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Thread: General Annoyance with people
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11-09-2006, 02:36 PM #21Originally Posted by FiReSTaRT
You can't hear me clapping but I am Well said..
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11-09-2006, 02:38 PM #22Originally Posted by Joe Lerch
It's true NYC is high pressured and fast paced. But it is worse lately I think. Oh well.
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11-09-2006, 05:19 PM #23
Considering the population of NYC
I can understand the rudeness to
an extent. But, I definately can't
relate to it at all. The entire state
of WV only has 1.8 million. Charleston
the state capitol has a population of
only 50,000 and actually falling.
I suppose things here are a little more
laid back because of this.... and that's
the way I like it.
To be honest I would rather live the life
of a pauper in these hills than be a rich
man in NYC anyday.
Terry
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11-09-2006, 06:19 PM #24
Terry,
NYC does have good points. I was just pissed at the general rudeness that seems to prevail nowadays. I guess for me the benefits outway most of the bad things. However I have always lived in NYC and might not know any better..
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11-09-2006, 06:28 PM #25Originally Posted by RichZ
I wouldn't mind visiting NYC at all. It would probably be
do me a world of good. It would definately be something
different.
I'm sure that one day I will make it up that way.
Terry
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11-10-2006, 12:07 AM #26Originally Posted by RichZ
I think maybe you don't know any better...
Actually, to be serious... it seems to me the world has changed a lot during our lifetime. People are a lot more ME focused than they used to be. The guy that accidentally kicked you had no concern for you... he was focused on himself... you got in his way, your cast likely hurt him when he kicked it -- how dare you infringe on his space! See... it's all in your point of view.
In my experience, major metro areas have always tended more toward that "me" focus than rural areas... that's why Terry sees it as so different. I can relate to his view...I was raised in rural area of western Pennsylvania... 23-mi to the nearest grocery store. When I graduated from college I went to work in central NJ. The guy in the office across the hall started about the same time and was from the Bronx. He and his wife moved to an apartment in the same complex where I lived... in a typical suburban neighborhood. He used to say he lived in the "sticks"... I used to say I lived in the "city". I told him he didn't know what the "sticks" were. One weekend they did a getaway to the Poconos... he came back and told me he now understood "what the sticks really were". I told him to go to rural Montana someday and then tell me again what "the sticks really are".All our responses are based on our points of reference... and most everyone has a different set of references to draw upon. For all you know, that guy was from some other part of the world and was just ignoring the space around him so he didn't have to cope. In his native culture pushing and shoving might be commonplace... in other parts of the world that's common.
BTW, that's why I left NJ 20+ years later and moved to Arizona... so I didn't have to cope with the greater NYC metro area anymore... and it worked for about 15 years. But now Phoenix has become a metro area. Alaska is starting to look better and better. I guess I'm just to ME focused....Last edited by azjoe; 11-10-2006 at 12:11 AM.
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11-10-2006, 04:37 AM #27
Joe,
Actually I think it was a woman. I guess that just adds to your point.
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11-10-2006, 04:45 AM #28Originally Posted by RichZ
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11-10-2006, 02:14 PM #29
Josh,
That is probably true for most people. I personally find that people who consider themselves liberals are less likely to listen to your opinion. I consider myself conservative yet I enjoy listening to other peoples point of view. So are the conservatives really the liberals and the liberals really the conservatives. Hummm
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11-13-2006, 03:42 AM #30Originally Posted by RichZ
Thre's also a cultural aspect. Tokyo ha sthe people crowded together more than almost anywhere. The walls between rooms are literally paper thin, and between apartments not much better. The culture has learned to deal with it and produced extremely polite people. NYC is just the opposite.