A Conversation for Ask h2g2
Petty Hates
Beatrice Posted Apr 18, 2007
Ooooh, seconding the misuse of blue badge spaces! I have a specially reserved cold stare for those who park in the disabled spaces outside a fast food restaurant "because they're going to sit in the car and eat their meal"
Or when challenged, give the response "but I'll move if someone comes along...."
Petty Hates
eloisa Posted Apr 18, 2007
I fancy a pad of post-it notes and a nice bright pen to jot down your thoughts is a helpmeet in times of stress. You don't even need to be creative, a simple 'nice parking, @sshole' gets the message across.
Petty Hates
Secretly Not Here Any More Posted Apr 18, 2007
I'll add some support to the misuse of Disabled spaces. I've been known to get my mother to park elsewhere when my dad (who's blue badge it is) isn't in the car despite her assertion that "I've got one in the car so I can use it"
Petty Hates
murraygray Posted Apr 18, 2007
I am not saying i disagree with the blue badge thing but it is not a petty hate. I would say that it is fully justified to be annoying.
Petty Hates
The Groob Posted Apr 18, 2007
Please do print those leaflets Dragon! I would like to print ones out that say "Where on the parking space does it say 'disabled drivers or people in a hurry?'"
Petty Hates
paracelsus Posted Apr 18, 2007
I hate queue-jumpers as much as I hate the people who allow them to push in and then moan about them afterwards'
Also - I hate people who can't put tops back on toothpaste etc, who can't leave a sink as they found it, and cretins who dump their old junk (tvs, fridges etc)in public places.
Petty Hates
Titania (gone for lunch) Posted Apr 19, 2007
Newbie bus drivers that lack plain common sense.
After getting fed up with commuter train problems (too big a hate to be described here) I decided to take a bus instead, and then switch to the tube.
So... there are three lanes in each direction on the motorway.
The outer lane is sometimes 'for buses only' and sometimes not.
As a bus driver, the smartest you can do is use the outer lane in those sections when it's marked 'for buses only' and the middle lane when it's not.
See - the trouble is that the outer lane leads to exits off the motorway - and some of the exits have traffic lights shortly after.
Which means that there will very often be a queue of cars waiting to get off the motorway in the outer lane, in those sections that are not marked 'buses only'.
Experienced bus drivers will switch between outer and middle lane.
A newbie bus driver will stick to the outer lane no matter what.
*rolls eyes*
Not even being bypassed by more experienced bus drivers in the middle lane again and again and again will cause him to change his mind and switch lane (sorry guys, but I've only experienced this 'stubborn mule' behaviour in male drivers but never female drivers so far, after around two years of commuting this way).
Biggest time difference in arrival at work so far caused by this kind of behaviour: 15 minutes...
Petty Hates
You can call me TC Posted Apr 19, 2007
In Germany, I've never seen a disabled space with a car in it at all - with or without disabled badge. In fact, I once got cross because the last free space in front of the post office was taken up by a disabled person's vehicle. Needless to say the disabled space was free.
Petty Hates
HonestIago Posted Apr 19, 2007
The bus stop at Playing Place in Cornwall. It's just of the main road between Falmouth and Truro, on the towards Falmouth side. It is also between 2 roundabouts.
This all means that in the morning the bus into Truro has to go around the first roundabout, all the way around the second, turn off into the bus stop, pull out, go all the way around the first roundabout again, and then around the second to go to Truro.
On the way back in the evening the road is so busy that once in the bus stop, the bus will be waiting for ages to get out. It annoys me a lot
Petty Hates
Yael Smith Posted Apr 20, 2007
Kids and young, fully able people, who take the disabled space on the bus. Most times they would resentfully make room for me and my double buggy, or a wheelchair. But they won't let LOD (little old dears) sit there most of the time, and then the poor things have to stumble further up the bus, and some of them have the cheek not to let prams or wheelchairs in, either.
Petty Hates
eloisa Posted Apr 20, 2007
Helplines! Most of them could be charged under the trades descriptions act.
Petty Hates
paracelsus Posted Apr 20, 2007
A very 'popular' hate is having to listen to endless options on the 'phone. You select the one you want only to find another list of options to choose from, and so it goes on......
Whatever benefit gets passed on to the customer, by using technology instead of people, is easily eaten up by the charges for the increased duration of the calls. We lose again.
Petty Hates
winnoch2 - Impostair Syndromair Extraordinaire Posted Apr 20, 2007
Well i had a bad experience there pounding the streets 'training' to be a cold calling marketing salesman, selling big piles of poo
At least i got see most of the place which seemed quite nice really, even the 'private shop' that we were trying to sell cheap MP3 players to
(I was offered and rejected the job btw)
So what's your reason for disliking the place?
Petty Hates
swl Posted Apr 21, 2007
There has to be a reason? I thought this was petty hates?
Getting stuck in traffic there for 45 minutes yesterday when I was in a rush for a ferry made me damn the place in perpetuity I'm afraid. Harsh maybe, but there you go
Petty Hates
You can call me TC Posted Apr 21, 2007
Another phone one: Phoning large and reknowned furniture retailers and getting five minutes of music at my expense. Hell, if they're not there, why can't they just let it ring or sound the "engaged" tone so it doesn't cost me anything. Actually, as I'm ringing from work and we're a supplier, it's not really my money. But they're not to know whether the caller is a customer or a supplier, are they? I certainly wouldn't buy my furniture from a shop that charges me extra to make a call there.
And sometimes I phone the general number, which should be a switchboard, and get "engaged". How can a switchboard be engaged?
Petty Hates
winnoch2 - Impostair Syndromair Extraordinaire Posted Apr 21, 2007
When all the lines are busy? Switchboards don't have unlimited lines you know. Even the biggest most expensive switchboards in the world have a finite number of available lines!
Key: Complain about this post
Petty Hates
- 3321: Beatrice (Apr 18, 2007)
- 3322: eloisa (Apr 18, 2007)
- 3323: murraygray (Apr 18, 2007)
- 3324: Secretly Not Here Any More (Apr 18, 2007)
- 3325: murraygray (Apr 18, 2007)
- 3326: Yael Smith (Apr 18, 2007)
- 3327: The Groob (Apr 18, 2007)
- 3328: paracelsus (Apr 18, 2007)
- 3329: Titania (gone for lunch) (Apr 19, 2007)
- 3330: You can call me TC (Apr 19, 2007)
- 3331: HonestIago (Apr 19, 2007)
- 3332: Yael Smith (Apr 20, 2007)
- 3333: eloisa (Apr 20, 2007)
- 3334: paracelsus (Apr 20, 2007)
- 3335: Petuniapetals (Apr 20, 2007)
- 3336: swl (Apr 20, 2007)
- 3337: winnoch2 - Impostair Syndromair Extraordinaire (Apr 20, 2007)
- 3338: swl (Apr 21, 2007)
- 3339: You can call me TC (Apr 21, 2007)
- 3340: winnoch2 - Impostair Syndromair Extraordinaire (Apr 21, 2007)
More Conversations for Ask h2g2
Write an Entry
"The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a wholly remarkable book. It has been compiled and recompiled many times and under many different editorships. It contains contributions from countless numbers of travellers and researchers."