Innocuous things that make you irrationally angry (a list thread)

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My boss is making me irrationally angry atm.

He is such a flake. He asked me y'day if I could attend a work xmas party a partner telco of ours is throwing. With 2 days notice. A week before I go on leave/interstate.

I hate having to say no, but dude, wth. If he cant go what makes him think my time's less valuable?

he also told me off this morning for telling a customer to contact our support team for help with something.

...uuhhh.

Sookie G Stackedgarten (Trayce), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:01 (fifteen years ago)

x-post you misunderstand, he won't be coming! i emailed him back and said, in a nicer way than this, that i didn't run the book group but i'd rather if he found another one.

I see what this is (Local Garda), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:01 (fifteen years ago)

Which floor was built first?

(Okay, I've hammered my point.)

http://tinyurl.com/ccccccccccccccccc (Pleasant Plains), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 09:35 (25 minutes ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

What does drive me nuts is when you're in a building that's built on an incline, because the 'ground' level isn't, depending on which side you go in. The way they sometimes get around that is by allocating a G floor and a LG floor, but if you're in the lift and you only use one building entrance you don't always know which is which.

leo tldrstoy (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:04 (fifteen years ago)

The main hospital in Oxford is really confusing because of the hill it's on - the floor at "ground level" to the back car park is 2 above the floor at "ground level" to the front.

moiré eel (a passing spacecadet), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:08 (fifteen years ago)

We have a shopping centre + office tower in Melbourne (Melb Central) that's built on a hill and a 45° angle. I worked there for a year and I still don't know how to get to anything.

leo tldrstoy (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:11 (fifteen years ago)

I always get so lost in the lower floors of MC.

Sookie G Stackedgarten (Trayce), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:12 (fifteen years ago)

on board now? good

leo tldrstoy (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:12 (fifteen years ago)

Zuh?

Sookie G Stackedgarten (Trayce), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:18 (fifteen years ago)

I also think that adding letters to building floors gives people licence to go ott with it (LB, B, LG, G, UG, M, 1, 2 etc). Just number the farken floors.

leo tldrstoy (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:19 (fifteen years ago)

Oh and while I'm here

- Office buildings that name their meeting rooms after things (Earth, Oxygen, Trees, Soil) causing you to miss a meeting because you can't find the bloody thing.

leo tldrstoy (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:22 (fifteen years ago)

I'm pretty sure in 50 or 100 years Melbourne Central will be revealed to be some kind of social experiment conducted by architects. It's still a mystery to me.

Square-Panted Sponge Robert (VegemiteGrrrl), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:23 (fifteen years ago)

My brain's still in "melb central has diamaru and not much else in it" mode, even after all these years, so the fancy new basement levels make me all baffled. But I have no sense of direction.

Sookie G Stackedgarten (Trayce), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:24 (fifteen years ago)

Daimaru is now a load of furniture shops, or something, and if you go high enough (that is if you can find the escalators (and if two people are not hogging the escalator grr)) there's a cinema and a gym, or something. There's a pub up there, too, which could be fun if you've had 2-3 beers and want to leave the complex.

leo tldrstoy (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:26 (fifteen years ago)

For the longest time I thought of it like a museum, like something you visit once to see the Shot Tower but never have any actual reason to go there bc wtf is Daimaru anyway.

but later on I discovered that I loved their food court and then you couldn't get me out of there. And I couldn't get myself out there bc I was always fucking LOST

Square-Panted Sponge Robert (VegemiteGrrrl), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:27 (fifteen years ago)

http://www.travelvictoria.com.au/images/regions/melbourne/city/22.jpg

complete with escalator hogs xp

leo tldrstoy (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:29 (fifteen years ago)

The top floor also has that cool sushi train place.

..sorry we've gone way off topic here.

Sookie G Stackedgarten (Trayce), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:29 (fifteen years ago)

I think if I worked there i'd go postal listening to that giant watch play "waltzing matilda" every hour fwiw.

Sookie G Stackedgarten (Trayce), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:30 (fifteen years ago)

You can't go there on the hour because of the HORDES of tourists waiting for it to go off gaargh irrational anger.

leo tldrstoy (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:31 (fifteen years ago)

Also I don't see how 'omg america = bigger than yu0' has anything to do with any of this.

― leo tldrstoy (Autumn Almanac), Monday, December 13, 2010 5:48 PM Bookmark

It has to do with it not being unreasonable to think that the way the vast majority of first-language English speakers do something is the standard way of doing it. And BTW, if anything is "butthurt" it's being upset that Americans don't recognize the way things are done in other places. It reminds me of when people from Central and South America get upset about people from the States calling themselves "Americans" -- "you're not the only Americans," etc. (1) We don't have another convenient name given the difficulty of deriving one from "United States" and (2) I don't believe that South and Central Americans actually call themselves Americans except when they're trying to make this tedious point.

mandatorily joined parties (Hurting 2), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:32 (fifteen years ago)

way to move on, dude...

Square-Panted Sponge Robert (VegemiteGrrrl), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:33 (fifteen years ago)

xxposts arrrg I totally forgot the Waltzing Matilda clock.

Square-Panted Sponge Robert (VegemiteGrrrl), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:34 (fifteen years ago)

It reminds me of when people from Central and South America get upset about people from the States calling themselves "Americans" -- "you're not the only Americans," etc.

Ah yeah I worked with one of those. They never volunteer an alternative demonym, although once a (non-the-Americas) friend proposed 'United Statians'.

leo tldrstoy (Autumn Almanac), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:35 (fifteen years ago)

Yanks.

Sookie G Stackedgarten (Trayce), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:58 (fifteen years ago)

(yes, we realise the term is misused in Aus, etc etc)

Sookie G Stackedgarten (Trayce), Monday, 13 December 2010 23:58 (fifteen years ago)

Americans who call northerners Yankees don't realize that the term means something else in the rest of the world.

mandatorily joined parties (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:00 (fifteen years ago)

lol

Sookie G Stackedgarten (Trayce), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:00 (fifteen years ago)

I have to admit, its amusing watching the splutrtered reaction to our phrase "Septics" when you explain it.

Sookie G Stackedgarten (Trayce), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:01 (fifteen years ago)

NOT A CHANCE, HOT PANTS. The so-called British spellings were transmitted to the rest of the English-speaking world FROM BRITAIN. We just decided, for better or worse, not to keep them. So step off.

Uh, I think you mean 'hot trousers' *hides*

I don't really care about US spellings despite otherwise being a spelling & grammar snob. I do hate 'jewelry' though.

Not the real Village People, Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:01 (fifteen years ago)

to be fair, my french co-worker just told me about how a bank teller was asking him how they celebrate thanksgiving in France. "We don't have pilgrims! We don't have Indians! How can we have Thanksgiving?!"

mandatorily joined parties (Hurting 2), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:01 (fifteen years ago)

omg I've been asked this multiple times here in the US. Part of me wants to say, look, Australians (well, Britishers at the time) didn't fuck around being friends with the natives on Van Diemen's Land. We pretty much got right down to the killing as soon as possible. They're far enough away from everyone they didn't have to put on a good show for the folks back home.

Square-Panted Sponge Robert (VegemiteGrrrl), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:10 (fifteen years ago)

Ha. Thats a sadly otm way of putting it.

Sookie G Stackedgarten (Trayce), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:22 (fifteen years ago)

Yeah, we don't have Thanksgiving Day, we have Native Slaugher Day (26 January).

leo tldrstoy (Autumn Almanac), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:23 (fifteen years ago)

On a similar but probably reversed note, I get all IA on ANZAC Day when the Australian press exhaustively covers Australian events commemorating the Australians who fought and died. Two of the letters in the word 'ANZAC' refer to four million people, see if you can guess what they all have in common ffs.

leo tldrstoy (Autumn Almanac), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:25 (fifteen years ago)

(and, by extension, Australians who are surprised when they learn that New Zealand does ANZAC Day too)

leo tldrstoy (Autumn Almanac), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:26 (fifteen years ago)

Yeah that gets pretty WTF. "Argle bargle what would those sheep shovers know about battlers anyway who's for a game of twoup"

Square-Panted Sponge Robert (VegemiteGrrrl), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:30 (fifteen years ago)

We don't know what it STANDS for, we just like the way it sounds. "ANZAC" -- see, it's got a nice ring.

Jesus Christ, the apple tree! (Laurel), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:30 (fifteen years ago)

It's about biscuits innit?

Square-Panted Sponge Robert (VegemiteGrrrl), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:31 (fifteen years ago)

http://www.istockphoto.com/file_thumbview_approve/9397086/2/istockphoto_9397086-australian-anzac-biscuits.jpg

Square-Panted Sponge Robert (VegemiteGrrrl), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:32 (fifteen years ago)

ANZAC = Australian Nom Znom Anzac Cookies

leo tldrstoy (Autumn Almanac), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:33 (fifteen years ago)

hahahah

Square-Panted Sponge Robert (VegemiteGrrrl), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:34 (fifteen years ago)

Fuck I hate those biscuits /being on topic

Sookie G Stackedgarten (Trayce), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:34 (fifteen years ago)

;_;

Square-Panted Sponge Robert (VegemiteGrrrl), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:35 (fifteen years ago)

It has to do with it not being unreasonable to think that the way the vast majority of first-language English speakers do something is the standard way of doing it. And BTW, if anything is "butthurt" it's being upset that Americans don't recognize the way things are done in other places. It reminds me of when people from Central and South America get upset about people from the States calling themselves "Americans" -- "you're not the only Americans," etc. (1) We don't have another convenient name given the difficulty of deriving one from "United States" and (2) I don't believe that South and Central Americans actually call themselves Americans except when they're trying to make this tedious point.

eh, this isn't true. the americas are called "america" and things and people from the americas are often referred to as "american" in the spanish language.

À la recherche du temps Pardew (jim in glasgow), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:35 (fifteen years ago)

I love Anzac bikkies. Though honestly I love them more since I've been away. Finding a tin of Golden Syrup is srsly like uncovering the holy grail. Suggestions of subbing maple syrup: GIT TAE FUCK

Square-Panted Sponge Robert (VegemiteGrrrl), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:37 (fifteen years ago)

I think I like the idea of anzac biscuits more than the actual biscuits. Nice history behind them, too.

xp Is there a unique demonym for US people in Spanish?

leo tldrstoy (Autumn Almanac), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:38 (fifteen years ago)

Waste of good maple syrup, iirc.

Jesus Christ, the apple tree! (Laurel), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:38 (fifteen years ago)

Definitely. And it tastes all wrong.

Square-Panted Sponge Robert (VegemiteGrrrl), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:40 (fifteen years ago)

the demonym for US people, although "americano" is used for that too, is "estadounidense".

À la recherche du temps Pardew (jim in glasgow), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:40 (fifteen years ago)

i.e. united statian.

À la recherche du temps Pardew (jim in glasgow), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:41 (fifteen years ago)

ah, ta

leo tldrstoy (Autumn Almanac), Tuesday, 14 December 2010 00:42 (fifteen years ago)


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