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I try to get there earlier, but it's hard when you have to drive up the A14 to even get home in the first place
Anyway: the bar shuts at midnight on a Friday, but they leave me in peace, staring out of the window and thinking of things, until 12:45 at the earliest.
Tonight I left at 12:45 and they were still trying to herd people out from under the arch
Still, only one more Friday night before it's gone for ever
It's look left, look right, look left again. When it's safe to cross, do so and keep looking and listening as you cross.
Because I won't be there when you cross the road.
I regularly see young people walking out of the FMB bar, straight into the (three-lane) road, without looking anywhere because they're engrossed by a conversation in which they are participating on their mobile telephonic apparatus. Given that it's a busy road, the screeching of brakes is a given; yet they never even seem to notice that they've escaped death by inches
Even more imbecilic is when they notice the taxi that has managed to stop before mowing them down, and shout excitedly that "Oh, it's OK, there's a taxi here! I'll be there soon" - again, without realising that said taxi managed to come to a halt about six inches from them, and already has a fare.
I've made a mental note that, if I ever have reason to drive around town after ten o'clock in the evening, I must assume that every single pedestrian is about to run under my wheels.
I can drive past an infant school at playtime without having to think that
Not quite that bad. I could probably get away with dark jeans-that-don't-look-too-much-like-jeans and button-down-shirts-designed-as-smart-casual-but-which-look-smart-enough. But if they're going to be so retarded as to have an official dress code, which is posted on the intranet, and drawn to your attention when you start (with a sense of regret - even the management don't like it, but there are greater powers at work), then I'll wear trousers with creases down the legs (and elsewhere, together with some stains of uncertain origin) and shirts that are clearly more expensive than the permies choose to buy for work
An email came round the other day saying that, for that "Children in Need" thing next Friday, you can wear whatever you like to work in return for a £2 donation. This strikes me as egregious at best. I'll be at a conference that day, and will wear whatever I damn well please; but if I was due at ClientOrg, I would refuse to take advantage of this "opportunity".
If I want to make a donation to a charity, I'll do it because I want to, not because I want somebody to throw me a bone.
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