I think one point that is missing is when waiters at a restaurant see a person in a wheelchair they rush ahead to the table to remove a chair assuming that person will not transfer to a regular seat, Oh it gets even better once the person transfers-they immediately take the wheelchair and hide it somewhere.
I think one point that is missing is when waiters at a restaurant see a person in a wheelchair they rush ahead to the table to remove a chair assuming that person will not transfer to a regular seat, Oh it gets even better once the person transfers-they immediately take the wheelchair and hide it somewhere.
Good point bob..how true! I think we could make a guidance of our own tbh lol...
I remember when i attended the 'warfrin' clinic when i has DVT's..i was in a waiting area, waiting on my turn to get my INR level checked and the next minute i was in motion and put before the nurse. It actually made me jump because i wasnt expecting it and i turned to see this older guy pushing me...grrrr
I think one point that is missing is when waiters at a restaurant see a person in a wheelchair they rush ahead to the table to remove a chair assuming that person will not transfer to a regular seat, Oh it gets even better once the person transfers-they immediately take the wheelchair and hide it somewhere.
bob, having parents that own a restaurant and having worked at the restaurant prior to my accident, I see nothing wrong with that. Actually, that's great service in my opinion. When I go to restaurants now I appreciate it when they move the chairs aside for me. The last thing I'd need is to go into a busy restaurant messing around with the chairs. When I've decided to transfer into a seating booth one time, I actually requested to have my chair set aside somewhere because I didn't want it getting in the way of staff or customers. I'd hate to see a waiter/waitress carrying a full tray of food or drink fall face first because they accidental tripped on the chair or had their clothing get caught on the push handles.