I think I understand where OP is going with this. Most importantly, Finns know how to queue and don’t look for every opportunity to skip the line.
Leave Lidl out of this.
Except for the grannies who insist on paying with coins. And expect the cashier to count them.
Oh, I do hate some people in grocery stores! People with shopping carts who decide to start a full conversation in the aisle, blocking it completely. People who touch the baked goods at the paistopiste or at the irtokarkki section. People who drop fruit on the floor and put it back. People who have like a trillion pieces of groceries and pay them in small coins. And after that they need to ponder which lottery ticket will be the one for minutes while others are waiting.
anyone who stops in the middle of a path is my enemy
7 comments
Please explain.
Nah, not true for most countries.
I think I understand where OP is going with this. Most importantly, Finns know how to queue and don’t look for every opportunity to skip the line.
Leave Lidl out of this.
Except for the grannies who insist on paying with coins. And expect the cashier to count them.
Oh, I do hate some people in grocery stores! People with shopping carts who decide to start a full conversation in the aisle, blocking it completely. People who touch the baked goods at the paistopiste or at the irtokarkki section. People who drop fruit on the floor and put it back. People who have like a trillion pieces of groceries and pay them in small coins. And after that they need to ponder which lottery ticket will be the one for minutes while others are waiting.
anyone who stops in the middle of a path is my enemy