Tuesday 22 November 2011

Sex for the birthday boy

Funny, the things you overhear. My son and his wife were out to dinner - posh restaurant dinner - at the week-end. Next to them sat a couple, speaking loudly. The man said to the woman: "It's my birthday, and I think the birthday boy should be allowed to choose who he f***s on his birthday!"

There was more to this conversation, and my son said he nearly went over to ask them to keep their voices down. I think that had I been there, I would have been sorely tempted to pour boiling soup into birthday boy's lap, thus scuppering birthday boy's birthday chances.

But then my son is a nicer person than I am.

13 comments:

  1. Wow, if I had been the lady sitting with him when the birthday Boy( which said it all boynot yet a man)said it, I think I would've poured the hot soup in his lap and a bottle of wine over his head.

    Nice Boy Not!

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  2. Having played rugby and worked in industry I'm used to language like that. But it should stay in the dressing room and on the factory floor not a restaurant. I believe it's a public order offence.

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  3. Well, there is no need to feel offended, I think. These people clearly show that they do not know how to behave in public - it is embarrassing for them, not for anyone else. Of course if things get out of hand, one could always ask a waiter to politely approach such people to pull themselves together while they are on the premises.

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  4. Quite right, Jarmara.

    Keith, it wasn't the language I would take issue with - after all, arent' we all "used to" that now? No. It was the content!

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  5. Librarian, I think we overlapped! As I said, it wasn't so much how this man spoke as what he said. Oh, and the volume! I don't think my son was offended; merely beumsed.

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  6. Part of me wishes people would keep their restaurant conversations private. But the writer part of me likes eavesdropping for material!

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  7. Why is it people only talk loudly when they're saying something we don't want to overhear?

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  8. I agree with Patsy. I think the boor intended to be "overheard"! Hot soup sounds like a good idea, but guess who would have been arrested for assault?

    Kay, Alberta, Canada
    An Unfittie’s Guide to Adventurous Travel

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  9. Height of bad manners in every way. Was he boasting, do you think? Or hoping to shock? Thing is he ended up sounding an idiot and being the subject of a blog!

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  10. Me too, Joanna, Me too!

    Patsy, it's like the mobiles-on-trains thing, isn't it.

    Kay, I think the arrest might just have been worth it!

    Rosemary, at least it's given us something to talk about!

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  11. This was just offensive bravado - a deliberate ploy to create effect. I think it is up to the restaurant staff to act - I would have asked to speak to the manager and asked him or her what they intended to do about it. Were they disinclined to stop it I would have asked for my bill and walked out with the assurance that I wouldn't be returning to their establishment again.

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  12. Too bad there hadn't been a little old lady at the next table to say 'Well what about me?'

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  13. Well said, Deborah! I'm afraid I've often bee accused of being inappropriate, but mostly with people I know,and if I should happen to drink too much, (and I haven't done that for ages) If I'd been there and thought of myself as little, (which I am,) and old, (is 65 old?) I would have been rather tempted to say, "what about me?"

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