Look, everyone knows and understands that the buses are currently at capacity (thanks I-5 construction) and it’s only going to get worse in the coming months (thanks FIFA). So let’s go over, as a class, some rules for the bus that appear to me to be common sense but are apparently not to other people:
1) Do not sit diagonal on your seat so that your knees and feet are in the area of the seat next to you, forcing the person on the aisle to have a whole leg and butt cheek hanging over the edge of your seat
2) Keep moving up the aisle if you are standing in it. People cannot go ghost through you and there is, in fact, plenty of aisle space behind you.
3) For the love of all that is holy, PUT YOUR FREAKING BACKPACK ON YOUR LAP AND NOT THE SEAT NEXT TO YOU. No, you don’t get to look annoyed when someone asks you to move it to sit there. No, you aren’t being clever by putting your barely full, tiny backpack in the window seat instead. You are being a privileged inconvenience for the rest of the commuters trying to get home in a timely fashion who just want to sit and disassociate until they get off the bus.
Feel free to add your own below (with kindness and respect, please). My runner up suggestion is to use the signal pull freely, even if it has already been pulled, to let the person in the aisle seat next to you that you are getting off, instead just shuffling your belongings and looking at them like they should be able to read your mind. Everyone can see the signal pull, everyone knows what it means, and it requires no talking.
Note: this rant does not apply to anyone who needs accommodations of any kind to ride the bus. I still think we should expect a certain level of courtesy and behavior from anyone taking public transit as part of the social contract, but obviously if you need more room for your assistive devices, you get more room for your assistive devices.
submitted by /u/Comfortable_Basket54
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