, I'd had it with being bulldozed by people who feel they MUST walk in a row, like the freaking Monkees walking on the beach singing their theme song..

Yeah, cause stepping off to the side to converse and being polite is beyond comprehension... heh
Learning for when their parents pull them from school to go to Disney?I see it all the time at my high school. They're mad at you for playing chicken with them and you didn't conceed to them.
... and (I) bend down and pat the child's head.This happens to me all the time along with the stroller push. People push their strollers into me and will just pull it back and keep pushing it into me.
That's okay, though, I turn around and smile pleasantly!.
This happens to me all the time along with the stroller push. People push their strollers into me and will just pull it back and keep pushing it into me.
That's okay, though, I turn around and smile pleasantly!
It's just the special snowflake-ness abounding.

I think they need to post "Go to the right and You'll never go wrong" signs. Most Americans tend to walk on the right side of the pathway and when coming head on to someone, sway right.

I will add this one more thing. I don't care if it is at WDW or anywhere else, if you are texting or reading emails on your blackberry while walking...then you are fair game to get steamrolled.
Yeah....this happened to us in December. There are 3 of us and we usually don't walk 3 abreast, unless it's very uncrowded. Usually, we walk 2, with one behind, or even single file, with me in front, DD11 in the middle and DH in back. And we're to the right.
But over and over, we encountered groups who just had to walk 4, 5, 6, even 7 abreast....which meant that even if they started out on the left, they ended up on our side because they took up so much space. We got tired of having to dodge them, and I admit it, I am feisty. I refuse to move on principle.Many times I just stop and give them the hairy eyeball and they had to dodge me.
However, one day it was raining and we'd put on those flimsy ponchos. We were walking single file on the right, with me in the lead. I'm short, barely over 5 feet tall, so maybe they think they can blow past me, but that's an error in judgement on their part.Anyway, I had my arms up so I could hold the hoodie part of the poncho on my head (it was too loose to stay up on its own) so picture me walking around like I had chicken arms.....elbows sticking out in front of me up high, at an angle. I see 6 or 7 youngish men in their teens to early twenties heading toward us, and yes, they are 6-7 abreast, taking up almost the whole walkway. There really is no place for us to go. Maybe if I'd put down my elbows and made myself small I could have avoided a collision, but my head would have gotten wet and it was dang COLD.
So I just kept going. I mean, the one on the edge saw me. I guess he just expected I'd move for him as we got closer. But I didn't. And so, we collided. Or more to the point, my elbow jabbed the bejeezus out of his arm. As I passed him, he loudly yelled, "OOOOOWWWWWW!!!!!"DD11 said, "I think you hit him." DH just LHAO. He knows me well enough to know that by then, I'd had it with being bulldozed by people who feel they MUST walk in a row, like the freaking Monkees walking on the beach singing their theme song. He'd had it too. I told DD he could have moved, but he didn't, so he'd made his choice.
If our family of three can manage to not hog the walkways and we just want to get by without incident, it's not too much to ask that we not be forced aside by those who are too rude to share space. At some point, even normally polite people decide to stand their ground......and sometimes elbows are involved if it's raining.
Go Pack!!!!!Wow... you guys wouldn't last a week on the Boston subways during rush hour...![]()

What is the problem with so many people being indignant about someone stopping in the path way. This isn't an interstate highway, it's a theme park. Disney specifically designed it to be detailed and to be noticed. So to stop and look at something that was put there for exactly that purpose is what is supposed to happen, not to be avoided.
New visitors need to look up references and sometime need to stop to do that and get their barrings. There are no lines drawn on the ground that keep people in one lane or a designated shoulder to "pull over too".
Rubato you were the rude one, not the teen. You're lucky her parents didn't confront you. I sure would have. After reading how some DISers deal with "rude" people,I think I need to add bail money to our packing list.
Or fall into a fountain like that lady on YouTube, lol.I will add this one more thing. I don't care if it is at WDW or anywhere else, if you are texting or reading emails on your blackberry while walking...then you are fair game to get steamrolled.
yeah, you did nothing wrong.. The girl should have moved over- and her parents are probably rude as well.Could you please explain to me how it's rude to have a little tiny piece of the huge sidewalk and refuse to move from it? Why should a family of 4 have the whole sidewalk and I have to step into the bushes? Seriously? I don't think I was being rude at all, I think I was fighting rudeness. Sorry if it seems that way to you. I was just trying to wake some people up. The girl in question was at least 17 years old and it's not like I knocked her on her butt, I just didn't sway.
It sounds to me like a lot of people on here are mistaking obliviousness for rudeness.
Add me to the crowd that gets sick of yielding. I used to play chicken on the streets of Chicago all the time because it irritated me how people (especially, in my experience, men) just expected you to get out of their way, even though they're on your side of the walk.
They always look so surprised when you don't move, and shocked when you collide with them. I'm a sturdy woman--I can take a hit. Some days I'd rather crash than let someone be obnoxious.