Anonymous wrote:Op here. It's not only in stores it's all over the neighborhood. Try walking up Wisc Ave or Mazza Gallerie. People just seem rude and entitled.
Anonymous wrote:Try walking up Wisc Ave or Mazza Gallerie. People just seem rude and entitled.
OP, I've lived in AU Park and the part of Chevy Chase near Friendship Hts. for 16 years now. A pretty long time, usually on foot, which qualifies me to say ...
The vast majority of the people you encounter walking up Wisconsin near Mazza / Friendship Heights don't actually live near here. This doesn't make them any less rude (I do happen to agree with you), but they're not locals.
The bitchy shiny-black-haired women with large sunglasses and good perfume are from Montgomery County somewhere. The douchebag guys on their Blackberries abusing the Starbucks employees work at Microsoft, etc. and commute in from somewhere. The near-elderly men and women who try to crush your foot with their shopping carts are *definitely* not local. You get the idea.
Try walking up Wisc Ave or Mazza Gallerie. People just seem rude and entitled.
Yes, the people who shop here seem to feel they are very special, a lot more special then the ones on Rockville Pike. They actually need off duty cops to direct traffic here and not just because spaces are limited. I've shopped regularly at the Tenleytown WF, the Rockville Pike WF and the River Road WF seems for whatever reason to attract those who shove past you in the aisles, think nothing of blocking your way while they talk on the phone, argue with the cashiers and generally disregard all others around them. Who knows what it is-the shopping center in Potomac Village (not that far up the road), seems to be another location where such entitled persons shop and drive. Nouveau riche? Again, go know.Anonymous wrote:15:58 here, For whole foods, my point of comparison is the one on River Road in Bethesda. There I do find people can be rude. The Tenleytown one, I haven't seen it. But most of the time I walk there so don't have to contend with the parking lot.
Anonymous wrote:What kind of rudeness are you talking about? Are you just upset that other shoppers aren't looking to make a personal connection at the supermarket or wine shop? Are they actually shoving you out of the way or just not humoring your leisurely pace by moving around you to get what they need from the aisle with a measure of efficiency?
As far as "almost getting run over" in parking lots, I think this is because you're dealing with people who don't reflexively give priority to pedestrians. You may have moved within the city limits, but you're still talking about a fairly car-dependent part of town.