Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Other subjects

Why do old people

88 replies

codswallop · 15/12/2003 13:34

drive so bloody slowly?

and wear hats in cars?

OP posts:
GladTidings · 18/12/2003 10:39

AND ds comes too.... pushchair and all!! ...and DH comes (although he doesn't need a pushchair yet). Its like a family outing.

I'm going to shut up now coz I'm not sure what point I'm trying to make!

Bozza · 18/12/2003 10:46

I'm feeling a bit controversial these days but I sort of agree with jaybee on the days when I am working. But it all of a sudden seems different on my other days.

Bearing in mind that much of the reason I don't have much time to spare is so that I can get home to be with my child. Also get irritated by the school run just to add a bit more controversy. Why is it so much quicker to get to work in the school holidays?

Bozza · 18/12/2003 10:49

Good grief gladtidings. Sunday morning quiet??!! I went to Asda with DS a few weeks ago and loads of people were queueing outside and then when it opened there was a huge scary trolley scrum. And the previous time I went on a Sunday lunchtime there was gridlock in the carpark and it took me 40 minutes from getting in the car to exiting the car park.

Jaybee · 18/12/2003 10:56

Not sure I dare show my face here - looks like I struck a nerve!! I do understand that some people have no choice than to do their shopping at lunchtime but I do find it unfuriating when, and this is usually old people, when they have opted to shop at lunchtime then moan like mad that they have to wait for ages to get through the queue.
I do not deem myself important just a very busy working mum who has to do her weekly shop in a lunchtime.

Jaybee · 18/12/2003 10:57

Bozza - thanks for owning up to seeing my point of view.

GladTidings · 18/12/2003 10:58

Bozza - Its a 24 hr Tesco. Don't know why that makes a difference, but it does. THe busiest part on a Sunday morning is the restaurant!

BluStocking · 18/12/2003 11:30

I blame the selfish checkout operators for wanting to eat lunch. Can't they be drip-fed on their stools?

Ummm, as I approach my dotage, I think I would rather be criticised for my shopping habits than be accused of smelling, being mad and dirty, showing my knickers and being a top-to-toe affront to Trinny and Susannah, so not quite sure why Jaybee got it in the neck!

Gone off to buy plastic rainhood and wet myself...again.

BluStocking · 18/12/2003 11:31

Bozza: It's quicker to get to work in the school hols 'cos all those working parents who drive their cars to work at rush hour are off on hol with their kids!

Bozza · 18/12/2003 11:57

Well they must get good holiday entitlements then blustocking.

Glad to be appreciated jaybee.

gladtidings now that I've found out who you are I know you are in Scotland so maybe you have different Sunday trading laws to us. Because although our Asda is 24 hour Mon-Sat it is only allowed to open 6 hours on a Sunday. But yes the cafe is also packed out on sunday am.

Jaybee · 18/12/2003 12:03

Wish I could have the whole of the summer off with my kids!!

Bozza · 18/12/2003 12:08

Well Jaybee do like me - have a baby due in May so you can start maternity leave at Easter

I agree with you really though - see post below.

BluStocking · 18/12/2003 12:11

If they each get two weeks, that's a third off the road at any one time...and since BOTH parents might drive their cars to work, presumably only one does the 'school run', so the effect of hols has twice the effect on commuter traffic as it does on school run traffic! QED!

(I am not a 'school-runner', and I DO drive to work, I just think the whole issue smacks of have-another-go-at-mums-who-aren't-as-important-as-real-workers)

Angeliz · 18/12/2003 12:17

Jaybee why don't you make a packed lunch to take to work then you wouldn't have to see any shoppers, let alone SAHM's with nothing better to do than annoy you

GladTidings · 18/12/2003 12:18

BluStocking.... Just as much as Having a go at those women that work who aren't as important as real Mums.

Sorry... referring to another thread there.

Seriously though, I don't think it was meant to be like that.... was it???

GladTidings · 18/12/2003 12:21

Angeliz - I don't think she meant when she was out getting her lunch..... I think she meant that on her lunchhour she had to do her weekly grocery shopping.

Jaybee · 18/12/2003 12:22

Personally, I walk my kids to school then go back home to collect my car to drive to work - dh goes into work early to enable him to get home by school finish time at least a couple of times a week. I think that it is good for a child to understand that they should walk to local things and it gives them an understanding of road safety.
There are loads of parents who drive their kids to school (some justifiably) but loads who could easily walk there whether the parents work or not.
Anyway, I will stop there as I am off topic!!

BluStocking · 18/12/2003 12:25

No, GT, I didn't mean anything like that! (Have I implied that on another thread???? Help! Doesn't sound like me!) I'm all confused now...Entirely my own fault, just don't like anyone being blamed for going about their own business...anyone who uses a car in London (like me!)is a menace, whether to do their shopping at lunch time, commuting or the school run!

Ooops, must go, geriatric incontinence pants leaking again, they don't make them like they used to in the war

Jaybee · 18/12/2003 12:26

Angeliz - I do bring packed lunch to work. However, I often have to purchase things like bread, ham, fruit etc. along with the rest of my weekly shop in order for me to do so.
And before anyone suggests it - I do my large monthly shop between 10pm and midnight.
Anyone else want to have a go at me??

Angeliz · 18/12/2003 12:27

oh o.k gladtidings thanks! Takes me alot longer than an hour!

GladTidings · 18/12/2003 12:37

BLuStocking - NO! I didn't mean that you had implied that on another thread, just that there is another thread on the go at the minute that implies that. Sorry, didn't mean to make you panic.

Zerub · 18/12/2003 12:37

This is one of my favourite poems; it seemed to be appropriate to this thread. Found it on the internet so I guess its ok to reproduce it here.

Warning - When I Am an Old Woman I Shall Wear Purple

By Jenny Joseph

When I am an old woman, I shall wear purple
with a red hat that doesn't go, and doesn't suit me.
And I shall spend my pension on brandy and summer gloves
and satin candles, and say we've no money for butter.
I shall sit down on the pavement when I am tired
and gobble up samples in shops and press alarm bells
and run my stick along the public railings
and make up for the sobriety of my youth.
I shall go out in my slippers in the rain
and pick the flowers in other people's gardens
and learn to spit.

You can wear terrible shirts and grow more fat
and eat three pounds of sausages at a go
or only bread and pickles for a week
and hoard pens and pencils and beer nuts and things in boxes.

But now we must have clothes that keep us dry
and pay our rent and not swear in the street
and set a good example for the children.
We must have friends to dinner and read the papers.
But maybe I ought to practice a little now?
So people who know me are not too shocked and surprised
When suddenly I am old, and start to wear purple.

Bozza · 18/12/2003 12:38

Don't worry Jaybee I'm your friend

Actually it was me who brought up the school run thing. I only said it irritated me - not that I was being fair or rational. Like I said about the shops at lunch time - I develop a different perspective when I'm not working.

And gladtidings I know which other thread you mean - because I felt a bit like that on there too.

Zerub · 18/12/2003 12:41

TBH I'm quite sad about the fact that I don't actually know any old people at the moment. They often have such a different perspective on life. I'm reduced to chatting to them in the dentists (as I don't have any as friends, I mean). I think my town needs an "adopt-a-granny" scheme. Probably there are lots of lonely old women out there who would love to come round for a cup of tea and a chat - and then play with dd for half an hour while I go on Mumsnet

BluStocking · 18/12/2003 12:43

Zerub: Love that.
GT Thanks! It'shh my own fawt, teef keep shlipping..can't make myshelf clear...
Hey Jaybee! I was sticking up for you before the school-run tangent!

salt · 18/12/2003 12:54

Zerub - I think that poem is lovely.

I've decided that I shall wear purple and red when I am old.

Swipe left for the next trending thread