
Onemunki says: We live in a world of genuine tragedy, starvation and terror. So, after hearing stories of cruise line passengers complaining at the air conditioning breaking down, what stories of sheer single-minded self-pity get your goat?
( , Thu 1 Mar 2012, 12:00)
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I was driving merrily on my way to work today, when I stopped at some lights, and some clearly insensitive fuckers had cable-tied bunches of flowers to the nearby railings.
Ok, so someone died there. I get it. But I was in quite a good mood up until that point. I did not need my happiness being somewhat interrupted by this forced reminder about what was probably a tragic incident that happened to someone I don't even know.
Thanks for that. Next time, make a donation to charity or something. For slithery fuck's sake, if you want to waste your money on remembering them, go to the pub and have a drink in their honour.
Stop ruining my day!
( , Thu 8 Mar 2012, 8:50, 14 replies)

in fact, have 10, and then see how many wasters you can mow over on the way home.
No jury would convict, they knew the risks when they tried crossing the road.
( , Thu 8 Mar 2012, 14:17, closed)

fucking shrines on every bloody tree. Put there by people who'd never even met the woman. Next it'll be flowers every time someone carks it in EastEnders.
( , Thu 8 Mar 2012, 9:54, closed)

( , Thu 8 Mar 2012, 11:03, closed)

"Yes, but the council don't listen to you any more, do they? Not since you complained about those flowers"
"Well I didn't know there'd been an accident!"
( , Thu 8 Mar 2012, 10:48, closed)

Now THERE is a first world problem.
( , Thu 8 Mar 2012, 13:54, closed)

Most odd; it's not brilliant but it does make me laugh
( , Thu 8 Mar 2012, 16:46, closed)

Now I understand grief and mourning, and the need to have a concrete physical focus for your emotion. But I don't understand the desire to mark the place where the loved-one died, as opposed to where they were laid to rest.
Personally I think I'd want nothing to do with the place they died. I'd probably drive a different way to avoid it.
( , Thu 8 Mar 2012, 11:01, closed)

but on further reflection decided that I actually probably would want to visit the place (maybe not immediately), and i probably would visit it quite often - if it was the place that my loved one spent their final moments.
But I certainly wouldn't want to put up some kind of memorial thing on the spot. I somehow find that disturbing.
( , Thu 8 Mar 2012, 11:44, closed)

I wonder what will happen when some roadworks come along and they have to dig it up or move it or something. Actually the inevitable outcome will probably be a letter to the Mail.
( , Thu 8 Mar 2012, 11:54, closed)

( , Thu 8 Mar 2012, 11:50, closed)

Round my way, there's a bike painted white at the junction where someone was killed by a lorry. It's covered in gaudy tat and long-dead flowers and has been chained up there for at least a year.
Not only is it a fucking eyesore, but if I was killed riding by a bike, I wouldn't want people's lasting memory of me being defined by my death. To top it all off, it was his own fault for riding down the inside of a left-turning lorry, as so it's basically a shrine to his own stupidity.
( , Thu 8 Mar 2012, 15:44, closed)
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