Is it still a sexist relic if you hold doors open for everybody?
― Thomas, Thursday, 28 August 2008 08:19 (seventeen years ago)
I hold doors open for everybody, but I've never been accused of being sexist for holding a door open for a woman, ever - does this actually happen or is it just an "political correctness gone mad" myth?
― Colonel Poo, Thursday, 28 August 2008 08:31 (seventeen years ago)
This never actually happens.
― Matt DC, Thursday, 28 August 2008 08:32 (seventeen years ago)
people who don't hold doors are assholes
― J0rdan S., Thursday, 28 August 2008 08:32 (seventeen years ago)
man idk i try and hold the door whenever i can, i think its pretty insulting when someone lets a door swing into your face instead of just holding it back as they walk through
― J0rdan S., Thursday, 28 August 2008 08:33 (seventeen years ago)
Holding doors for anyone is nice, fullstop.
― Masonic Boom, Thursday, 28 August 2008 08:38 (seventeen years ago)
we've discussed this so so many times but yes holding doors open for anyone is just good for everyone.
― Ste, Thursday, 28 August 2008 08:39 (seventeen years ago)
Best just let the door smash into their face on the off chance that they find the door being held open is a sign of patriarchal oppression.
― Billy Dods, Thursday, 28 August 2008 08:44 (seventeen years ago)
how about giving up yer seat on public transport for the ladiez?
― velko, Thursday, 28 August 2008 08:45 (seventeen years ago)
I swear this "women don't like doors being held for them" thing was just invented by insecure men who wanted to find an excuse to feel threatened by feminism.
― Masonic Boom, Thursday, 28 August 2008 08:45 (seventeen years ago)
Oh no, that just won't do. In fact if there's a pregnant woman sitting down or an OAP, best to ask them to stand. They will feel empowered by doing so and will feel happier that they've eased the burden on an obviously hard working alpha male.
― Billy Dods, Thursday, 28 August 2008 08:52 (seventeen years ago)
In fact as an act of public spiritedness and out of concern for their health, suggest that they walk rather than using public transport.
― Billy Dods, Thursday, 28 August 2008 08:54 (seventeen years ago)
When the door is held open for you, not interrupting your conversation to say 'thank you' or even acknowledge the holder - classic or unbelievably fucking annoying?
― Ismael Klata, Thursday, 28 August 2008 09:37 (seventeen years ago)
(this happens to me a lot)
am i the only guy who sometimes gets almost annoyed by peoples 'over-politeness' e.g. guy ahead of you or arriving at same time as you actually lets you pass first. i get this with motorists too tho, just don't want to seem like a mad man.
― blueski, Thursday, 28 August 2008 09:38 (seventeen years ago)
Judging distances is important. If you hold the door open for someone who is too far away from the door, they have to speed up their walk, while you stand there like a lemon waiting for them to reach you - bad news all round.
― Tom D., Thursday, 28 August 2008 09:41 (seventeen years ago)
don't think its overpolite to let somebody go first if you arrive at the same time. however, more than one "no,you" is criminal.
― Thomas, Thursday, 28 August 2008 09:42 (seventeen years ago)
haha i love being an onlooker to that whole distance problem, always the person starts jogging and i know they're thinking "OH FOR FUCKS SAKE"
in our company now all our doors are left open, and close automatically if the fire alarm sounds. So nobody needs to be polite anymore here, hurrah!
― Ste, Thursday, 28 August 2008 09:45 (seventeen years ago)
Living in London, one that particularly gets my goat is people thanking drivers for stopping at pedestrian crossings - they're supposed to stop, don't thank them for obeying the law, don't encourage the bastards!
― Tom D., Thursday, 28 August 2008 09:49 (seventeen years ago)
At crossings i feel despair when a driver feels the need to slam on their brakes to almost cause the car behind him to crash for me. i wave 'thanks' anyway
― Ste, Thursday, 28 August 2008 09:51 (seventeen years ago)
i always like to thank cars for stopping at pedestrian crossings, makes me feel superior somehow.
― Ludo, Thursday, 28 August 2008 09:52 (seventeen years ago)
actually the wave is to say "look I'm still here in the middle of the road. don't go until I've stopped waving"
― Thomas, Thursday, 28 August 2008 09:53 (seventeen years ago)
Never thank them, and walk as slowly and nonchalantly as possible
― Tom D., Thursday, 28 August 2008 09:54 (seventeen years ago)
I wouldn't normally see that being female should get me a seat on the bus or anything else in particular but this week I have done my knee in so I was thinking bad thoughts about the guy who took the first seat to be freed ahead of me and two other women standing (all of us got on before him). Not as many bad thoughts as I was thinking about the guy I ended up propped up next to, who was reading "Teach Yourself Christianity". Err, no real reason for the bad thoughts, just WTF at book choice.
I like "no, you"-ing as I am a terrible faffer and permanently confused and it gives me precious extra seconds to work out what the hell I'm supposed to be doing, even if it's as simple as "walk forward. show ticket. sit."
(xpost, I thank cyclists for stopping because hardly any of them do and I'd like more of them to, but I don't imagine me speaking inaudibly to them is much incentive)
― a passing spacecadet, Thursday, 28 August 2008 09:54 (seventeen years ago)
my friend always makes me laugh when he's driving and somebody gives him the right of way, he makes the fake hand-gun sign with his fingers and winks at them.
― Ste, Thursday, 28 August 2008 09:54 (seventeen years ago)
at zebra crossings do you a) wait politely at the side of the road hoping someone will stop for you, or b) step out and risk it on the basis that they probably don't want to hit you?
― Thomas, Thursday, 28 August 2008 09:56 (seventeen years ago)
b) of course
― Tom D., Thursday, 28 August 2008 09:57 (seventeen years ago)
xxpost likewise the you-da-man point is a great way of paying tribute in situations like that
― G00blar, Thursday, 28 August 2008 09:57 (seventeen years ago)
yeah b
If a), you deserve a slap
wait patiently, as most often in our village they're speeding through not looking anyway.
― Ste, Thursday, 28 August 2008 09:57 (seventeen years ago)
I imagine it's mostly tourists who do this in London, so they're exempt from criticism
― Tom D., Thursday, 28 August 2008 09:58 (seventeen years ago)
i remember my first visit to london as a teenager, my dad lived there and i went to visit him, and i crossed the road by a)not using a crossing, and b)weaving in and out of moving cars. My dad went crazy telling me off and said "you're in the city now son!"
― Ste, Thursday, 28 August 2008 10:00 (seventeen years ago)
and then i threw a tin of beans at a fleeing criminal
― Ste, Thursday, 28 August 2008 10:02 (seventeen years ago)
still do a) all the time wherever possible, crossings are for no-imagination lamers. b)... maybe not.
apparently no-one in france does the friendly "thanks for waitin" driver wave.
― ledge, Thursday, 28 August 2008 10:02 (seventeen years ago)
Hull has the world's most courteous drivers. So here, standing by the side of the crossing works fine.
any other cities I tend to employ the step and hope model, usually followed by weaving in and out of moving cars.
― Thomas, Thursday, 28 August 2008 10:04 (seventeen years ago)
i think my sincere 'thanks to driver for letting me pass' gesture comes off too much like 'yeah that's right bitch you will wait' but no matter.
― blueski, Thursday, 28 August 2008 10:06 (seventeen years ago)
Are they're different rules for pedestrian crossings in different countries/ places though? At a zebra crossing, which are much more common in London than anywhere else in the UK as far as I can tell, the driver HAS to stop, so thanking them for doing so is pointless, you may as well thank them for stopping at a red light
― Tom D., Thursday, 28 August 2008 10:06 (seventeen years ago)
My favourite comedy tube rudeness moment: I was on a tube carriage in Putney one morning which had one empty seat. The doors opened and a middle-aged guy in a shirt and tie practically sprinted in and took it. A couple of seconds later a gasping pregnant woman struggled up the step and waddled over to stand by the pole. About half the carriage spontaneously jumped up to offer her their seat - obviously not including the guy who'd just entered
― Ismael Klata, Thursday, 28 August 2008 10:08 (seventeen years ago)
People not thanking me for holding a door open for them is about my number 1 bugbear. Makes me want to kill.
― Scik Mouthy, Thursday, 28 August 2008 10:09 (seventeen years ago)
I do accidentally thank people at red lights sometimes!
― Thomas, Thursday, 28 August 2008 10:09 (seventeen years ago)
But yeah, I'll hold a door open for a woman, a man, a black, a gay, a Jew, an asian, a muslim, a Frenchman, whatever. But never a student.
― Scik Mouthy, Thursday, 28 August 2008 10:10 (seventeen years ago)
But, even though they might be legally obliged to stop, they have stopped for you and I think that's worthy of a least a nod of thanks.
― Thomas, Thursday, 28 August 2008 10:11 (seventeen years ago)
No it isn't. I have decided not to kill you, please thank me.
― Tom D., Thursday, 28 August 2008 10:11 (seventeen years ago)
Pressing the button for the green man *before* looking to see if there's any traffic coming. Grrr.
― Ismael Klata, Thursday, 28 August 2008 10:13 (seventeen years ago)
Tom it's not like a huge hand gesture, just a slight raise of the hand a few inches up, and then gently down. if you're in a good mood perhaps even a little eye contact and a friendly nod, nothing drastic tho don't scare them off.
i just know that if i don't thank them they'll be all "OH DON'T MENTION IT MUTHAFUCKER" in their cars.
― Ste, Thursday, 28 August 2008 10:15 (seventeen years ago)
But why do it at all though?
― Tom D., Thursday, 28 August 2008 10:17 (seventeen years ago)
because it provides a smidgen of human contact in this otherwise desolate world?
― Thomas, Thursday, 28 August 2008 10:18 (seventeen years ago)
I gesture thanks to drivers who let me pass at bits of road that give priority to drivers in my direction (which there are a few of in my area). I guess technically they ought to be stopping, but it seems like a small effort for a bit of pleasantness.
― Scik Mouthy, Thursday, 28 August 2008 10:19 (seventeen years ago)
i guess its just something i've done since a kid, i first came across these crossing in Isle Of Man, me and my sister thought it was magical. we came from a quiet countryside dwelling where they didn't exist. Now i live in a much busier village that has two of the crossings, everyone else i see does it too so i don't feel like society's misfit phew.
― Ste, Thursday, 28 August 2008 10:20 (seventeen years ago)
That'll teach them not to be white supremacists (xp).
― Marcello Carlin, Thursday, 28 August 2008 11:00 (seventeen years ago)
Don't like people on buses playing the sympathy card and standing there like a cigar store Indian expecting me to read their minds. You probably had to stand on trams in Budapest for 80 years, deal with it.
oh that's kind of annoying too but the little old lady i was talking about wasn't doing this at all
― lex pretend, Thursday, 28 August 2008 11:01 (seventeen years ago)
i know you had to make the point that the guy was being a dick but you could've offered the woman your seat (unless you were actually far away) no?
― blueski, Thursday, 28 August 2008 11:04 (seventeen years ago)
-- Tom D., Thursday, 28 August 2008 09:49 (1 hour ago) Link
stopping at zebra crossings is becoming more and more of a rarity. i don't thank people for stopping, but i do give a 'wanker' gesture to those drivers who don't stop.
― stevie, Thursday, 28 August 2008 11:05 (seventeen years ago)
i was standing too steve! xp
― lex pretend, Thursday, 28 August 2008 11:05 (seventeen years ago)
Yeah, if you're talking about someone who's obviously in need of a seat then I've never really seen people steadfastly sitting there and refusing to give up their seats on the bus.
Total bad manners: holding the bus up for ten minutes because you want the driver to let you out the front even though the exit door is clearly marked EXIT and is wide open because you're obviously the fucking Queen of the Netherlands and deserve special treatment.
― Marcello Carlin, Thursday, 28 August 2008 11:06 (seventeen years ago)
lex i missed that detail my bad
― blueski, Thursday, 28 August 2008 11:07 (seventeen years ago)
This is my whole point, I don't thank people because I don't like to encourage drivers in the (increasingly popular it seems) belief that stopping is optional and that I should be obliged to them for doing so and that, basically, a pedestrian crossing is nothing more than just some pretty stripes on the road
― Tom D., Thursday, 28 August 2008 11:12 (seventeen years ago)
It isn't?
― Marcello Carlin, Thursday, 28 August 2008 11:12 (seventeen years ago)
News just in: pedestrian crossings in London now "just some pretty stripes on the road." Boris had a meeting about it this morning.
― Marcello Carlin, Thursday, 28 August 2008 11:13 (seventeen years ago)
So I'm doing it for everyone - the disposessed, the voiceless, the downtrodden!!!!!
― Tom D., Thursday, 28 August 2008 11:15 (seventeen years ago)
i take it plans to pedestrianise Oxford St completely are off now then
― blueski, Thursday, 28 August 2008 11:17 (seventeen years ago)
Yes. They're now considering demolishing Oxford Street to make way for the 2012 Olympics Real Tennis complex.
― Marcello Carlin, Thursday, 28 August 2008 12:11 (seventeen years ago)
OK, when was the last time that anyone *ever* got upset at you for offering them a seat?
Seriously.
The only time people ever refuse, it's along the lines of "Oh no, dearie, I'm just getting off at the next stop."
What is this myth that people will get angry at you for doing nice things for them? I think it's just justification of selfishness.
(That said, I would probably knife a pregnant 80 year old on crutches to get a seat on the morning Thameslink.)
― Masonic Boom, Thursday, 28 August 2008 12:27 (seventeen years ago)
You fruity Europeans. Women like that shit. They also like when you let them order first. If you don't, they think you're some fruitcake.
― burt_stanton, Thursday, 28 August 2008 12:27 (seventeen years ago)
xp kate see above for sweary old man story
― Thomas, Thursday, 28 August 2008 12:45 (seventeen years ago)
What if you don't like fruitcake?
― Marcello Carlin, Thursday, 28 August 2008 13:00 (seventeen years ago)
What is this myth that people will get angry at you for doing nice things for them
i only seen it once, a guy was told in a very shirty manner "i'm quite capable" when he held a door open for a gurl. This was in school though lol.
― Ste, Thursday, 28 August 2008 13:00 (seventeen years ago)
fear of some hypothetical old person/woman mistaken for being pregnant* snapping at you is a really lame excuse not to proffer your seat to anyone who you think might need/appreciate it. they'll look like the dick in that situation, you know?
*also i think their annoyance would be kinda justified, no one wants to be thought of as old or fat, though actually making a big deal of it in this situation is stupid
― lex pretend, Thursday, 28 August 2008 13:11 (seventeen years ago)
I refused to give a pregnant 15 year old my seat on the bus once, because I thought she was taking the piss about being pregnant
― MPx4A, Thursday, 28 August 2008 13:26 (seventeen years ago)
I later realised she was pregnant but thought I might as well lie in the Dick bed that I had made for myself
― MPx4A, Thursday, 28 August 2008 13:27 (seventeen years ago)
A woman at work (in her 50s) told us a story about how someone offered her a seat for the first time a few weeks ago. She was really quite annoyed, and told them that she was "Fine standing up, thank you."
So its not entirely mythical.
― AlanSmithee, Thursday, 28 August 2008 13:27 (seventeen years ago)
Testing kits should be made mandatory on all buses for spot checks.
― Marcello Carlin, Thursday, 28 August 2008 13:28 (seventeen years ago)
I later realised she was pregnant
when a child popped out?
― ken c, Thursday, 28 August 2008 13:29 (seventeen years ago)
xpost
shit man that guy must've gone straight home and killed himself
― MPx4A, Thursday, 28 August 2008 13:29 (seventeen years ago)
did she say why she was annoyed ?
― Ste, Thursday, 28 August 2008 13:32 (seventeen years ago)
her bulge was bigger than I had realised, and her subsequent conversations were all along sort of "stupid fackin' clinic telling me aaahhhh to raise maaahhh baby" lines
her friends were all taking the piss out of her for being a whinger after she asked for my seat anyway
― MPx4A, Thursday, 28 August 2008 13:32 (seventeen years ago)
that is a strange crosspost.
― MPx4A, Thursday, 28 August 2008 13:33 (seventeen years ago)
Ultimate would be offering yr seat to a pregnant woman who it turns out is actually just fat
― Tom D., Thursday, 28 August 2008 13:37 (seventeen years ago)
I think she was annoyed because it means people think she looks old.
I wouldn't want someone to offer me their seat, and I don't see why that would change until standing became difficult for me for one reason or another.
Hmm I think you have to hear the tone she used rather than the words themselves. Kind of doesn't work on the internet.
― AlanSmithee, Thursday, 28 August 2008 13:42 (seventeen years ago)
i'm imagining it in a Judy Dench 'M' style
― Ste, Thursday, 28 August 2008 13:44 (seventeen years ago)
Ha! I remembered the best example of someone being annoyed at chivalry. Friend of mine on train, sitting on fold-down seat by the door. Woman with pram gets on, he gets up and offers her the seat. She looks at the seat, then at him, and (genuinely angry) says: "Oh yeah, fucking great, give me the crap seat.". She then takes the seat anyway
― Ismael Klata, Thursday, 28 August 2008 13:54 (seventeen years ago)
what was he meant to do, get up and pull someone out of one of the "better" seats?
― ledge, Thursday, 28 August 2008 13:54 (seventeen years ago)
If someone gets angry at an act of kindness, honestly, the dickhood is on them. Why let them ruin everything for the people who do appreciate such acts of kindness?
― Masonic Boom, Thursday, 28 August 2008 13:55 (seventeen years ago)
On the buses/trains I use the "crap seat" is the only one with enough room for a pram anyway.
― a passing spacecadet, Thursday, 28 August 2008 14:08 (seventeen years ago)
i twisted my ankle once and i was on the bus and i was on the seat that used to be "give up for elderly etc" but they changed the wording to "priority for those less able to stand" and when an old lady got on the bus i was like YEAH! TWISTED ANKLE, YEAH! IN YOUR FACE. to her
― ken c, Thursday, 28 August 2008 14:30 (seventeen years ago)
Self-inflected ankle-twist people should not take preference over the elderly
― Tom D., Thursday, 28 August 2008 14:32 (seventeen years ago)
Inflected! LOL.
next you'll be saying that fat people are their own fault!!!!!!
― ken c, Thursday, 28 August 2008 14:33 (seventeen years ago)
Ha ha, after I had my operation on my wrist, I used to sit in the seats with my MASSIVE BANDAGED PAW out and on top of my bag so everyone could see it.
And then some smartarse would say something like "you don't stand with your arms" and I would say "Yeah, but you can't hang on to the strap with your toes!"
― Masonic Boom, Thursday, 28 August 2008 14:33 (seventeen years ago)
you don't hang on to the strap/pole with both hands though?
― ken c, Thursday, 28 August 2008 14:34 (seventeen years ago)
Man, everyone (EVERYONE) holds doors open for one another here! Every entrance or exit involves practically fighting over who gets to hold the door open.
Not sexist. Only beautiful and sweet.
― Abbott, Thursday, 28 August 2008 17:30 (seventeen years ago)
I sign (ASL) 'thank you' to drivers who let me cross the street. Not too many seem to know what it means, other than a friendly gesture, but the few times people have signed back 'YOU'RE WELCOME' have made my fucking day every time.
― Abbott, Thursday, 28 August 2008 17:32 (seventeen years ago)
Ive had a few ppl offer me a seat in recent times, which I then realised was the mistaken pregnancy thing ;_;
I have a weird sway back that makes my stomach stick out! Also I has beer gut.
― Trayce, Friday, 29 August 2008 05:54 (seventeen years ago)
guy holds door open for two pretty women; I happen to be approaching the same door right at the same time so I walk in too & he gives me this really grumpy look
― death and darkness and other night kinda shit (crüt), Friday, 14 March 2014 19:20 (twelve years ago)
Tell him next time he should work at his slamming the door in someone's face to underline what a genitalia he is technique.
― già, ya, déjà, ja, yeah, whatever... (Michael White), Friday, 14 March 2014 20:52 (twelve years ago)
I really shouldn't slander genitalia like that. Compliment him on his kidney stone impersonation.
― già, ya, déjà, ja, yeah, whatever... (Michael White), Friday, 14 March 2014 20:53 (twelve years ago)
I just thought it was hilarious tbh!
― death and darkness and other night kinda shit (crüt), Saturday, 15 March 2014 06:34 (twelve years ago)
I'm intrigued by how having to walk across a car park as a pedestrian fits with this type of etiquette. Is it only good manners not to back a car into a space occupied by a pedestrian walking, or out of a stationary parking position into somebody. Or is it just very bad driving, or are rehearsals for Death Race 2000 ongoing. Seems that giving some people a car means they think they have automatic right of way.
As to bus seats, the fold up type seem to be there on the local ones to allow wheeled users a place to park. That's prams and wheelchairs. So people stand from them when a pram or wheelchair gets on the bus.
― Stevolende, Saturday, 15 March 2014 08:31 (twelve years ago)