I don’t understand how buying fast food kills you fast.
Working at a busy, busy place where people cannot spend the time to make and bring their own food to work I can offer this insight: Hungry people = angry people (even worse at a place where the highly educated reside, like hospitals). You would think that professionals would act with a bit of well, professionalism, but at lunch time... Noooooo. Once their stomach gets empty their brain takes leave...
I don’t understand how buying fast food kills you fast.
EpicSaxGuyZ said:
Think it out of the box. Instead of focusing on the fast food, focus on other actions she's doing.
RiderFan said:
Working at a busy, busy place where people cannot spend the time to make and bring their own food to work I can offer this insight: Hungry people = angry people (even worse at a place where the highly educated reside, like hospitals). You would think that professionals would act with a bit of well, professionalism, but at lunch time... Noooooo. Once their stomach gets empty their brain takes leave...
Brendo said:
she's got the window going up against herself hasn't she?
Working at a busy, busy place where people cannot spend the time to make and bring their own food to work I can offer this insight: Hungry people = angry people (even worse at a place where the highly educated reside, like hospitals). You would think that professionals would act with a bit of well, professionalism, but at lunch time... Noooooo. Once their stomach gets empty their brain takes leave...
Looking at her right hand, and she's out of the car window.
Years ago there was a safety issue in older cars with powered windows where they had individual "up" and "down" buttons inside to operate the windows. If you leaned on the "up" button while you were leaning out of window, the window would keep going up and the power in an automatic window motor is actually quite strong. Some children were injured or killed in that scenario and it made the news. Cars after that point were designed to always have rocker switches such that if you leaned on them, the window could only go down, and you had to pull up on them to raise the window.
The news segments back then had a common demonstration they would do showing that they could split a watermelon with the powered window (which is a rough analogue for a person's head). I can't seem to find any of the news segments online anymore, but here's a somewhat annoying YouTube version of the same thing.
She's just re-enacting the demo, but with herself instead of the watermelon.