ThePompousPaladin
New member
- Apr 7, 2013
- 1,025
Getting off seemed quicker and easier, i havn't gotten on during rush hour, so seemed the same as ever
Have a read of http://www.amazon.co.uk/Martin-Harbottles-Appreciation-Dominic-Utton/dp/1780743726 if you haven't already (won't win any literary prizes but a decent enough little read). It's fictional but the author has clearly commuted in his days as you can certainly draw comparisons with a lot of his gripes and the responses from the train company MD.
The "we don't recognise a train being late until it's more than 30 minutes" line he trots out every response is very much a bug bear of mine especially if the Evening Standard to be believed when they say the TOCs get compo when the train is > 5 mins late. Why do we the paying customer only get to claim > 30 mins??
I honestly can't remember the last time I got a train and it arrived on time either way on my daily commute. Usually it's only a few minutes but do that twice a day 5 days a week and you can easily lose a couple of hours of your life a week. From 3 journeys this week I've already wracked up 45 mins and the worrying thing is I don't see that as being too bad.
Oh and [MENTION=409]Herr Tubthumper[/MENTION] We know......It wouldn't happen in Germany! Bore off!
I can do everything from my sofa that I can from my desk in Moorgate.
A day when I'm in London: up at 5:45, leave home at 6:30, get on a train at 6:50, arrive at London Bridge at 8:10 (if I'm lucky), walk to office arriving about 8:35, leave the office around 17:00, get the 17:40ish train, get back to West Worthing at 19:10 (if I'm lucky), get in the front door around 19:30. 13 hours or my time for around 8 hours work.
A day when I WfH: up around 7:00 and straight on my laptop, work through until it's convenient to jump in the shower and continue. I'll probably walk my won to school (taking 10 minutes) and I will go and get him in the afternoon (another 10 minutes). I'll work through until I've got done what I want - sometime between 5 and 6, although I'll keep going if required. 9-10 hours work for 10-11 hours of my time.
Everyone is a winner with the WfH option.
You're probably right - it's about the life you and your family have become accustomed to. However, for somewhere as expensive as Brighton the salaries are poor compared to not just London, but other cities of similar stature.
You are lucky though that despite being based in London you never need to go there!
9-10 hours work a day ? you're f-----g mad
Not that it'll achieve anything but if you fancy venting your anger at the FOURTH night on the bounce of signalling problems you could sign this petition
[tweet]553236656040734721[/tweet]
Certainly not unusual in the City. I had years of getting in the office before 8 and leaving at 6, often without a break, and being on-call all the rest of the time. If I worked at home, I usually started at 6 and worked through til 6 if not later depending what I was doing
**** that.
Does that happen in Germany?
The trains at the moment are an absolute shambles, I keep expecting the train to turn up at the station and all the doors to fall off and the driver ejected via a spring. Clown car jokers couldn't run a knees up in a brewery.