Mea Culpa: I am an outside man.
Mea Culpa: I am an outside man....
Mostly on Dublin and Regional buses - I am 6'3" - And in so many bus seats my legs dont fit - so I have to sit splayed legged - or twisted out into the aisle. If I am in the inner seat - my legs are encroaching into the other persons space and neither have space. So i sit in the aisle - and anyone can go into the inner seat if they choose.
I'd agree. The glares I've had from some people for having the audacity to sit in the aisle seat, rather than against the window. Ask me to move so you can sit there, I'm not going to bite. I just don't like having my knees up around my ears.
When a car is parked over the white line in a car park, taking up two spaces, do you deliberately park right beside their drivers door so they can't get in? (I doA person who sits in one seat and leaves her handbag and/or second bag in the seat beside her. When I board a DART at rush hour, I sometimes make a point of choosing to sit beside her (and in my experience it's generally a 'her') and ask her to move her bag. Which she does with an air of disdain. Very very petty on my part, but if not me, then someone else will be siting in that seat before too long.
I am insulted by these comments (on behalf of fat people, Outer Men etc), even though they dont apply to me (of course).
Such inflammatory language is likely to cause untold pain and psychological damage to fat people, outer men et al. After all they are merely victims of circumstance and dont deserve to be ridiculed in such fashion.
One of my best friends is fat and he is distraught at the ridicule which he has faced following reading the earlier comments.
I think we need an Independent Inquiry (preferably headed by a Supreme Court Judge) followed by a Compensation Commission to determine what damages should be paid to those impacted by such inappropriate language. After all 1 in 10 people are fat (well I heard somebody referring to 1 in 10 people on the radio yesterday), so the other 9 of us need to cop on.
When a car is parked over the white line in a car park, taking up two spaces, do you deliberately park right beside their drivers door so they can't get in? (I do)
You shouldn't do this, I often have to park my car over a white line in car parks due to the way other cars are parked. If the incorrectly parked car moves off before me, it could appear that my parking was bad but it's not the case. Consider this before you box in another car.
You shouldn't do this, I often have to park my car over a white line in car parks due to the way other cars are parked. If the incorrectly parked car moves off before me, it could appear that my parking was bad but it's not the case. Consider this before you box in another car.
It's worth the odd bit of collateral damage.
Seriously though, it's usually obvious when someone has parked that way on purpose.
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