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Rhetorical questions are no fun!So is a reversal in your future? [emoji14]
It's a joke! And rhetorical!
And yes
Rhetorical questions are no fun!So is a reversal in your future? [emoji14]
It's a joke! And rhetorical!
When I was approaching the date when I'd get mine done back in 2001 I didn't mention it to anybody at work because I didn't want to have to put up with what I was sure would be a steady stream of bad jokes. I just told my immediate supervisor that I had a doctor's appointment and needed to take Friday off and left it at that, figuring I'd be in good shape by the time I returned on Monday. I thought I had it made, but I wasn't at work for 10 minutes that Monday before the President of the company approached my desk, said "Good morning", and followed that up with, "Listen, it's none of my business, and you don't have to tell me if you don't want to, but did you get snipped on Friday?" At that point we had been working together for about 14 years, and in addition to our supervisor/employee work relationship we were friends--hell, we had gone golfing with a couple of other co-workers almost every Saturday for two to three years--so his question was not at all out-of-line and I told him the truth. To my surprise he replied not with a joke, but by telling me about when he got "snipped" years earlier. As word spread throughout the facility I replayed this experience over the next three or four days with several other co-workers who were also friends, and was surprised by the number of guys I worked with who had been neutered. I did hear a few good-natured jokes, but they were from the co-workers who hadn't experienced the procedure.So is a vasectomy.
I don't think that's a conversation you would need or want to have with a female co-worker anyway, unless she was in a supervisory capacity and needed to be informed of the days you wouldn't be at work. My wife had worked for that company for about five years before I started working there, so everyone already knew I was married and unavailable.I didn't tell anyone at work either. Considering most of them were/are females, I didn't want to give any false signals.
Probably right about that Alex. These days, a "Hi how are you?" or a "Good morning" is all you are allowed to say these days.I don't think that's a conversation you would need or want to have with a female co-worker anyway, unless she was in a supervisory capacity and needed to be informed of the days you wouldn't be at work. My wife had worked for that company for about five years before I started working there, so everyone already knew I was married and unavailable.
No matter if it’s an empty restaurant, a sparsely populated movie theater or wide open beach...
The person(s) arriving just after you do will sit directly behind or right next to you.
Or the converse of it, when there's a row of parking spaces and people refuse to park close together so that they're spread out across multiple spaces to the point where there are five cars in a space meant to hold nine.
No matter if it’s an empty restaurant, a sparsely populated movie theater or wide open beach...
The person(s) arriving just after you do will sit directly behind or right next to you.
I've seen that in parking areas without lines to designate the spots, which is rare around here, but probably more common where you are. But when there's lines, there's the rare oh-my-car-is-so-important guy that parks considerably over the lines. I've even seen a few parked in 4 spaces by the oh-my-car-is-so-important -and-I'm-so-important types.
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Always fun at relatives kids sports events when they do this THEN start shouting as loud as possible!
Being loud and disruptive seems to be a given in my experience! I used to try and ignore these types of folks, but now I just relocate once it becomes evident it’s going to be annoying.
Good for this driver. How are you expected to open a door properly in these narrow parking spaces. Not all drivers are young, thin and agile. What if you need to remove a childs seat from the back or whatever. Or the driver or passenger may have a disability and use a walking aid. Blame the folk trying to cram as many cars into a parking lot as possible. I don't have a problem with these drivers, personally.
I'm sure this driver thought he/she was "protecting" his/her hunk-o-junk by parking it that way, but around here he/she would do just as well by painting a big red "bull's eye" on it because it would definitely become the target of angered other drivers.I've seen that in parking areas without lines to designate the spots, which is rare around here, but probably more common where you are. But when there's lines, there's the rare oh-my-car-is-so-important guy that parks considerably over the lines. I've even seen a few parked in 4 spaces by the oh-my-car-is-so-important-and-I'm-so-important types.
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I frequently see some rather spry & fit looking people emerging from cars parked in the handicapped spaces. A special place in hell awaits able bodied people who use these.
Wait, are you actually applauding the driver of this white car (I don't see any sarcasm emoticons)? To me, that is an epitome of lack of consideration.