melayneseahawk (
melayneseahawk) wrote2006-12-07 07:12 pm
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Dear Sir Who Gave Me His Seat on the Bus,
Now, while I'm usually the first person to bemoan "chivalry" as misogynistic (and to run to open the door for my male friends, much to their chagrin), I really appreciate you giving up your seat for me. I know you were doing it to give the little waif of a girl a seat, but I took it because the damn meds are playing havoc with my blood pressure. At the time you gave up your seat, I was feeling rather faint, and not looking forward to standing for almost half an hour on a warm, crowded bus. Disaster waiting for a place to happen, let me tell you.
I know I thanked you on the bus, but I want to do it again. You made my day a little bit easier.
Merry Christmas (as odd as it is for atheist, blasphemous little me to say it).
Me
I know I thanked you on the bus, but I want to do it again. You made my day a little bit easier.
Merry Christmas (as odd as it is for atheist, blasphemous little me to say it).
Me
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*Or rather, the facet of chivalry which you're discussing above. There is of course more to it, but that's an irrelevant part of the discussion. Unless you see a need to bring loyalty to the sovereign into this discussion. :P
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There. Women are not the weaker sex.
And no, loyalty to the sovereign isn't involved.
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Yes, you can open your own door. Nobody denyin' that. But if someone thinks highly of you and wishes to hold the door, why is that a problem?
chivalry
(Anonymous) 2006-12-08 05:55 pm (UTC)(link)I'm trying to remember the orgins of the practice... I know that they are false construct based on romanticized ideals about past behavior.
If, however, you felt faint, you probably looked faint, and thats good enough reason to give up a seat, in my world.
Re: chivalry
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Don't mind me, I'm a little nuts at the moment.
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It's always touching to hear about these random acts of kindness on buses. Goodness knows I rarely see any.
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