Pull to enter, you say?
-
This post did not contain any content.
I have no trouble understanding why this has to be this way.
Twice a year our facility has a staff day where we get hit up by aflac and find out how we are doing as a organization. We have huge placards we place in the walkways leading up to the doors. Our meeting room is right by those doors and inevitably we will have people who ignore all the signs saying closed walk to the doors and pull them several times before finally reading the sign that we also put on the door.
-
I have no trouble understanding why this has to be this way.
Twice a year our facility has a staff day where we get hit up by aflac and find out how we are doing as a organization. We have huge placards we place in the walkways leading up to the doors. Our meeting room is right by those doors and inevitably we will have people who ignore all the signs saying closed walk to the doors and pull them several times before finally reading the sign that we also put on the door.
And sometimes you get so used to there being brightly colored ads,
corporate propagandamotivational messages and various warning signs everywhere, that you develop a blindness for everything too flashy and ignore it until you encounter a roadblock that doesn't yield. -
This post did not contain any content.
Brought to you by the Department of Redundancy Department
-
Had? I bet you they still have people pushing the doors all the time.
Maybe even more now because the button is perfectly camouflaged between all the useless signs.
-
What's a daisy in this context?
wrote on last edited by [email protected]It's a nursing excellence award. Pretty prestigious. You can be nominated by a patient or an employee. They write down why they think you are deserving of one on a card and then a panel chooses who gets awarded. There's even a runner-up kind of award if the nurse was in the final considerations but didn't actually win.
-
This post did not contain any content.
I would still push the door latch.
-
And sometimes you get so used to there being brightly colored ads,
corporate propagandamotivational messages and various warning signs everywhere, that you develop a blindness for everything too flashy and ignore it until you encounter a roadblock that doesn't yield.You don't normally have to step around a billboard.
-
This post did not contain any content.
Understood. Don't do anything apart from stop him entering the room.
-
This post did not contain any content.
Those are the actions of someone who has dealt with The Public
-
This post did not contain any content.
Define "emergency"
-
Those are the actions of someone who has dealt with The Public
Literally had to put a sign on my door saying to use the god damn doorbell with an arrow pointing directly at it. The pizza guy would then call me, asking why I didn't open when he knocked. Maybe because I can't hear your fucking knock, which is why I bought a god damn doorbell! Fuck the public.
-
This post did not contain any content.
And people will STILL try to push the door, or wait for it to open.
-
Receptionist: DID YOU NOT SEE THE SIGNS!?
Patient: bitch I'm blind.
"What did your skank-ass say!? I'm deaf, so I might have got it wrong."
-
Maybe imprison fewer people against their will then
-
signs are invisible to people. at my workplace we had to lock one of our double doors because of a maintenance issue and i put a sign saying "use other door" with a huge arrow pointing to the other door. the instant i walked away after attaching the sign directly on the door handle, someone tried the locked door. pushing the handle with the sign on it.
We have socially conditioned ourselves to ignore signage if we aren't specifically looking for it. 99% of signage in today's world is usually just an ad being shoved into your face trying to sell something. It is a bombardment of annoying and intrusive information to the point our minds have trained themselves to filter the visual noise out. It is literally too much for our mind to process, so most of it gets deleted from our consciousness in the same way the hole in your vision from your optical nerve is being hidden from your perception unless you specifically expose it.
-
This post did not contain any content.
"No, it opens both ways. I was here yesterday."
slowly breaks the door open
-
This post did not contain any content.
Now think about the people that need all that and how they treat road signage.
-
I very much doubt they even remember it to be upset
That may or may not be a good thing (I'm joking I'm sure it's all fine!)
Nice! I try to be generally positive and uplifting on this account, but I admit I wish I'd thought of this joke. It's a good one.
-
We have socially conditioned ourselves to ignore signage if we aren't specifically looking for it. 99% of signage in today's world is usually just an ad being shoved into your face trying to sell something. It is a bombardment of annoying and intrusive information to the point our minds have trained themselves to filter the visual noise out. It is literally too much for our mind to process, so most of it gets deleted from our consciousness in the same way the hole in your vision from your optical nerve is being hidden from your perception unless you specifically expose it.
This explains the ignorance of global warming perfectly.