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Idont believe it

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ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

JustJohn

JustJohn Report 3 Apr 2013 21:59

SueC. I was pleased to see you had read the fat thread I put up. I do have an opinion that there is a correlation between overweight and laziness. I expect I will get RR'd again for saying that, but that is what I currently think.

I thought that article was interesting. It did not support my opinion. Though it is obvious that some doctors do agree with my opinion, otherwise that article would not have been writen.

It would make a good debate, i think. But someone wil just rr it, I feel sure. Shame imo

KittytheLearnerCook

KittytheLearnerCook Report 3 Apr 2013 22:07

Personally I don't care what shape, size or lifestyle anyone has as long as they have a kind soul.

Kindness and empathy go a long way to make life enjoyable both for ourselves and those whos lives we touch <3

*wonders if the word whos needs an apostrophe somewhere* :-S

supercrutch

supercrutch Report 3 Apr 2013 22:09

Please try not assuming, guessing or estimating?

In order to get a valid point across you'd be taken more seriously using facts. They aren't hard to find with some searching. You leave yourself open to criticism by posting a comment that could wrongly encompass many GR members.



SheilaSomerset

SheilaSomerset Report 3 Apr 2013 22:12

Yes, some people are overweight and eat too much and don't exercise. Some people are overweight and can't do anything about it. Some people are dieting, some are trying to, some are happy with the way they are. You could ditto all that for skinny people.

But does it really MATTER. As Kitty says, it's the person that counts. I've met a few 'fattist' people and just don't get their attitude...

Suzanne

Suzanne Report 3 Apr 2013 22:21

for all of you that know me,you will know that my son had the cheek to park in a disabled bay at our local hos at 3am when his 3yr old son was rushed to hos in a serious condition,he was fined,he went through certain guidlines and the fine went up to over 600 pounds that we had to pay to the county council.i know people hate non disabled people parking in their spaces but this was 3am and the 32 spaces were empty and opposite the AE where his son was taken,
ive seen disabled people park in their spaces and walk around their cars and lift their scooters out and get into them,the first time i saw that,i thought i was seeing things,
today i went into my local hos to do a resus course,while i was there i decided to ask personal how many disabled parking spaces the hos had,i was gobsmacked when they told me they had four bays totaling 125 spaces :-(

of course lots of people are disabled and rightly so.but a lot take the pi**
just like everyone else :-(

eRRolSheep

eRRolSheep Report 3 Apr 2013 22:26

Kitty don't worry about the apostrophe - it's whose
Anyway you are far too busy with your new found love of the kitchen to bother about such trivialities's's's
However, I agree wholeheartedly with what you say

KittytheLearnerCook

KittytheLearnerCook Report 3 Apr 2013 22:30

Oh thank you Errol.......... :-D :-D <3

jax

jax Report 3 Apr 2013 22:36

Suzanne

Are you saying a disabled person should not be able to get their own scooter out of their car? I have met a few who do this, would be a bit tricky not to, as they live on their own.

Oh these people have MS

eRRolSheep

eRRolSheep Report 3 Apr 2013 22:37

you are more than welcome Kitty - just save some of your souffle for me

supercrutch

supercrutch Report 3 Apr 2013 22:45

I wish the three hospitals I use had 125 disabled bays. We rarely find one so it's drop me off whilst himself parks anywhere he can! Not great if I'm having a MH attack which mimics a stroke and my left side is useless.

Eeyore13

Eeyore13 Report 3 Apr 2013 23:08

I now have "bay envy" :-(

AnnCardiff

AnnCardiff Report 3 Apr 2013 23:14

you can get ointment for that I think :-D

MR_MAGOO

MR_MAGOO Report 3 Apr 2013 23:21

Seems we have the "Parking Bay City Rollers" on here now..... :-D :-S

Eeyore13

Eeyore13 Report 3 Apr 2013 23:58

:-D

Suzanne

Suzanne Report 4 Apr 2013 00:01

check out disabled bays at my local hos;

jax

disabled scooters weigh a ton((and ive tried to lift one) if you can lift one out of your boot how can you be disabled,i cant do it,and noting wrong with me,

:-(

jax

jax Report 4 Apr 2013 00:19

I know they weigh a ton and three years ago when I first got one I probably could lift it in and out of the car if I needed to. I could'nt walk more than 50 mtres with out having to rest, that is the point of having a scooter. One of the people I know who has a scooter plays wheel chair basketball, so there is nothing much wrong with his arms for lifting it in and out of his car

SylviaInCanada

SylviaInCanada Report 4 Apr 2013 00:31

Suzanne ..........


you are being just as ignorant about some aspects as others on this site.

I thought you were a nurse??? So you should have known about this.



Of course people can move their scooters around, if it is a mobility problem that they have.

If it is MS, or another nerve and muscle disability, then it might be more of a problem.


You can even buy lightweight, folding scooters over here that make it even easier for someone to have access to the outside world.

supercrutch

supercrutch Report 4 Apr 2013 03:05

As it's my legs that are a problem, now I have had my shoulder surgery I probably could lift out one of the Luggie range of folding scooters.Maybe with a lot of cursing. I think they weight about 52lbs. If I was a man I don't think it would be a problem at all if upper body strength was good.

If the boot of the car has a straight floor and no raised perimeter that would be very easy to deal with as in estate cars and some saloons.

I don't care whether they can lift half a ton as long as they have a genuine reason for their blue badge that's fine by me. It's the selfish swines that don't or use someone else's blue badge or don't have one at all I could cheerfully throttle.

No blue badge...no use of a disabled bay! and slap them with a £60 or £80 fine.

Guinevere

Guinevere Report 4 Apr 2013 07:20

On the same subject but from a different angle.

Some years ago I broke my leg in 3 places and was in plaster up to my knee. I was not allowed to put any weight on it for at least 8 weeks and struggled for several more weeks. We bought a wheelchair so I had some mobility. Crutches weren't much use because I was waiting for a carpal tunnel op so couldn't trust my hands using them.

We checked with Tesco, where we used to do our weekly shop, and they said it was ok to use a disabled bay. So we did. We got a few dirty looks about the lack of blue badge but when people saw us getting out of the car and the wheelchair being lifted out they were fine.

We also parked in a disabled bay on a street when we went on holiday so I could go into my favourite shop in Cardigan. A traffic warden said we really shouldn't have done. Now, at that point in our lives I maintain we were as entitled as any permanently disabled person to use the bay. And we would have fought it all the way if the traffic warden had given us a ticket.

Perhaps there should be more flexibility within the rules to take into account people who have restricted mobility for a short time. As Tesco did.

ChAoTicintheNewYear

ChAoTicintheNewYear Report 4 Apr 2013 08:28

On another site that I go on the possibility of a 'pink' badge has been raised for those who, for various reasons, find themselves with restricted mobility at some point in their lives.