I often wonder the same thing, but then I am thankful they are least trying to open the door. Often I have sat outside a particular entrance for quite awhile waiting on someone to open the door.
What ticks me off is when the individual holding the door says you're welcome in a sarcastic manner before I can think them once I have successfully navigated their obstacle course. They need to understand sometimes that I'm concentrating on not running my hand into the door are running them over in the process. Knowing it takes too long to explain I simply just turn around and say, "it would have been really nice if you didn't expect to be thanked every time you did something. Thank you so much for holding the door for me." Quadius On 12/30/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > What is it that when an ab open's a door they think two doors are better > THEN they try and stretch their bodies to hold both doors and now it is > impossible to get through the door? All I need is one door open, a very > simple easy task. Or they very nicely open the door and stand leaning > against it so if I did go through the door I would run over their feet? > Bobbie > > > > ------------------------------ > See AOL's top rated > recipes<http://food.aol.com/top-rated-recipes?NCID=aoltop00030000000004>and > easy > ways to stay in > shape<http://body.aol.com/fitness/winter-exercise?NCID=aoltop00030000000003>for > winter. >