goofy4tink said:Okay....here's the scenario....a very pregnant woman, an elderly couple, and a family with mom, dad, an infant, a 2 y/o and a 5 y/o all get on the bus...no one is willing to hop up and offer their seat (for whatever reason). Finally, someone offers to stand...which one of the above people gets that one seat??
I'm just curious, for the sake of discussion (rather than argument!!) what trumps what in this case.
Okay, I'm sorry, but unless both hubby and I are seated than I'm likely already seated with two kids in my lap, a frontpack on and a stroller between my legs, so I'm not going to be giving up my seat on this trip. In which case it's whoever is standing closest to my DH who jumps right up to offer his seat -- he never plans on sitting on public transportation and considers it a bonus when he can.
If hubby is seated with one child and I am seated with one child, than one of us will wordlessly pass the second child to the other then stand up and offer his/her seat to whoever was closest. Usually DH insists that I remain seated, but if traveling childless, we both happily surrender our seats. Again the lucky recipient would be whoever is closest.
We would not suggest to any of the remaining persons that perhaps they should have waited for the next bus, because we will presume that if they hadn't felt reasonably confident in their riding the bus in a standing position ability, they would have waited for the next bus.
Nor will we suggest that perhaps they should have rented a car. Maybe they are $pending their life $aving$ to go to Di$ney and adding a rental car $imply would have put a Di$ney trip out of reach for them.
Also, we won't spend the whole bus trip worrying about them because if they truly needed a seat they would have gotten one (think ADA here), or they would have waited because they knew that they could not reasonably stand on a moving bus.
All that said, we will still teach our children that when they are, by the grace of God, able to stand on a moving bus that they should give up their seat regardless of how long they waited, not because any of these people is entitled to their space, but because it is the polite thing to do.
So let's see, that'd be 4 seats. If the elderly couple and the pregnant woman accept the seats that my husband and I never planned on sitting in because we truly don't need them and that our DDs graciously offered, that leaves one seat for the family of 5. Maybe one of the parents would sit and -- well let's face it ladies, since we're better at multi-tasking generally -- mom would figure out a way to share a seat with all three of their kids. I know I've carried a kicking, screaming, 3 year old, a newborn and a furiously barking 18lb. dog before, so it can be done!
