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5 Unintentionally Rude Things People Do

5 Unintentionally Rude Things People Do

Yahoo27-07-2025
A lesson for the faux polite people of the world.
Rude people either live in a vacuum of self-awareness — or just don't care.
I fear I have been 'that guy' a few times. I've unintentionally ruffled feathers and burned bridges in my wake.
Heck, I'm sure a few people have said, 'If Sean does that one more time, I will reach across this table."
By the end of this article, you will know what to look out for — and how to avoid being an accidental fool. It will help you preserve friendships, and live a better, more seamless life.
Getting a gauge on where they are 'really' from
Some people are as subtle as a brick through a window.
Especially here in the US. If someone is non-white, don't make it into your mission to find out where they are 'really' from.
I see this cringefest commonly with Asian-Americans, some of whom have been here for two generations.
They talk with no accent and couldn't be more American. But some stranger begins interrogating them like they just stepped off the boat on Ellis Island. The stranger stops just short of asking for their green card.
And look — I'm not Mr. Perfect. I'm sure I've done this at some point. It's more out of curiosity as I'm into family heritage stuff.
I've now seen it from the outside and realize it's generally a bad look. Questions about a stranger's heritage can wait until you know them a little better.
A question that implies there's something wrong
My spouse, Laura, says that men used to always ask her, 'So why are you still single?'
They often asked it in this curious and doubtful tone — that implied something had to be wrong.
'She must be crazy or have some type of baggage.'
If you think about it, that question is loaded with assumptions: that she is looking for a boyfriend, that she's getting rejected because she's broken, and that you know her well enough to ask that type of question.
For the record, Laura was one of those women who spent most of her 20s single by choice.
Their question was probably just their awkward way of saying she was super attractive. But they unintentionally send bad vibes.
Commenting about anything bizarre on their appearance
One of my guy friends has dark circles under his eyes naturally. That's just how he looks.
Too often, people comment, 'You look tired.'
'Have you gotten sleep, buddy? You look sleepy.'
He plays it off like it doesn't bother him. But I can tell it makes him insecure.
In general, I'd refrain from commenting about someone's appearance in any negative or neutral light. Don't point out irregularities about their face. That includes telling them they should smile more.
This is especially true with women. Years ago, my dad was in the car with me and I was only 10-years-old.
We weren't even talking. And just out of the blue he said, 'I don't care how tall, beautiful, ugly, skinny, or fat a woman is — don't ever make a joke about her weight.'
I suspect he'd witnessed some cringe.
Dining habits from hell
There's this habit of slurping amongst otherwise civilized people.
They sound like a toddler using a straw for the first time. And I'm not just talking about soup. Literally, any liquid is grounds for a mouth concert.
It's the drinking version of hearing someone chew with their mouth open. It also makes the person seem like they are finishing their drink in a frenzy of dehydration.
Some people are repeat offenders. They moan in pleasure as they eat and smack their mouth like a cow and then unleash burps.
One of my coworkers had this big bag of tortilla-style Doritos. Every day around 11, he sat behind me and spend a solid 20 minutes each day slowly crunching through these chips.
Now granted, I know in some countries in Asia, slurping is normal — while blowing your nose in a restaurant would be hugely rude (it generally isn't in the US).
I hate hearing the sound of other people eating and consuming food with no effort to conceal the noise. Please have the courtesy to limit the mouth noise.
Culture math on our arrival time
Years ago, one of my marketing professors, Professor Eric Ritter, told me people judge you by three things:
Your personality.
The quality of your work.
Your punctuality.
And it makes sense if you think about it. Some people are on time, have great personalities, but do shotty work. Others do great work, are on time, but total jerks.
And there have been plenty of people who I liked and respected greatly, who drove me nuts on their habitual lateness.
It's particularly aggravating when meeting someone for lunch or dinner.
I don't like writing their tardiness off as being on Island Time. Perhaps this is my military upbringing making me a bit of a stiff.
I don't like sitting alone at a lunch table for 15–20 minutes every time we get together. It tells me the other person doesn't respect my time.
A friend suggested, 'Just lie to them and say you are meeting 15 minutes earlier than you actually are.'
That feels convoluted and dishonest. I don't like doing culture math on the appropriate level of lateness to be. If we are meeting at 6, let's meet at 6. Cool?
The worst one of all
The Kingslayer unintentionally rude thing that I've had the non-pleasure of witnessing.
Asking a woman how 'far along' she is—when she isn't pregnant.
If you have to ask, go with something safe like, 'Do you have children?'
Or make sure I'm out of earshot so I don't have to cohabitate the cringe grave with you. Stupid Bob to the non-pregnant girl: 'Wow! you look so regnant. When are you gonna pop that thing out?'
It makes me want to shrivel up into a ball.
Unless you are her doctor, and she is in front of you, in labor, avoid that question.
Recap for memory: intentionally rude things people do
Slurping and being a loud eater (with cultural exceptions).
Commenting on someone's appearance or pointing out any abnormality.
Interrogating a minority stranger's 'real' homeland.
Being habitually late with no valid excuse.
Asking a woman how far into her pregnancy she is.
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My husband's 21 years older than me and plans to leave his entire $3M fortune to me. How do we tell his 3 adult kids?
My husband's 21 years older than me and plans to leave his entire $3M fortune to me. How do we tell his 3 adult kids?

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My husband's 21 years older than me and plans to leave his entire $3M fortune to me. How do we tell his 3 adult kids?

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Here Are 17 Extremely Toxic Ideas, Habits, And Behaviors That Are Weirdly Glorified In American Culture
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Here Are 17 Extremely Toxic Ideas, Habits, And Behaviors That Are Weirdly Glorified In American Culture

As we all know, Americans do A LOT of weird stuff. While some of it might seem harmless, there are many toxic ideas and behaviors that have become popularized and in some cases, even glorified in the US... That's why when Redditor u/imwith2 asked, "What's something we glorify in American culture that's actually extremely toxic?" thousands of both Americans and non-Americans shared the most bizarre things that have been normalized in the US. Without further ado, here are 17 of their most enlightening examples: If you know any toxic behaviors, attitudes, or ideas that have been glorified in American culture, feel free to tell us about them using this anonymous form! 1."Absurd and excessive consumerism that only serves to represent status." —u/renreniii "I saw someone make an angry post online about discount stores carrying Stanley cups, because then anybody could buy one, even 'poor people', and she wouldn't be special anymore. Thankfully, the comment section tore her apart unanimously. 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Apparently, that piece of paper at the end of the year was more important than her child's or the class's health." —u/SkiPhD 4."At least in the South: Big, intimidating, and expensive weddings. It hurts everyone when something is that expensive, including the people traveling. They have to pay for their hotel bookings, dry cleaning, dog sitters, etc. Just make weddings chill." "Recently, I spent at least a thousand dollars to be a part of a relative's wedding (I was a groomsman). In between the hotel, paying for drinks at the rehearsal dinner, buying my own food the morning of, travel, and buying a suit, I was financially hurting by the end of the weekend. The groom is lucky he's family, that's all I'll say." —u/ssssskkkkkrrrrrttttt 5."Instant gratification. 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It's terrible when it means you can't do the basics needed to ride on a plane, go to the theater, or buy food at a restaurant without the cops being called." —u/BangBangMeatMachine Related: 7."Treating political leaders like gods." —u/Pearl725 "The goal should be voting in someone with good policy, who's also not a horrible person. It shouldn't be about loyalty to any person or party. Things are always swinging around. People have individual opinions separate from a party identity. Voting on a single issue, voting on a single party, or just being loyal to one person in politics is not a good use of the vote." —u/ArcannOfZakuul 8."Being positive at all times." —u/BlueStarFern22 "I'm Greek and I was raised with the mentality that life is going to be hard sometimes. This year, I've had two different American friends tell me they're trying everything to be happy and positive within a week of a break-up, and it wasn't working. My suggestion that they 'be sad for a while, because that's what's going to happen, and that way you can grieve the relationship and actually heal,' was met with complete non-comprehension. The idea of sitting with sadness for a while after an objectively sad event is actually the normal, healthy response, yet it sounded completely nuts to them. I love a lot of stuff about U.S. culture, but have never met a culture so intolerant to any feeling other than happiness." —u/losethemap 9."Gun ownership culture: I was raised as a hunter and was on the rifle team in college; however, gun culture is out of hand, including the glorification of firearms in movies and media." "Many equate owning a firearm to 'being a man,' whether they live in the city or the country. I stopped owning firearms because I realized the cost of actually using one wouldn't be worth it. 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I got a blank stare in return." —u/CunninLingwist 11."High school and college athletics: It's extremely toxic that 26 percent of high schoolers' parents want their children to become professional athletes one day, and some greater percent of kids push themselves to play three seasons." "I wish people would just play these games for fun in clubs during high school and college." —u/semxlr5 12."Celebrity obsession.'" —u/Addis_Thinker "I never understood this growing up, and I never had any celebrity I was into other than a passing cool vibe. I've since moved overseas, and I found that outside of soccer, the idea of obsessing over any celebrity is seen as weird. In all the cultures in all the countries I've visited, none of them compares to the US. Even in Japan and Korea, with their obsession with bands, celebrity obsession is still widely considered out of the ordinary and is deeply frowned upon." —u/SookHe 13."Competition: A little competition is good, fun, and aids productivity. But we Americans take it way too far." "I've seen two grown men passing each other in a hallway turn farting into a competition, executives commit horrible crimes in the name of competition when it wasn't even necessary for them to 'win,' and projects totally demolished by infighting. I've even been to the scene of accidents where people are bleeding out while two people are in a shouting match over who should be in charge of the crisis. Not to mention how companies defraud thousands of people just to outcompete their rivals. Americans do so many unethical things just to be competitive." —u/jdlech 14."Being prudes about nudity/human bodies." "I'm not talking about sexually explicit situations, but simply general nudity — nude beaches, sunbathing, etc. Even nipples poking out of a shirt cause many Americans to clutch their pearls! I really don't like it when people use anatomically incorrect terms for their genitalia because the anatomically correct ones are 'too vulgar.' We have bodies. Stop glorifying the shame of those bodies." —u/flugualbinder Related: 15."Cars/car-centric life: You have toxic fumes from the engines, toxic debris from the tires and brakes, and toxic fluids leaking everywhere, as well as the vast amount of concrete and pollution that is associated. All of these issues are known to affect the health of humans nearby. When we got rid of lead in gas, the population at large became less violent." "Then there is the lack of general activity. Ten thousand steps is roughly equivalent to two hours of walking. How often do doctors complain about people not being generally active? Compare those two hours of walking to the length of your commute to work and back. We need to have fewer cars, fewer parking spaces, and make everything closer together. That way we could walk more, and not spend as much of our income on transportation." —u/AbueloOdin 16."The obsession with group identity: Democrat, Giants fan, blue collar, college-educated, Christian, etc." "Sure, humans are tribal by nature, but Americans view every little box they can fit into with a kind of nationalism, more so than actually being American. It's as if their group identities are more important than their own personal ones, and even more important than safety at times. This ties into the compulsion to be in the 'winning team' no matter what. Their 'tribe' has to be on top, even if they are at the bottom of their internal social structures." —u/rulingniko 17."'The American dream.'" "It's what every person on the planet wants, besides a couple of outliers who want more, and a few who will settle for less. 'Americanizing' is just a form of 'othering,' by creating the basic assumption that this is something only 'Americans' want, meaning that what other people want must be different somehow. By inviting the notion of such a basic concept, you lay the groundwork for the 'us vs. them" rationale. The idea isn't itself a bad one, but with the wrong sort of push, you can build very bad behavior onto this foundation." —u/tsuruki23 Did any of these examples surprise you? What are some other toxic aspects of American culture that have been glorified? Tell us about it in the comments or answer anonymously using the form below! Note: Some responses have been edited for length and/or clarity. Also in Internet Finds: Also in Internet Finds: Also in Internet Finds:

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