1. We've had very few donations over the year. I'm going to be short soon as some personal things are keeping me from putting up the money. If you have something small to contribute it's greatly appreciated. Please put your screen name as well so that I can give you credit. Click here: Donations
    Dismiss Notice

The Complaining and Bitching Thread

Discussion in 'General Discussions' started by ASU2003, Jan 14, 2013.

  1. ralphie250

    ralphie250 Fully Erect

    Location:
    At work..
    Sounds like we had the same day,
     
    • Like Like x 1
  2. Bought a Kindle Fire to entertain myself while traveling next week. (only 50 bucks, no complaint there) Kindle is not compatible with Tapatalk! Fuck this shit.
     
  3. Borla

    Borla Moderator Staff Member

    It used to be. I haven't used a fire for almost two years, but when I did there was a Tapatalk app in the Amazon store.
     
  4. martian

    martian Server Monkey Staff Member

    Location:
    Mars
    It's funny how nobody ever gave a shit how qualified cabinet members were until half of them were women. I guess in some peoples' minds "has a dick" is an essential qualification.
     
    • Like Like x 1
  5. Didn't see it in the app store, so I searched "Tapatalk for Kindle." Found a link that says it's not compatible with my device.
     
  6. snowy

    snowy so kawaii Staff Member

    Making decisions is hard. Waffles or breakfast sandwiches?
     
  7. Chris Noyb

    Chris Noyb Get in, buckle up, hang on, & be quiet.

    Location:
    Large City, TX
    Sigh...SIGH...s-i-g-h...S-I-G-H...sigh...SIGH...s-i-g-h...S-I-G-H...
    Sigh...SIGH...s-i-g-h...S-I-G-H...sigh...SIGH...s-i-g-h...S-I-G-H ...


    ad nauseam.





    I'm tired of hearing it, along with the accusatory tone. Example: "Pass the salt, please." With a tone that says it's my fault the salt wasn't where she wanted it to be.
     
  8. Japchae

    Japchae Very Tilted

    I'm tired of hearing that I'm stupid or a loser, constantly. It's not motivating, though that's the intent...to make me mad and more determined. It's really just making me feel sad now.
     
  9. Chris Noyb

    Chris Noyb Get in, buckle up, hang on, & be quiet.

    Location:
    Large City, TX

    Say what? IME, that type of "motivation" doesn't work well with most adults.
     
    • Like Like x 2
  10. snowy

    snowy so kawaii Staff Member

    It doesn't work well with anyone.
     
    • Like Like x 2
  11. Chris Noyb

    Chris Noyb Get in, buckle up, hang on, & be quiet.

    Location:
    Large City, TX

    I've seen it work with a very few people, usually younger folks wanting to prove everybody wrong, and it had to come from the right person. One thing I've noticed is in most cases the person wasn't too bright; the smarter ones saw right through it. The backfire/failure rate by far exceeds the success rate.
     
  12. ralphie250

    ralphie250 Fully Erect

    Location:
    At work..
    You're not stupid or a loser. You're the shit
     
    • Like Like x 3
  13. Japchae

    Japchae Very Tilted

    I'm the sober DD. No fucking with me.
    I just sat through 4 hours of karaoke. Sober. With rednecks. I deserve fucking medal. And a long nap.
     
    • Like Like x 6
  14. ralphie250

    ralphie250 Fully Erect

    Location:
    At work..
    Yes you deserve a medal
     
  15. Japchae

    Japchae Very Tilted

    Not feeling as bitchy as last night. It's raining today and I'm halfway through studying for today. Which means I can relax tonight. Everyone else is reeeeeally hungover, despite the 2am trip to the local college kid-owned Columbian restaurant for late-night empanadas, tostones, and arepas. I just wish I hadn't left the half of my strawberry-goat cheese-candied pecan-bacon salad topped with carnitas at the restaurant at the start of the night. I cheated with arepas and an empanadas. I felt it in 15m... Sick as hell today. But, Soup's On has a kick ass menu today. See, I'm balancing my bitching today...
     
    • Like Like x 4
  16. cynthetiq

    cynthetiq Administrator Staff Member Donor

    Location:
    New York City
    She should at least put out or buy you some chocolates.
     
    • Like Like x 1
  17. CinnamonGirl

    CinnamonGirl The Cheat is GROUNDED!

    I've already met the quota for rude/clueless customers. I unlocked the door nineteen minutes ago.

    It's going to be a long day.
     
    • Like Like x 1
  18. Stan

    Stan Resident Dumbass

    Location:
    Colorado
    They give medals for that? :p
     
    • Like Like x 1
  19. cynthetiq

    cynthetiq Administrator Staff Member Donor

    Location:
    New York City
    Yea it's a participatory award. Everyone gets one.
     
    • Like Like x 1
  20. Borla

    Borla Moderator Staff Member

    Irresponsible/inconsiderate dog owners irritate me, and when they are irresponsible and inconsiderate with large dogs it can make it dangerous.

    I just took Stanley for a walk around the neighborhood. Typical suburbia with 1/3 acre lots, mostly fenced back yards, etc. There is one walking path alongside a green space and a park that runs along the back property line of a street of houses. Most of the dog owners along it are considerate. By that I mean that they either keep their fences up, or dogs on leashes. If they see someone (with or without a dog) go walking by, and their dog goes nuts barking in the house from seeing it, they at least wait until the people are down a house or two before letting the dog out to race to the fence.

    There is one exception, who I might've posted about before. It's the end house, so it not only borders the green space, but also a small park with swings and slides for small kids. There is a large Goldendoodle or the like that lives there. He's about as tall as Stanley, but probably only 60-70lbs. He goes nuts any time anyone walks by, or kids play in the park, racing to the fence and snarling. The owner will sit in the yard 10' away, turn his back to it, and not say a word. If you are walking along the path, he will purposefully let his dog out to race to the fence while you are right there. The fence is like this: [​IMG]

    There is enough space for his dog to almost get his whole head through, and Stanley could get his muzzle through. So enough to get some biting going. Stanley is pretty chill in general, even around other dogs. He doesn't react to dogs that race to the fence other than to have his tail and hair on his back stand up. He just otherwise keeps walking. The other dogs along that path that occasionally are out and bark (boxers, pitbulls, labs, little ankle biters) he ignores. But this dog he wants at. It's the only one I have to tug on his leash to keep him from going to the fence to confront. Today we get to this property, the guy sees us out the sliding door, and lets the dog out. He immediately shuts the door and stands back in the shadows. I almost lost it and let Stanley to the fence. I know he would've torn the other dogs snout and head up. But I didn't. Then I stood in the park right next to the house (letting little kids pet Stanley because half the neighborhood knows him) and debated on going up to the door and asking them for the slightest bit of consideration for the neighborhood. I know from conversations with several neighbors that they do this to everyone with a dog. It's not just me, or Stanley. But I decided that, in the mood I was in, nothing good could happen from it. So we walked down the street and continued our exercise.

    Then I get almost home. 2-3 doors down and across the street lives a St. Bernard. Who just happened to be loose in the back yard, which doesn't have a fence, with no one in sight. She came galloping at us, and Stanley wasn't sure if she was going to be friendly or not. Neither did I. I'm walking him out into the street and making sure she has a collar on (broken up a few dog fights by snagging both collars, actually broke an Akita's collar once tossing him through the air by it, that's a story for another day), and she does. She was this weird combination of being both protective of her yard and wanting to make acquaintances. I'm keeping her on one side of me and Stanley on the other, all the way back to our house. She followed me all the way up to our porch, at which point I threw Stanley inside and stayed outside and directed her back to her own yard. The St. Bernard thing was an accident I'm sure, it's the first time I've seen them let it out off the leash. But that could've gotten ugly fast. Especially if someone was walking a more aggressive dog than Stanley.




    Moral of the story? I guess be responsible and be polite. In all honesty, it's just better for me to post this and vent than go off on some idiot, or let Stanley maul their dog. :eek: