- Jul 7, 2003
- 47,639
I remember years ago I worked in Sainsburys, and was serving some woman at the till one day. She had a teenage lad with her, presumably her son, and without warning he started to blurt out "f***" repeatedly.
Initially you can't help but turn and stare, thinking how rude this person is, then you realise it's an inadvertent tic and you feel terrible for giving them the evil eye. It must be a horrendous condition to live with, both for the sufferers and their families. You'd feel like you had to continuously explain yourself, surely?
It looks funny on TV, but I recall a similar programme a few years back where a group of sufferers were taken to America, and when they went somewhere where there was a large black community one lad couldn't help shouting "******" and such as he walked around the place.
It's not so funny when it puts you in a position where (1) you'll genuinely upset people who don't know about your condition and (2) are likely to get your ass kicked as a result.
Initially you can't help but turn and stare, thinking how rude this person is, then you realise it's an inadvertent tic and you feel terrible for giving them the evil eye. It must be a horrendous condition to live with, both for the sufferers and their families. You'd feel like you had to continuously explain yourself, surely?
It looks funny on TV, but I recall a similar programme a few years back where a group of sufferers were taken to America, and when they went somewhere where there was a large black community one lad couldn't help shouting "******" and such as he walked around the place.
It's not so funny when it puts you in a position where (1) you'll genuinely upset people who don't know about your condition and (2) are likely to get your ass kicked as a result.