Here's a theory. I'd combine the idea of a warmer glass, and a colder beer, but combine it with the beer being poured in roughly the same spot over and over. If you tip that glass over, as if to pour a beer in, that's the approximate splash area.
My husband is disabled. He has severe arthritis in his knees, hips and back. HE returns his cart, more often than not to the store itself.
It's just not that hard.
I've seen people walk the cart out to their vehicle with TWO bags, load up, then leave the cart right behind the vehicle and pull out forward (the space in front is free, or it's the top in a 2 column parking space)That just makes my blood boil
The thing with banning perfume due to allergies vs banning peanut butter or gluten is this:
Ultimately, the nut allergy sufferer, the gluten allergy sufferer, the Latex allergy sufferer...they have the choice to not eat the unknown product, wear the offending condom, etc. Perfume allergy sufferers don't always have that freedom. If we HAVE to do banking with a teller, but she (or he, no discrimination with scents) is wearing a strong scent, we can't get away from it. we can ask for a new teller, but who's to say they might not have something just as reactionary on? And it's not just watering eyes; throats can close up, hives can break out. I don't know about other people, but I'd rather not have to avoid one on one contact just because my body is intolerant to scents. In a store, I can and have walked away from people who's perfume is too strong.
It's just not that hard.
I've seen people walk the cart out to their vehicle with TWO bags, load up, then leave the cart right behind the vehicle and pull out forward (the space in front is free, or it's the top in a 2 column parking space)That just makes my blood boil
Ultimately, the nut allergy sufferer, the gluten allergy sufferer, the Latex allergy sufferer...they have the choice to not eat the unknown product, wear the offending condom, etc. Perfume allergy sufferers don't always have that freedom. If we HAVE to do banking with a teller, but she (or he, no discrimination with scents) is wearing a strong scent, we can't get away from it. we can ask for a new teller, but who's to say they might not have something just as reactionary on? And it's not just watering eyes; throats can close up, hives can break out. I don't know about other people, but I'd rather not have to avoid one on one contact just because my body is intolerant to scents. In a store, I can and have walked away from people who's perfume is too strong.