Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm so annoyed by these people. Don't wait for a spot until you see their reverse lights on! Instead people are huffing and puffing while I buckle my kids in the car seat, return a text message and then look up directions to my next place. Just park 10 spaces further away!!!! I do understand if I'm in the city and there aren't spots, but sheesh.
If I see you waiting, I try to hurry up, but if you honk, I will wait alllllllll day.
All of this. If you're in that much of a hurry, choose an open space and keep it moving. You probably need the exercise.
These threads make me laugh every time seeing how upset people get over the possibility of someone in their parking spot reading messages / emails before driving. Yet the same people will scream to the high heavens about phone use while driving.![]()
Anonymous wrote:I'm so annoyed by these people. Don't wait for a spot until you see their reverse lights on! Instead people are huffing and puffing while I buckle my kids in the car seat, return a text message and then look up directions to my next place. Just park 10 spaces further away!!!! I do understand if I'm in the city and there aren't spots, but sheesh.
If I see you waiting, I try to hurry up, but if you honk, I will wait alllllllll day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What kills me is when someone is waiting for your spot and blocks the flow of traffic through the parking lot to do so. I see this at Costco all the time.
It’s power/control in reverse. If the person in the spot won’t yield and the waiting car won’t either, the increasing blocked traffic is the tiebreaker. It’s the waiting car putting crowd/social pressure on the parking space idiot.
Anonymous wrote:This is a major safety issue and, unfortunately, it will catch up to many of you. Be safe. Get in your car, get secure, and drive away.
Anonymous wrote:No answers here but I’m an Airbnb host with a webcam pointed at the parking area. I have watched many, many cars sit, idling, for 15 minutes or more. No idea what they can possibly be doing that they couldn’t have done before they left the unit. Some people just like sitting in their cars. I think it’s like “non time” - the only peace they have.
Anonymous wrote:I'm waiting for my car to warm up and meanwhile setting up my GPS. I move as fast as I can when I see people waiting but if my next destination is dependent on talking to someone else (like do I need to stop at the supermarket or go straight home) or needs GPS, I am not pulling out until I have that working.
Anonymous wrote:Someone did this to me today. It makes me so angry when people do that.
Anonymous wrote:This is a major safety issue and, unfortunately, it will catch up to many of you. Be safe. Get in your car, get secure, and drive away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think there was a study that showed people take longer to pull out when they know someone is waiting for their spot.
You are correct.
For all of the maybe this, maybe that, it's interesting that it all seems to happen more when it looks like someone is waiting for your spot.
+100 it’s a power/control thing even if nobody admits it.
+1
I will wait as long as it takes just to p*ss them off, if the parkers are obviously taking extra time intentionally.
Hint: they are.
Totally agree. I’m surprised the length to which posters here have tried to justify their wait. The overwhelming reality is that people get in their cars and go, and they don’t routinely do the things mentioned here. Outwaiting someone for your spot is simply a power/control issue.