Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Alan Medic Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Alan Medic Wrote:

> --------------------------------------------------

> -----

> > Why was he running on the road and why do you

> > think he flipped a finger?

>

> You've speculated about the first bit liz but not

> the second. That's a crucial part of the story I'd

> have thought.


Upon rereading, there does seem to be a bit missing, doesn't there? There's some right barstewards around, but flipping the finger just because someone is 'in the drop-off bay for 30 seconds' seems a little unbelievable.

numbers Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Can see why the OP was angry and wanted to vent

> but this short, balding, bespectacled man with

> poor taste in ill-fitting lycra has already shamed

> himself by sticking his fingers up at a mother in

> front of her young children. There's never an

> excuse for that disgusting behaviour.

>

> sounds like jogging in London isn't for him

> really.



Won't someone think of the children? Anyone?

I am said partner on lizards login... I was merely dropping lizard at the station, innocent children in the car, lycra clad gentleman running in the drop off zone, I pulled into it whilst managing to avoid him, and received a flipped finger. Very unnecessary, we were not on the pavement, nor was he... Exaggerated response on his part, lizard defending his family in a heroic and admirable manner, really no indication for threatening behaviour

I would see a random stranger sticking their fingers up at me as an unwelcome, aggressive and threatening gesture. I would probalby feel quite vulnerable if I had young children in my care as I would want to avoid confrontation and so feel unable to retaliate.


clearly some on here think its an acceptable way to behave but I don't think it sets a good example particularly to young uns.

Two adults 'threatened' by what sounds like unfit old jogger flipping the finger, and offence increased as a 10 month old in the car who would have no idea what happened. Hilarious. 'I pulled into it whilst managing to avoid him' not exactly the same as the OP 'waiting for thirty seconds'. Clearly he has taken offence by you driving too near him. Not sure what the 'heroic amd admirable defence' was either

LadyDeliah Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Flipping your middle ginger is aggressive? Where

> the hell have you guys lived? Trumpton?

>

> On a scale of 1 to 10, where 10 is hacking someone

> up with a machete and 1 is giving a hard frown,

> I'd put flipping a finger at 0.5.


You can make the scale as extreme as you like if your objective is to mock the OP, but if the context is dropping someone off at North Dulwich station in the morning I think most people could understand that it seemed aggressive to them!

Basically then you just avoided hitting lycra man when pulling into an area where he shouldn't have been jogging. He probably got a shock and reacted without thinking of the innocent children but how lucky he was not to have been hit by a car. That it was his fault obviously did not compute but next time he may be more careful.

LadyDeliah Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Flipping your middle ginger is aggressive? Where

> the hell have you guys lived? Trumpton?

>

> On a scale of 1 to 10, where 10 is hacking someone

> up with a machete and 1 is giving a hard frown,

> I'd put flipping a finger at 0.5.


haha that made me laugh out loud LadyD, good one. well, perhaps I do need to recalibrate my acts of aggression scale!


You didn't grow up in the 1980s South Bronx by any chance? ;-)

Thumbing your nose is the 0.1 then.


LadyDeliah Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Flipping your middle ginger is aggressive? Where

> the hell have you guys lived? Trumpton?

>

> On a scale of 1 to 10, where 10 is hacking someone

> up with a machete and 1 is giving a hard frown,

> I'd put flipping a finger at 0.5.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • £30-40 for M&S Christmas food for two seems very low! And only £60 for food and drink for 8-10 people?  We have had M&S food at Christmas in the past, and it came to a lot more than that. I suppose it depends exactly what you are buying. We left it late to book a Christmas Day meal out last year, so there weren't many options left.  The Cherry Tree menu looked very nice. That was our first mistake. We also overlooked the fact that it was a Young's pub, with all that implies about the food. That was our second mistake. We don't have shedloads of money. We  took the view that we deserved a nice meal  out after working bloody hard all year. So it was doubly disappointing to basically waste a lot of money which could have been very much better  spent elsewhere.
    • No sweetheart. It is a fantastic sermon which should be shared. It is a rights-based sermon which received a standing ovation - if you can be bothered to get to the end.
    • Welcome back. What have voting intentions got to do with this thread? And much as you may hate the present incarnation of so-called Labour, as do I,  I don't think it is true that they have "not done a single positive thing for working class people", is it? And how exactly are you defining "working class people", anyway? 
    • I can’t bear the media “is this racist comment racist” angle taken to reporting it. I feel like she’s a useful out rider for Farage to test how far they can take their rhetoric - it’s not the first time she’s said things that cross over the line. Overt racism is becoming far more commonplace and it’s deeply concerning.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...