Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My experience (in south Arlington and old town Alexandria) is that there are two pretty distinct groups: the every man for himself type who doesn’t give a crap about what others are doing and the type that gives you wry smiles and says excuse me when your farts get close and kind of signals that we are all in this bizarre situation together.
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This typo/autocorrect made my day.
I actually thought PP meant that word, not autocorrect. Ha!
Anonymous wrote:I hadn't been to Trader Joe's in 2 weeks, and went in Old Town this morning at 9am. Some of you were barreling down others with your carts, cutting in front of other people, and just generally being rude AF.
Some degree is always there, but it was WAY beyond normal.
Slow down and be kind. Someone drops something, help them pick it up. Smile. Make eye contact. Let that person "turn" around the corner. Sing along to Hotel California playing in the store and calm down a little. Pretending like you're more important and everyone else is invisible is really sh!tty.
I know many of you are seriously anxious and stressed, but being kind may actually help you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My experience (in south Arlington and old town Alexandria) is that there are two pretty distinct groups: the every man for himself type who doesn’t give a crap about what others are doing and the type that gives you wry smiles and says excuse me when your farts get close and kind of signals that we are all in this bizarre situation together.
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This typo/autocorrect made my day.
Anonymous wrote:I hadn't been to Trader Joe's in 2 weeks, and went in Old Town this morning at 9am. Some of you were barreling down others with your carts, cutting in front of other people, and just generally being rude AF.
Some degree is always there, but it was WAY beyond normal.
Slow down and be kind. Someone drops something, help them pick it up. Smile. Make eye contact. Let that person "turn" around the corner. Sing along to Hotel California playing in the store and calm down a little. Pretending like you're more important and everyone else is invisible is really sh!tty.
I know many of you are seriously anxious and stressed, but being kind may actually help you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hadn't been to Trader Joe's in 2 weeks, and went in Old Town this morning at 9am. Some of you were barreling down others with your carts, cutting in front of other people, and just generally being rude AF.
Some degree is always there, but it was WAY beyond normal.
Slow down and be kind. Someone drops something, help them pick it up. Smile. Make eye contact. Let that person "turn" around the corner. Sing along to Hotel California playing in the store and calm down a little. Pretending like you're more important and everyone else is invisible is really sh!tty.
I know many of you are seriously anxious and stressed, but being kind may actually help you.
Someone drops something, help them pick it up![]()
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I am going to say it only once DO NOT TOUCH other people's stuff! I don't want you
to touch my stuff. For one if I decide I still want it from the floor .. I will deal with it,
but if you touched it it is yours.. I don't want your virus on my doritos!!!!
Also lots of it is not rude, it is jus trying to focus and be fast because nobody wants to
be there longer then must.. Of course rude is not an excuse for anything but don't kill us with your kindness either, do not touch our stuff. And don't slow move and prolong your exposure or exposing others. People mean business.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My experience (in south Arlington and old town Alexandria) is that there are two pretty distinct groups: the every man for himself type who doesn’t give a crap about what others are doing and the type that gives you wry smiles and says excuse me when your farts get close and kind of signals that we are all in this bizarre situation together.
![]()
This typo/autocorrect made my day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My experience (in south Arlington and old town Alexandria) is that there are two pretty distinct groups: the every man for himself type who doesn’t give a crap about what others are doing and the type that gives you wry smiles and says excuse me when your farts get close and kind of signals that we are all in this bizarre situation together.
![]()
This typo/autocorrect made my day.
Anonymous wrote:I hadn't been to Trader Joe's in 2 weeks, and went in Old Town this morning at 9am. Some of you were barreling down others with your carts, cutting in front of other people, and just generally being rude AF.
Some degree is always there, but it was WAY beyond normal.
Slow down and be kind. Someone drops something, help them pick it up. Smile. Make eye contact. Let that person "turn" around the corner. Sing along to Hotel California playing in the store and calm down a little. Pretending like you're more important and everyone else is invisible is really sh!tty.
I know many of you are seriously anxious and stressed, but being kind may actually help you.
Anonymous wrote:My experience (in south Arlington and old town Alexandria) is that there are two pretty distinct groups: the every man for himself type who doesn’t give a crap about what others are doing and the type that gives you wry smiles and says excuse me when your farts get close and kind of signals that we are all in this bizarre situation together.
Anonymous wrote:This is why I avoid the Bethesda Trader Joe's, and go to Rockville instead. It's not that people in Bethesda are ruder than in Rockville, but the layout of the small Bethesda store is difficult to navigate if there's a crowd. Add in collective anxiety, and it's a nightmare.