Lori Stork‘s wrist injury is just the latest in a growing list of her injuries sustained during work related activity that some may label as extreme. Before going to the office for her third annual employee evaluation, Stork said she doesn’t plan to reign in her impetuous ways, no matter who asks her to.
After the infamous pineapple injury, Stork says her supervisor, assistant manager Chad Day pulled her to the side to tell her to think about the big picture. That got under her skin, as the three time ‘High Five’ award winner insists that’s all she thinks about.
“When you make plans for your life, that’s when life makes plans for you,” she said, according to the Walmart World. She downplayed the significance of jamming a knuckle on her right ring-finger calling it a “bump in the road.”
“You just figure out (how to make things work),” she said. “I’m just never going to stop being me … I’m just prone to this kind of stuff. I don’t know why. I wish I wasn’t.”
A short list of Stork’s injuries includes the finger; the wrist; the toe she fractured after dropping a cantaloupe; another finger which she cut while opening a box; the shoulder she bruised in 2012 while sweeping; and the back injury she sustained break dancing after the power went out. To be fair, if she hadn’t gotten hurt break dancing, she’d likely have kept pursuing a stripper career, and may have never had the time to learn how to juggle fruit.
After the infamous pineapple injury, Stork says her supervisor, assistant manager Chad Day pulled her to the side to tell her to think about the big picture. That got under her skin, as the three time ‘High Five’ award winner insists that’s all she thinks about.
“When you make plans for your life, that’s when life makes plans for you,” she said, according to the Walmart World. She downplayed the significance of jamming a knuckle on her right ring-finger calling it a “bump in the road.”
“You just figure out (how to make things work),” she said. “I’m just never going to stop being me … I’m just prone to this kind of stuff. I don’t know why. I wish I wasn’t.”
A short list of Stork’s injuries includes the finger; the wrist; the toe she fractured after dropping a cantaloupe; another finger which she cut while opening a box; the shoulder she bruised in 2012 while sweeping; and the back injury she sustained break dancing after the power went out. To be fair, if she hadn’t gotten hurt break dancing, she’d likely have kept pursuing a stripper career, and may have never had the time to learn how to juggle fruit.