'Every Day Is Frightening': Working For Walmart Amid Covid
It was a hot morning in Baton Rouge, La., the day that Peter Naughton woke up on the floor.
Sore, disoriented, hed already grasped what his mother was now telling him: Hed had another seizure. But he also grasped a larger truth: He needed to pull it together and somehow go to work.
A cashier and self-checkout host at the nearby Walmart, Mr. Naughton dreaded depleting his limited paid time off in the midst of a pandemic. His mother, for her part, insisted that her epileptic son, then 44, stay home and rest. The hours after a seizure were difficult enough. Toss in the stress of Covid-19 and a customer base that largely and often angrily rejected mask use, and a day at work seemed anything but recuperative.
In the end, Mr. Naughtons growing headache and general fogginess were intense enough that he conceded to his mothers wishes. He dialed once, twice, three times. No answer. Given the penalty for missing work without giving notice and the fear of risking his job during uncertain times he saw what he had to do. Reeling, he made the trip to the store and clocked in.
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https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/every-day-is-frightening-working-for-walmart-amid-covid/ar-AAORG8c