She didn't look "not bothered". Most people would prefer to be able to push their pushchair along the pavement rather than be forced out into the road. I don't think it's a class issue, more a question of ordinary politeness.Obviously Steven Taylor sees politeness as middle class hypocrisy
To the man skipping on the pavement on the corner of Lacon who wouldn't give up so a woman with a pushchair had to walk out into the road. Well done you. I hope you're really fit now and I don't for a moment hope you'll get entangled in the rope and fall flat on your face.
In particular, now the schools are open, they need libraries. Lots of children find working at home difficult for various reasons. And as a ratepayer, I'm not getting much of a service for something I'm paying for.
Ate they ever going to open? Shops, banks, the PO, charity shops with volunteers (often elderly) all opened. But no libraries. And I don't count the rather useless ordering system as opening. Is it just to save money?
Had two calls this week purporting to be from BT. When I said I was surprised because we were'nt on BT the voice said that was OK because their service was fully compatible with any system. I hadn't heard this one before. So I put the phone down and let him talk to the table for a bit while I went away
Traffic now dreadful around the round-about and no parking available for residents of the Crawthew/Worlingham/ Lacon area. Things have very sudden;y got a lot worse. Can't see that being stuck at the round-about nor driving round for ages looking for parking is helping air quality. Are the elderly like myself supposed to ride a bike?
We had two unasked for cards last week. One a Debenhams account, another a credit company. Took hours on the phone to sort it out and block them. Presumably someone hoped we'd use them and they could then join in