It’s subtleties like this that make me wish for the “how it works” signs I suggested.
OTOH, there could be some invisible filtering going on: perhaps bars wouldn’t even want the kind of customer that doesn’t have a “sponsor” that can accustom them to the many rules there.
On the third hand, establishments do resort to “how it works” signs when either a) everyone is more ignorant than they would like (e.g. sub shop Quizno’s posting of how to order a sandwich), or b) the downside of not knowing how it works is severe (e.g. emergency rooms, safety warnings). I just think cases like a) and b) are more common than the prevalence of “how it works” signs would indicate.
I agree—I think people generally have a hard time imagining that what’s easy for them is hard for other people.
“Some people have a way with words, and other people, um.… thingy.” was a revelation for me—it had literally never occurred to me what it might be like to not have words come easily.
It’s subtleties like this that make me wish for the “how it works” signs I suggested.
OTOH, there could be some invisible filtering going on: perhaps bars wouldn’t even want the kind of customer that doesn’t have a “sponsor” that can accustom them to the many rules there.
On the third hand, establishments do resort to “how it works” signs when either a) everyone is more ignorant than they would like (e.g. sub shop Quizno’s posting of how to order a sandwich), or b) the downside of not knowing how it works is severe (e.g. emergency rooms, safety warnings). I just think cases like a) and b) are more common than the prevalence of “how it works” signs would indicate.
I agree—I think people generally have a hard time imagining that what’s easy for them is hard for other people.
“Some people have a way with words, and other people, um.… thingy.” was a revelation for me—it had literally never occurred to me what it might be like to not have words come easily.