Think Soup Nazi.
Riley ,'Potential'
Natter 57 Varieties
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Let people that are inside get out, THEN enter the elevator.
WORD
I think this is universal, because it happens on a daily basis in my office building. I've even told people, as I'm trying to exit but being delayed because they're already shoving their way on, "You know, it's a lot easier for you to get on the elevator if you just LET ME GET OFF FIRST."
All I get in return is a blank stare. Possibly drool.
Sue, I can tell you, but then I'd have to kill you. Or perhaps I'd get drop-squadded and killed myself.
There's an assumption of acquaintance, by means of shared minority. So all the black guys on my floor at work had at least said "hello" to me in my first week, and there are many white guys here who'll never say a thing. I know where they are, they know where I am.
Two friends of mine would travel for work, one white one black. The white guy was surprised at how many people the black guy seemed to know so far from home. Nah, he didn't know them. They were black, they greeted each other. It's a thing.
I was trying to put my finger on something about Anansi Boys that had been evading me--people were saying that the way they realised the race in the book was that the narrator only mentioned the race of white people, ergo the narrator was black. But in my experience, black people damned well notice other black people's race, and are fairly likely to use it in a description or retelling.
I can't characterize Kansas City. People will generally be helpful if asked and driving doesn't seem very cutthroat.
I think it's easier just not to eat when I'm in NYC. After all, Boston is just a couple hours away by train, and I always have such lovely chats with the baristas and short-order cooks when I get there.
I think this is universal, because it happens on a daily basis in my office building. I've even told people, as I'm trying to exit but being delayed because they're already shoving their way on, "You know, it's a lot easier for you to get on the elevator if you just LET ME GET OFF FIRST."
Those people don't bother me as much as the ones who are stopped right in front of the elevator or escalator just to have a conversation. At least I can understand the impulse behind the other.
Counter ordering is definitely an advanced application of the two rules.
I avoid counter places for that reason. There's always far too many rules. So I haven't been to Zabar's or Katz's. I get het up as it is at my lunch deli with the unguessable line location. (next to the crackers! THE CRACKERS!)
I already knew ita's black people greeting rules! I feel so well-read now.
I can't characterize Kansas City. People will generally be helpful if asked and driving doesn't seem very cutthroat.
IME there the driving was very pleasant, but passerby would say hi or smile at you, which was disconcerting.
Doesn't this make sense as a general rule, no matter where you are? I mean, really.
My theory is that they weren't raised with public transportation, and therefore never learned this as a rule. They just need a week where they constantly get bodychecked and barked at by angry commuters, and it will become pavlovian.