just a little something that gets on my nerves...
1) When someone claims they don't eat meat for reasons of "morality".
Cos to me that implies that they're telling those who eat meat that they're all "immoral" and ... who the hell are they to judge us?
I mean if Person X doesn't want to eat meat then fine, don't eat it. I won't try to change what PX eats, or try to convince them to change, or even trick them into eating an animal.
But at the same time Person X better not try telling me that I'm "immoral" for eating that tasty steak.
2) People who try telling me that drinking alcohol is "wrong."
Same thing. If Person Y doesn't want to drink, fine. Person Y won't even need to give me a reason beyond "I don't want any". If I'm offering a drink to someone I usually include other non-alcoholic things from the start anyway, so it's not like there's going to be any pressure. I'll even be nice and, if someone isn't a drinker, that the bottles of hard lemonade are alcoholic, cos ... that's just basic good manners.*
But tell me that I'm doing the wrong thing? >:-/
As long as I'm drinking responsibly (meaning no law breaking, etc) then PY has no say in it, and should perhaps enjoy nice warm glass of shut-the-hell-up.
basically as i see it... if i can be accommodating and polite to others with their food preferences then there's no freakin' reason others can't be polite about mine.
* and yes I really did that. My roommate was religiously against alcohol, so I figured she might not know that Mike's Hard Lemonade was alcoholic. I made a point of letting her know as I put it in the fridge. Good thing I told her too - one of her church-friends was visiting when I was away and almost drank a bottle.
I will say though, my roommate didn't try to change me. I appreciate that.
1) When someone claims they don't eat meat for reasons of "morality".
Cos to me that implies that they're telling those who eat meat that they're all "immoral" and ... who the hell are they to judge us?
I mean if Person X doesn't want to eat meat then fine, don't eat it. I won't try to change what PX eats, or try to convince them to change, or even trick them into eating an animal.
But at the same time Person X better not try telling me that I'm "immoral" for eating that tasty steak.
2) People who try telling me that drinking alcohol is "wrong."
Same thing. If Person Y doesn't want to drink, fine. Person Y won't even need to give me a reason beyond "I don't want any". If I'm offering a drink to someone I usually include other non-alcoholic things from the start anyway, so it's not like there's going to be any pressure. I'll even be nice and, if someone isn't a drinker, that the bottles of hard lemonade are alcoholic, cos ... that's just basic good manners.*
But tell me that I'm doing the wrong thing? >:-/
As long as I'm drinking responsibly (meaning no law breaking, etc) then PY has no say in it, and should perhaps enjoy nice warm glass of shut-the-hell-up.
basically as i see it... if i can be accommodating and polite to others with their food preferences then there's no freakin' reason others can't be polite about mine.
* and yes I really did that. My roommate was religiously against alcohol, so I figured she might not know that Mike's Hard Lemonade was alcoholic. I made a point of letting her know as I put it in the fridge. Good thing I told her too - one of her church-friends was visiting when I was away and almost drank a bottle.
I will say though, my roommate didn't try to change me. I appreciate that.
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