Lewkat
Senior Member
- Location
- New Jersey, USA
The folks from Newfoundland and Labrador are extremely hospitable. We were stuck in Labrador in the mid 50s and those people were primo.Yep...sure was.
The folks from Newfoundland and Labrador are extremely hospitable. We were stuck in Labrador in the mid 50s and those people were primo.Yep...sure was.
I was hard pressed to add to this thread until I read your post- I recall when I was with my former wife who was Mexican-American- we would get some looks from people sometimes, when in public.I get the same rude stares; a Mexican American woman with a white man is still frowned on in parts of our nation, unfortunately. Do I care? Of course not.
@Pinky
Only those who have experienced 'this' will understand @Nathan Thanks for understanding.I was hard pressed to add to this thread until I read your post- I recall when I was with my former wife who was Mexican-American- we would get some looks from people sometimes, when in public.
By "in parts of our nation" you must be referring to the stupider parts. Los estupidos.I get the same rude stares; a Mexican American woman with a white man is still frowned on in parts of our nation, unfortunately. Do I care? Of course not.
@Pinky
Good, I’m glad ignorant people don’t bother you
Hi Ruby Rose: Your story reminds me of the time we went to a senior luncheon in the city of Steinbach. It was at the senior center. My wife & I tried to sit with these 2 ladies because they had 2 empty chairs at their table. We were told that we could not sit there as the chairs were reserved for their friends who are still coming. Talk about "stuck in the mud" women.I am sorry to hear that but am not surprised as I presently live in Rural Manitoba and have done so for ten years and I am still the 'newbie'. I have actually approached a few people in town and was informed that they had no need for 'a new friend' as they had all lived there for many, many years. To say I was rather stunned with this response would be putting it mildly. Perhaps it is because I am part French? Anyways, I get along great with all the animals (and there are many) on the ranch and I sleep good with the silence about me.
Your experience at the senior center is something I've heard about a lot from my niece-in-law; she was an activities director for years at seniors/independent living/assisted living centers and she said that was common at all the places she worked, that for new people at the centers, it was like being the new kid at first day of junior high (middle) school; even though there was never official assigned seating, the "cool kids" (the seniors who'd been there the longest) would not allow newcomers to sit at their tables and were unfriendly for a long time toward newcomers. (She thought it was caused by the fact that at the living places, you had people who really didn;t want to be there, they'd rather be still in their 40s and in their nice big homes, so when people are unhappy they act like snotty adolescents and teenagers.)Hi Ruby Rose: Your story reminds me of the time we went to a senior luncheon in the city of Steinbach. It was at the senior center. My wife & I tried to sit with these 2 ladies because they had 2 empty chairs at their table. We were told that we could not sit there as the chairs were reserved for their friends who are still coming. Talk about "stuck in the mud" women.
Everytime we went any place in Steinbach we were always asked the same 2 questions:
1. What is your name? They wanted to know if we had Mennonite names. We did not!
2. What church do we belong to? Steinbach had 31 churches when we lived there.
Talk about a city where the seniors all had some sort of small "village" mentality. LOL
Memories...lots of memories..I have been to Steinbach. One of my problems was trying to get a seat on the bus!!! It was always being saved!!!Hi Ruby Rose: Your story reminds me of the time we went to a senior luncheon in the city of Steinbach. It was at the senior center. My wife & I tried to sit with these 2 ladies because they had 2 empty chairs at their table. We were told that we could not sit there as the chairs were reserved for their friends who are still coming. Talk about "stuck in the mud" women.
Everytime we went any place in Steinbach we were always asked the same 2 questions:
1. What is your name? They wanted to know if we had Mennonite names. We did not!
2. What church do we belong to? Steinbach had 31 churches when we lived there.
Talk about a city where the seniors all had some sort of small "village" mentality. LOL
I agree with you. Parisians are quite rude. Although I loved seeing some of the sights (Notre Dame cathedral!), I didn't see anything romantic about Paris, either.I'll second that...Parisians are verrry rude...... it always makes me laugh when people say they'd love to visit Romantic Paris.. *ugh*
I have never met friendlier or more helpful people than I have in NYC and I've been around. Maybe you don't inspire those qualities in strangers? I do. That's part of it.
Somehow, even in my hometown, I'm always told or asked: "You're not from here, are you?" Anywhere, I've travelled to, until recently, I heard that moniker.The time that jumps to memory was when we were posted (once more) from Calgary, Alberta to Toronto, Ontario. With every posting, I have list in hand to register kids in school, dentist and doctor, etc. As I entered the busy waiting room of a clinic and waited my turn, I gabbed away but no responses. Maybe they didn't approve of my cowboys boots or jeans! Then a voice from across the room addressed to me stated loud and clear, "You're not from here, are you?" He was an elderly dude and others enjoyed silence. Needless to say, I did not register there...I merely left.
Just like London....What was the friendliest place, the unfriendliest place, and the strangest place I lived in. That's easy, New York City. "Strange" does not begin to describe NYC. Where else do the homeless march in parades? Where else does the "Five Families" do not refer to the socially elite? NYC has the tallest buildings, and the biggest rats. It can be unfriendly, you can be alone in a crowd of thousands. And it's the friendliest, everybody gets thrown together, so we're all in the same boat.
yep ..Turkey was always friendly...still are to us when we go... and without doubt our next door neighbours the Parisians are the most rude and unfriendly...As far as friendliest....it would have to be when we were living in Yalova, Turkiye in the late 60s and early 70s.
At that time, everyone, and I mean everyone, loved Americans. We were treated like friends everywhere we went, even the big cities.
Unfriendliest? Paris, hands down. The rest of France was fine.