Anonymous wrote:Thank God, finally a chance to criticize millennials.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never put my feet up on a table where people could eat. I'm flexible and more comfortable curled up usually. I'm an older millennial. If I'm on a chair or sofa, I almost always have one or both legs curled under me. I always have sat like that. When I was a kid, my dad always laughed at me because he said I'd stand like a flamingo, sort of like the tree pose but with my toes curled under. I don't sit with my feet under me in formal settings, but I will at casual restaurants, theaters, planes, trains, home, public benches. If I can slip my shoe off I'll do that. If I can't, I won't put my foot on the furniture, except public benches.
In a car, if I'm on a long trip, I definitely put my foot/feet on the seat or dash. It's my car, I'll sit how I please. Shoes are coming off for that. I keep a pair of flip flops in the car for driving so I can slip them off and on easily, in case I need to stop for gas while my foot is up.
I get why dirty feet are gross. I get why shoes are gross. I get why shoes on furniture are gross. I get why feet or shoes around food are gross. I don't get why clean bare feet on a chair are gross.
Thank you so much for this detailed description of yourself. We are all so grateful to now know the idiosyncrasies and history of how you sit. /S
For the record, not all human beings have such delightful feet as you THINK you do. (I suppose you think your sht doesn't stink either.) Maybe you actually have gnarled ugly toes, weird looking fungal nails or your feet smell and you aren't aware of it. If you are sitting in a coffee shop or elsewhere in public with your bare feet on a chair, many people think you are gross. How would you like to be the person (or their child) who has to sit in that vacated chair after your highness has just pulled her feet off it?
Anonymous wrote:I hate feet. One of the reasons I dislike getting massages is because they start with your feet and then rub your feet funk all over your body.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would never put my feet up on a table where people could eat. I'm flexible and more comfortable curled up usually. I'm an older millennial. If I'm on a chair or sofa, I almost always have one or both legs curled under me. I always have sat like that. When I was a kid, my dad always laughed at me because he said I'd stand like a flamingo, sort of like the tree pose but with my toes curled under. I don't sit with my feet under me in formal settings, but I will at casual restaurants, theaters, planes, trains, home, public benches. If I can slip my shoe off I'll do that. If I can't, I won't put my foot on the furniture, except public benches.
In a car, if I'm on a long trip, I definitely put my foot/feet on the seat or dash. It's my car, I'll sit how I please. Shoes are coming off for that. I keep a pair of flip flops in the car for driving so I can slip them off and on easily, in case I need to stop for gas while my foot is up.
I get why dirty feet are gross. I get why shoes are gross. I get why shoes on furniture are gross. I get why feet or shoes around food are gross. I don't get why clean bare feet on a chair are gross.
Thank you so much for this detailed description of yourself. We are all so grateful to now know the idiosyncrasies and history of how you sit. /S
For the record, not all human beings have such delightful feet as you THINK you do. (I suppose you think your sht doesn't stink either.) Maybe you actually have gnarled ugly toes, weird looking fungal nails or your feet smell and you aren't aware of it. If you are sitting in a coffee shop or elsewhere in public with your bare feet on a chair, many people think you are gross. How would you like to be the person (or their child) who has to sit in that vacated chair after your highness has just pulled her feet off it?
Anonymous wrote:Ok, can somebody please tell me what age group are these Millennials? I've googled and searched and many here claim that parents of Millennials are Baby Boomers. And then that would mean that some 35 year old is a Millennial? I do not see any 30 somethings with feet on the tables, I see a lot of 20 somethings and teens doing this, being disrespectful, lazy, having moms calling their bosses to tell that their kid is overworked. Is this actually happening with 30 somethings and almost 40 year olds? I am Gen X, born in 1970, if I got these things right? I see 18, 19 year olds and people in their 20s being really badly behaved, not 35 year olds. Please, tell me how old are millennials, as I am too dumb to figure it out on my own, and what generation are these 18 to 25 year olds today, in 2017. Many thanks and pardon my stupidity.
Anonymous wrote:I would never put my feet up on a table where people could eat. I'm flexible and more comfortable curled up usually. I'm an older millennial. If I'm on a chair or sofa, I almost always have one or both legs curled under me. I always have sat like that. When I was a kid, my dad always laughed at me because he said I'd stand like a flamingo, sort of like the tree pose but with my toes curled under. I don't sit with my feet under me in formal settings, but I will at casual restaurants, theaters, planes, trains, home, public benches. If I can slip my shoe off I'll do that. If I can't, I won't put my foot on the furniture, except public benches.
In a car, if I'm on a long trip, I definitely put my foot/feet on the seat or dash. It's my car, I'll sit how I please. Shoes are coming off for that. I keep a pair of flip flops in the car for driving so I can slip them off and on easily, in case I need to stop for gas while my foot is up.
I get why dirty feet are gross. I get why shoes are gross. I get why shoes on furniture are gross. I get why feet or shoes around food are gross. I don't get why clean bare feet on a chair are gross.