Why Do Some People Think Queue Rules Don’t Apply to Them?
Well.. It became long!!! Last Thursday during the inauguration of GEMO at Marina Mall AD, they had an introductory offer — AED 100 voucher valid only between 7 PM and 8 PM, and only one voucher per transaction. Naturally, huge queues formed immediately after opening.
I was around 10th in line, with at least 50 people behind me. There were two billing counters, both packed. The queue I was standing in was barely moving because people at the front kept taking additional clothes/items from friends and family standing outside the queue.
Right in front of me were two middle-aged Hindi-speaking women who were also doing the same thing. Then I noticed another lady who had already finished purchasing from the other queue suddenly join them for another round of shopping.
At that point, people behind were already frustrated because our line literally wasn’t moving. So I politely told her:
“Ma’am, I saw you joining this queue after your purchase. It’s not really fair to cut into the line. Please start again from the back.”
I honestly expected maybe an apology or at least acknowledgment. Instead, one of the other women got angry and started arguing with me, asking why I was pointing only at her when others were also taking clothes from outside.
I replied that just because others are doing something wrong doesn’t make it right. I also told them there were many people waiting behind us for a long time, and everyone should be considerate.
Then came the classic justifications like:
“She was already in the queue.”
And finally:
“She’s buying for her mother in a wheelchair.”
(Though ironically the item being purchased was high heels.)
At that point I just stopped arguing because protecting my peace felt more important than fighting with people who already know they’re wrong but still justify it.
The funny part? One of their voucher claims eventually got rejected, and they ended up paying full price for some items anyway.
What honestly bothered me wasn’t even the extra shopping — it was the attitude. Why do some people think rules, queues, and consideration only apply to others?
And to the lady in front of me, if you are reading this:
What you did was wrong, and it’s not appropriate to justify it just because others were doing the same thing. Deep down, you yourself knew it was unfair. While everyone is trying to move ahead in life, we should still remain considerate toward the people around us, because everyone deserves fairness.