How long would you wait in the parking lot to get a closer spot?

I'm not willing to wait at all for a closer spot. Unless the weather is particularly terrible, it's not that much trouble to walk for an extra thirty seconds to get where you need to go. Besides, I figure that parking in a less busy area likely lowers the chances of your car being hit or damaged.

I would also never want to be the one to block an important lane of traffic and cause delays for others by stopping to wait for a certain spot to open up. Any time you spend waiting could probably be spent to just as easily find a spot somewhere else and start walking. If you really don't want to part far away, I suppose the best option would be to simply arrive at a less busy time of the day.

I won't. It drives me insane to see those people in the middle of the lot waiting, and blocking traffic. There was one time when I needed to back out, and there was a car behind me.

Waiting for a spot, and wouldn't move for me to back out...i had to sit and wait for them! What nerve! I did scream and yell out my window, but to get a spot a few places up, they made me wait!

This is one reason why I avoid crowds.

I don't, and if someone is not physically disabled, I can't understand why they do either. I just park in the first place I can find and walk. Since walking is not problem to me, I'll actually pass up closer spots so that those who need them can get them, but it seems they never do.

I actually usually try to get a spot further away. I think it helps me walk more and so burn more calories. I'm perfectly happy parking 3 blocks away even.

I typically do not wait in the parking lot for a closer parking spot to open up, until I actually see a car backing out of one right as I enter the lane. I will then wait long enough for the car to leave so that I may take its place in the lot. I may go as far as turning around or taking another round through the parking lot if I see a car close by leaving but am not close enough to actually park my car in its spot.

I would then loop around and see if I had a chance of getting that spot if I truly needed to be closer to the entrance (if for example, my child were asleep, it was freezing cold outside or raining). Mostly, however, even though I look for the closest parking spot to the entrance, I end up parking more towards the center or back of a specific lane and so I walk the remaining distance. This is really not a big problem for me and I usually remind myself that the extra few feet that I will have to walk can be written off as added exercise for the day.

Not at all I just park on the side of the building or wherever the car will fit. Unless your blocking a fire lane they really don't bother you because you are shopping in their store.

I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.

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