DrTomorrow said:I often offer my lap if a lady needs a seat....![]()

OP, I agree with you, the woman was rude.
DrTomorrow said:I often offer my lap if a lady needs a seat....![]()
No, the individuals I am refering to are people who just ignore others because they don't want to be bothered with moving. These are also some of the same people who fight with everyone to be the first on or off the bus or monorail. You would not move that fast if you had a injury or an ache.Marseeya said:Just out of curiosity, how do you know the "kid" doesn't have bad knees or some other hidden problem as well?
My 9 yr old can't walk for long periods of time without having bad pain in her ankles and if some "adult" ever told her to move, mama bear would have to come out of her cave!
I'm not saying that every kid you'll see sitting has a problem, it's just that you can't know whether they do or don't.
Ergens2 said:My DH and I are always giving up our seats on the bus or on the monorail. My DH even has bad knees and anyone with bad knees knows after a long day you have to sit! It makes me so mad when you see a young "kid" sitting there not even moving when a young couple gets on with a sleeping child and then has to juggle the child like a bag of grocerys! My DH has even gone as far as telling them to "get up"You should see the look on there faces!
minmate said:Speaking of which, we were on a bus on our last trip a few weeks ago and it was standing room only. Nobody made very big efforts to give up a seat to my 4, 5, or 6 yo children who subsequently, all stumbled and I had to catch them a few times b/c of the bumpy ride. It was also on one of the buses that didn't have a lot of places for shorter people to hold on... mostly just the overhead strap. Nobody tried to accomodate them and let them have a place to hold onto very well either. Plus it was so crowded, they couldn't all stand next to me and nobody else offered to move to another "hold onto place" so they could. It was pretty sad.
beattyfamily said:I think it's because they have the mentality that you really didn't have to stand; you could have waited for the next bus....
minmate said:that may be true... but not really, b/c the CM's just herd you on. If we got on and decided to get off, wouldn't that just cause more chaos? Besides, I didn't say it really as a complaint. I guess I didn't EXPECT anyone to give up seats. It would have been nice. The only one who tried was another 5 yo girl who offered to squish over and share her one seat with one of my kids.
Mister Disney said:I had something similar happen, but different on our return trip from WDW this past April.
We fly on Southwest (they are SO cheap), but do not have assigned seats.
The flight was at least 80% booked and we ended up being boarded towards the end.
We come across this guy who was in a row of 3 seats (very near the front) and he is sitting at the aisle and had his briefcase on the middle seat and was working on some papers.
I asked him if anyone was sitting in the other two seats, he lifted his head, said "NO" and went back to what he was doing.
So I just stood there, and he finally looked up and said, "What can I do for you"? I said, well, since no one is sitting in those seats, we would like to.
He was NOT a happy camper. He parked himself like that in the hopes of having all three seats to himself.
I personally believe that when people act like that, including on the monorails its important to call them on it and use the available seating.
Mom2Ashli said:I had something similar this weekend. The monorail was standing room only and we had a couple with a stroller stuck right in the way. It was not folded up or anything. They just pushed it on as is. And the child was sitting on the parents lap. So everyone around had to try and fit around the stroller that took up most of one side of the car. I found that to be rude. If it was not busy, I can see just pushing it on. But it was standing room only and plenty of people still waiting to get on.
BostonRob said:Well maybe they were rude and maybe they weren't. Our stroller has a big compartment underneath where you can store a lot of stuff, be it camera bags, pocketbooks, souveniers, whatever. Only problem is, you can't fold up the stroller with all that stuff in there. So if their kid just woke up and insisted on getting out of the stroller (this happens by the way - whenever you want your kid in the stroller, they want out - murphy's law), it wouldn't make sense to fold up the stroller and then try to find a place to put all their stuff.
If this was the circumstance, then those parents weren't rude. And to presume otherwise is, well, presumptuous.
Mom2Ashli said:I had something similar this weekend. The monorail was standing room only and we had a couple with a stroller stuck right in the way. It was not folded up or anything. They just pushed it on as is. And the child was sitting on the parents lap. So everyone around had to try and fit around the stroller that took up most of one side of the car. I found that to be rude. If it was not busy, I can see just pushing it on. But it was standing room only and plenty of people still waiting to get on.
Ergens2 said:You would not move that fast if you had a injury or an ache.
beattyfamily said:I've never had CMs herding me on a bus. I've only seen the bus driver. And it's pretty easy to tell if it's standing room only before you get on so I've never seen chaos.
....
Sorry but the stroller should have been folded up in the first place before even getting on the monorail since it was crowded. Parents were rude for not haivng it folded in the first place.BostonRob said:Well maybe they were rude and maybe they weren't. Our stroller has a big compartment underneath where you can store a lot of stuff, be it camera bags, pocketbooks, souveniers, whatever. Only problem is, you can't fold up the stroller with all that stuff in there. So if their kid just woke up and insisted on getting out of the stroller (this happens by the way - whenever you want your kid in the stroller, they want out - murphy's law), it wouldn't make sense to fold up the stroller and then try to find a place to put all their stuff.
If this was the circumstance, then those parents weren't rude. And to presume otherwise is, well, presumptuous. Would you have preferred they force their child to stay in the stroller to justify the unfolded stroller and then have the kid cry and scream the whole time?