Feel free to judge - scooter dispute

Wall-E1

Dis Dad
Joined
May 12, 2008
Messages
4,266
I was on line at Test Track this past weekend with a close friend. She has rheumatoid arthritis, spinal stenosis and diabetes. She is also having knee replacement surgery in the next couple of months. We were waiting in the regular line. On this ride, wheelchairs and scooters wait in line with everybody else. There was a 50 minute wait time posted when we first got in line, but the ride broke down and that added about another thirty minutes in wait time.

Well, we had been on line for about an hour, when we hear from behind us a woman telling us to excuse her. I stepped to the side as I turned around and this woman zips in front of me with her scooter. She just swerves right around my friend sitting in her wheelchair. We happened to be at the point in line where the pathway becomes thinner(this is in the area of the queue where you begin walking up the ramp. There is only enough width for one person to stand). So, this woman has the front of her scooter nosed right into the beginning of this section of line. She can't cut anyone else because the queue has become too thin. She then looks back behind me where her husband is sitting in his scooter. She tells him to catch up with her. She looks back at me and motions for me to move aside. I put my hands up and ask her what she is doing? She tells me that the cm at the entrance to the ride told her to go on through the regular line. I tell her that he meant that she could wait on the regular line and that he didn't mean that she should cut everyone in the regular line. She disagrees with me. I ask her if she is kidding. I extend my arm in the direction of the rest of the line and show her all of the other wheelchairs and scooters that have patiently been waiting in line with everybody else. At this point, I am standing beside my wheelchair so that the husband cannot catch up to his wife(I know, a little immature, but I had been waiting over an hour and I had no patience for line jumpers).

The old lady in the scooter then turns her attention to my friend in the wheelchair. She tries reasoning with her(big mistake - my friend has less patience with this type of behavior than me). She tells my friend that she has multiple sclerosis. My friend responds with the list of ailments that she suffers. The scooter lady then counters that with her age - 76. My friend is unimpressed and responds with her age - 38. The scooter lady then tries diminishing my friends' handicaps. She tells my friend that knee replacement surgery is nothing and she suffers much more each day. (I'm staying completely out of this discussion, simply enjoying the debate about who is more handicapped. The scooter lady then says that her husband is in a scooter because he had suffered a major stroke last week. My friend tells her that she is amazed that a doctor has cleared her husband to go to Disney and ride Test Track, less than a week after he suffered a major stroke. She also remarked how perfect his speech was for someone who had suffered a major stroke.

So, I made sure to keep the two scooter people split up through the rest of the line. When we made it to the front, the scooter lady tried telling the attendant that we had cut her husband off splitting them up. We quickly countered with what had actually happened. We were so delighted when the attendant had her pull forward and to the side so she could wait for her husband. We were sent right into the pre ride room. They followed right behind us after getting back together. At this point, we were escorted through another door and into the wheelchair/scooter unloading area. The scooter lady again tried telling this attendant that she was first even though we were ahead of her as we traveled to the unloading area. We laughed and told the attendant what they had been doing in line. The attendant then said very loudly to my friend and I, "You two go stand on number 1 for the front seat since you were here first. She then motioned the other couple to line 2. The looks on their face were priceless. They were so mad(it was a truly magical Disney moment).

After the ride, I helped my friend out of the car, as she doesn't have the strength to climb out on her own. The funny thing was that the old lady behind us was having the same issue. She was saying that she needed help getting out, but nobody was hearing her. If it had been anyone else, I would have gladly leant an arm for support. Instead, I just smiled and waved as we left.
 
Love It!! Sounds just like something I would do....the you and your friend part.
 

I don't use a scooter as a rule but in Disney I do for reasons similar to your friend minus the diabetes. I think the problem is that people rent thses things for the right of entitlement. Years ago wheelchairs meant little or no wait. Disney realized the abuse and now make us go through the regular lines as much as possible.
I would have done the exact same thing that you did. Some people are determined to try and suck the magic out of Disney for everyone else. I'm glad the CM's out her in her place.
 
Was she wearing Crocs and carrying a refillable mug from last year? ;)
 
Good post!

Note: since this is Wall-E1, this may or may not have happened. Wall-E1 is in the habit of posting several such items each week (as a piece of satire).
 
Love, Love, Love your story! DH is disabled an uses an ECV. He always waits in the lines. If we can fast pass it great, if not he is in the regular line. They have made most of the lines HCA at all parks but MK.

DH and I would have definitely stopped them from going through the way they did. Good for you!
 
Good post!

Note: since this is Wall-E1, this may or may not have happened. Wall-E1 is in the habit of posting several such items each week (as a piece of satire).

This did actually happen this past weekend. It's not a joking post. I was taking my friend to Disney because she was really depressed over her upcoming surgery. I thought the trip would take her mind off things for awhile.
 
This did actually happen this past weekend. It's not a joking post. I was taking my friend to Disney because she was really depressed over her upcoming surgery. I thought the trip would take her mind off things for awhile.

My mistake! Sometimes it is hard to tell the real from the other.
 
WallE, did this really happen or is it one of your fun threads like the New Years Eve one? BTW, thanks for your "assist" in my being tagged finally.:thumbsup2

If you are looking for a Dis crowd today, you need to move over to the cheating Dis'er thread- that's where everyone else is.
 
My mistake! Sometimes it is hard to tell the real from the other.

Understood:thumbsup2

WallE, did this really happen or is it one of your fun threads like the New Years Eve one? BTW, thanks for your "assist" in my being tagged finally.:thumbsup2

If you are looking for a Dis crowd today, you need to move over to the cheating Dis'er thread- that's where everyone else is.

Wow, I guess I'm like the boy who cried wolf.
This was an actual event that took place this past weekend. I was just relaying one of the highlights of our trip this past week. My friend really enjoyed this confrontation. I'm usually more passive and let things slide, but I will say I enjoyed the confrontation as well.
 
Ok, WallE, I would have stood in the way of the husband too. I HATE line cutters.

I wonder if the woman truly didn't understand that the CM meant for her to be in the regular line and wait like everyone else (as if perhaps this was her first time to ride Test Track), or if she has a season pass and this is her method for getting to the front of every line. :confused3
 
Ok, WallE, I would have stood in the way of the husband too. I HATE line cutters.

I wonder if the woman truly didn't understand that the CM meant for her to be in the regular line and wait like everyone else (as if perhaps this was her first time to ride Test Track), or if she has a season pass and this is her method for getting to the front of every line. :confused3

I did tell her that what the cm meant was that she could wait on the regular line, and that he was not telling her to cut everybody. Disney has separate entrances for scooters and wheelchairs when the lines aren't wide enough to accommodate them. They would never send handicapped people through a line of hundreds of people, telling them to cut everyone. She still disagreed with me, even after me pointing out others in scooters and wheelchairs waiting their turn in line. This woman knew exactly what she was doing and was trying to find any excuse that would get her to the front of the line faster. Why else would she then switch her tactic and begin trying to gain sympathy in order to get a better line position? She seemed like a seasoned line cutter to me.
 
That was my point - I suspect she is a seasoned line cutter.... the sense of entitlement is disturbing and rather sad. Think of the children and others in wheelchairs and scooters that she cut in front of- I wonder if the husband is embarassed by what she does or is he in on it too?
 
That was my point - I suspect she is a seasoned line cutter.... the sense of entitlement is disturbing and rather sad. Think of the children and others in wheelchairs and scooters that she cut in front of- I wonder if the husband is embarassed by what she does or is he in on it too?

The husband seemed more timid than her. He wasn't trying to scam his way through the line like her. He seemed like he was just along for the ride. He wasn't as pushy as her, but he was more than willing to cut in front of others if his wife was able to talk her way through the line. He certainly wasn't telling his wife to stop what she was doing. He didn't seem embarrassed by her behavior.

I just really loved that I was able to split the two of them up. Every time she would turn to speak to him, I would try to block her view with my body(I'm so immature).
 
I don't think I would consider your actions immature, Wall-E1; it appears more that you are concerned with being fair to everyone, and all Guests being equal to all other Guests no matter what their mobility may be.

And I agree with the assessment that the offender is likely a seasoned line-jumper.
 
I didn't see you being immature either. I actually thought your story was hilarious and I've been near others who have done the same at DLR/DCA. Not everyone who rides a scooter or uses a wheelchair acts like this but some do. Good for you for not letting them get away with it, the CM's should have made them leave the line and re-enter it.
 
On the same note but without the scooters. The last time we went to WDW, we went straight to Soarin' at rope drop. First DH and I got a fastpass, then we both got in line to ride it. Three women come strolling up through the line, heading to the front. I mentioned that they were cutting in line and their response was "Our husbands are up there. We were getting fastpasses." Darn, I didn't know that was the way it worked.:rotfl:
 












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