have taken on the challenge of raising me, but I can almost guarantee they worried enough about me that I took some time off their lives.

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