Originally posted by normr
Like I said in an earlier post, if people felt like they HAD to use all 4 dryers when one or two would do, wouldn't the considerate thing to do would be to move your things into less machines if someone else came to use them.
I think there is a misunderstanding and perhaps two different scenarios here.
You walk into the laundry room. You have two loads of wash to do and there are two washers and four dryers. No one else is using the laundry room when you walk in so you put both of your loads in at once (I don't see this as a big deal at all, personally).
Someone walks in 10 minutes later and has to wait 10 or 15 minutes to do a wash. Also not a big deal.
Scenario 1: You finish washing your clothes and you put each load into a dryer knowing that the person after you will need to dry their clothes at the same time as your clothes are drying.
Scenario 2: You finish washing your clothes and spread them over all 4 dryers knowing that in 20 minutes (before your clothes are done) someone else will need the dryer and will have to wait another 40 minutes to use them because you are hogging them all.
I think these are two very different scenarios and that scenario 1 is what most people would do to "follow the golden rule" while scenario 2 is what someone who didn't care about anyone else would do. I don't think there is a "1 washer at a time" rule (at least there hasn't been at any laundromat type facility I've ever been in) and if there laundry room were THAT crowded that I'd have to fight just to get one washer, I'd do my laundry later.
I don't see the elevator analogy either. In the case of the elevator you're not using it, but preventing others from using it so that it will be available to you immediately. In the case of the washers you are actually using them and willing to turn them over to someone else as soon as you are finished.
My husband and I also don't "sit out" by the pool but rather we prefer to swim. I wish Disney had some kind of place (maybe they do and we don't know about it?) for us to leave our stuff so that we have a place to sit down and dry off and leave our stuff within viewing range of the pool so that we can both go swimming. I'm sorry if we are taking a chair away from someone who could be sitting in it, but at least we consolidate all of our stuff into one chair (then again I've never been at the pool when it's been terribly crowded)
Lisa