A while ago, I asked the BuzzFeed Community to share the common things people do that they don’t realize are rude. I couldn’t agree more with the examples they shared. Here’s what they said:
Note: Some submissions come from this Reddit thread.
1. “Asking a newly married couple if they plan to have kids.”
2. “Looking at your phone while someone talks to you. Put your phone DOWN and live in the moment that is REAL.”
3. “If someone declines alcohol, do not insist, and do not ask them why.”
4. “Leaving your grocery cart in the middle of the aisle so others cannot pass. It’s inconsiderate and infuriating.”
5. “Stepping off a full escalator and then standing still while looking around. Bro, just take four to five steps forward to figure yourself out!”
6. “LISTENING TO ANYTHING IN PUBLIC WITH YOUR VOLUME ON. This includes TikTok, YouTube, social media, FaceTiming, and anything with your phone on speaker. No one gives a crap what media you’re consuming. Airports especially seem to attract this in droves as if earbuds or headphones don’t exist. If I can hear your phone, you are getting The Glare. Learn to adjust to polite society.”
7. “People who let their dogs jump up on you. Hey, I love dogs, but I’m not in the mood of having dirty paws on my nice clean clothes.”
10. “Saying ‘You look good for your age.’ There are so many ways to compliment someone on aging well, but that is not one of them.”
11. “Telling someone ‘You look tired.'”
12. “Telling a guy he’s going bald or thinning out on top. He already knows and is probably gutted.”
14. “Asking someone ‘Why are you so quiet?'”
16. “While it’s rude to look at your phone while someone is talking to you, it’s equally rude to just start talking to someone who is looking at their phone. You don’t get to judge that what I’m doing must not be important. I could be reading emails from work. I could be reading the news. I could be texting with a friend or family member. If someone looks engaged with their phone, ask if it’s okay to interrupt first.”
17. “Commenting on weight in any way. Even if you mean it as a compliment. ‘You’re so skinny’ isn’t always a compliment.”
18. “Saying ‘It was God’s will’ when someone you care about dies. So inappropriate, yet so many people do it anyway.”
19. “Touching someone’s tattoos without permission. I get asked about them a lot, which is fine but a little annoying, but I really can’t stand it when people start stroking me? Like, screw off.”
20. “I’m a veteran, and my wife is originally from Southeast Asia. A fairly common question I get is whether we met overseas. We didn’t, we met in the US while she was studying for her Masters in Business Admin. I have absolutely no judgment toward people who meet that way, but the question about whether we met overseas reveals an assumed stereotype.”
21. “Don’t say, ‘You don’t look autistic’ when someone tells you that they’re on the autism spectrum. It’s offensive to us individually because you’re invalidating our identity or implying that we’re making it up, and it’s offensive to our community as a whole because you’re claiming that there’s a stereotypical ‘look’ that we should be adhering to. It is in no way a compliment.”
22. “People touching my hair. It’s really weird and inappropriate. Yes, it is curly, and yes, it is naturally this curly.’
23. “When people say to me, ‘I wish I could take time off work every time I was sad!’ My dude, it’s not sadness. It’s the kind of mental illness that can kill you. I’m not taking time off. I’m fighting for my life.”
24. “It annoys me when you are driving in a parking lot, and someone or a family comes walking out of the store or just crossing the driveway into a parking lane, and they take an extreme diagonal path! Just walk straight across and get out of the way!!!”
25. “If you find out someone’s an adoptee, don’t start asking them a million questions and forcing them to share their personal lives and narratives with you. For example, don’t ask questions like: ‘Where are your parents?’ ‘Why did they give you up?’ ‘Do you see your adoptive parents as your ‘real parents?’ ‘Do you want to find your ‘real parents?’ ‘Are you happy or grateful you were adopted?'”
—kkad