Jump to content

Recommended Posts

You have to go up two flights on stairs at Peckham Rye to reach a platform. There is no lift.


If you see a parent struggling with a pram, or anybody else struggling to carry something up/down the stairs, why not offer to help them? It's pretty amazing that so many people seem to have absolutely no interest in helping others out.

Agree with OP - and that includes station staff: if there are three of you standing around chatting while watching someone struggle up or down the stairs, feel free to pitch in (and yes, I did say make that comment to the staff in question at the time, too).

*Bob* Wrote:

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

> Usually I just pretend to be blind.

>

> The downside is that instead it's me who gets

> helped-up the steps - which means uncomfortable

> small talk.


Yes, but this can also facilitate an 'accidental fumble' when you go to link arms...amateur!

I've seen a few people helping carry in Peckham Rye - usually someone jumps in before i can offer.

Its the queues to the gates at peak times which are now bad - sometimes there's only a single gate..


Obviously should be an extra gate for hipsters - a hip one - maybe on the "I Love Peckham" theme. :)

Good on you JohnL, but anecdotal evidence suggests you're in the minority.


When a woman stands at the bottom of the stairs avec buggy and nobody offers to help... and then starts asking passers by who all apprently have dodgy knees/hips... and then starts carrying the bloody thing up the stairs on her own and still nobody steps in... your faith in humanity starts to take yet another nosedive.

I got past buggy days a couple of years ago after two kids but can safely say that Peckham Rye station was the one station where nine times out of ten someone offered to help me. I was really heartened. Victoria on the other hand - rush rush rush so less help offered.

mima08 Wrote:

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

> Agree with OP - and that includes station staff:

> if there are three of you standing around chatting

> while watching someone struggle up or down the

> stairs, feel free to pitch in (and yes, I did say

> make that comment to the staff in question at the

> time, too).


I avoid PR station at all costs and will even get a bus to herne hill/ Denmark hill and then a bus home because those stations have lifts.


It wasn't at Peckham Rye but at Herne Hill when the lifts were out that I was told by a member of the station staff they were not allowed to help for 'health and safety reasons'. I imagine it's the same at Peckham.


But sometimes PR station is unavoidable. I have found that mostly it is only when I hoist the pram up a couple of steps myself that someone helps. And I hate to jump on the anti-hipster bandwagon because it's a cliche but sadly they really do exist in a bubble. I don't think they even compute someone needs help. It makes me feel invisible in my neighbourhood.


.

It's not just hipster Central Peckham Rye, Lewes is just as bad!


I've even seen people there struggling with suitcases!!!


Joking aside, I always find it shocking when I see people struggling up stairs with buggies on their own...whilst I limp past, headphones blaring & intently rummaging in my bag like my life depended upon it.

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

    • I never said that. Saying I don’t like some of the rhetoric coming from the left doesn’t mean I approve of Farage et al saying that Afghans being brought here to protect their lives and thank them for their service means there is an incalculable threat to women.    Anything to score a cheap point. It’s pretty pathetic. 
    • To be fair we are as hosed as the majority of other countries post-Covid. The problem is Labour promised way too much and leant in on the we need change and we will deliver it and it was clear to anyone with a modicum of sense that no change was going to happen quickly and actually taking the reigns may have been a massive poison- chalice. As Labour are finding to their cost - there are no easy answers.  A wealth tax seems straightforward but look how Labour have U-turned on elements of non-dom - why? Because the super rich started leaving the country in their droves and whilst we all may want them to pay more tax they already pay a big chunk already and the government saw there was a problem.
    • You don’t think there are right-wing politicians fanning this with rhetoric? Really? 
    • No party is willing to tackle the "elephant in the room" which is the national debt. It is costing the country circa £100 Billion ANNUALLY to service that debt. That is more than the defence and education budgets. That debt burden has to be reduced which in reality means cost cuts. That means cutting back state pensions, index-linked pensions for civil servants and others such as police, NHS etc. It means cutting back on universal credit and cutting the number of people who are claiming benefits.  
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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