Self Adhesive Stickers Always Remind Us Of Things To Forget
Feb 02, 2022| I usually buy some bread in the bakery for breakfast. Generally speaking, fresh bread is always better than stale bread. Many times I didn't pay attention to the date written on the self-adhesive sticker, but when I was late a few days ago for a bread that was obviously stale, I decided to buy it according to the date every time.
So today I am very careful. The first thing to pick up the bread is to confirm the date on the sticker, but when I saw it, I was stunned. The sticker only monotonously said October 25, and there was nothing more.
It's June 24th, but why is it tomorrow?
I asked the clerk why it said tomorrow's date? The clerk explained that this is a valid eating date. The bread is made today. I see. It seems that I was preconceived and mistook it for the production date. If today's production date is tomorrow, it would be too strange. But on second thought, I don't blame my misunderstanding, because it only says the date and doesn't explain anything, so the right of interpretation is always beneficial to the store.
What if I pick up this bread tomorrow? The store will tell me that it is the bread baked that day, and I still buy the "fresh bread" baked that day. What if I buy this bread the day after tomorrow?
The store told me that the bread was made yesterday and the consumption period is one day. It doesn't matter to eat it today.
In fact, the bread I ate was one day overdue! It can be seen that the "wonderful use" of this self-adhesive sticker is really very powerful. But this is actually cheating consumers.
I hope businesses can make good use of self-adhesive stickers and bar code labels, and can not use them to deceive consumers.

