We were heading toward Forest Hills on the Orange Line this afternoon when the woman across from us asked me if I knew what the weather would be like tomorrow. I didn't have a clue, but I told her I'd look it up on my phone. I got the weather and told her.
She thanked me and then asked if I were from Roslindale. When I said yes, she said, "I thought so. People from Roslindale are just friendlier."
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Comments
That's lovely, an anecdote
By Sarah
Sun, 09/13/2009 - 7:40pm
That's lovely, an anecdote like this reminds me why I love living here so much.
Everything is relative
By MadMax
Sun, 09/13/2009 - 8:44pm
I agree Roslindale is a nice place. People say hello to my 2yo daughter all the time.
But I do notice that her comments were relative. Was she really just saying people from JP aren't as nice? :-)
Well ...
By adamg
Sun, 09/13/2009 - 8:53pm
She was kind of emphatic about the extra niceness of Roslindale.
West Roxbury/ Roslindale........
By billings
Sun, 09/13/2009 - 9:10pm
Let's be fair West Roxbury has just as many friendly people:)
I agree
By Manny
Sun, 09/13/2009 - 9:38pm
My wife and I have lived in Roslindale for three years and seriously have the best neighboors we have ever had. One just offered to help me build a shed. They have all been here for 10 years or more and really are some of the friendliest people I have know
If you weren't so nice, you could have said...
By Sarcastic Sam
Sun, 09/13/2009 - 10:28pm
..that you were from New York!
-----------------------------------------
who and the what now?
There is no place in the USA....
By Michael Kerpan
Mon, 09/14/2009 - 9:29am
...where our family (as obvious visitors) has been treated with as much kindness as in New York City.
I love visiting new york too
By Sarcastic Sam
Mon, 09/14/2009 - 12:13pm
and have had nothing but positive experiences there.
-----------------------------------------
who and the what now?
Drivel and glurge
By Lanny Budd
Mon, 09/14/2009 - 9:19am
This kind of saccharin bs seems to be something that humans have to engage in. I have lived in tiny towns and big cities. I have lived in the desert. I have lived on both sides of the Continental Divide. I have yet to find that magical place where the people are more friendly, or more rude, or more insane, or more X than predicted by a simple Gaussian distribution.
You see this on the news, when some idiot goes on a rampage and kills all the people at his place of employment in some small place you have maybe never heard of. The first quote shown on the news will be the obligatory: "He was a quiet man.", followed by the other hoary chestnut: "I never thought it could happen here." or: "I thought this kind of thing only happened in big cities."
News Flash: 1 out of 10,00 or so humans is pathological. There are more in New York because there are more people there. But the odds are that in your little burg of 20,000 out in Iowa, there are a couple of timebombs.
It was the Texan Chainsaw Massacre, not the Brooklyn Chainsaw Massacre.
Ed Gein. Plainfield, Wisconsin. Population 899.
A quiet man
By adamg
Mon, 09/14/2009 - 10:04am
The one time I covered a murder where all the neighbors said they knew something like this would happen, the guy was nuts, it was only a question of time, the editors cut all of that out of the story.
It's a conspiracy, I tell ya!