Rajdhani “Main Uncomfortable Hu”: A passenger becomes enraged as a man refuses to give up his seat on Rajdhani, saying, “Mard Ho Tum.”When the other passenger, who was traveling with family, asked the man to move so that their family could seat together, the argument started. Recently, a passenger on the Agartala Tejas Rajdhani Express in 2AC who was traveling from Assam to Delhi had an unsettling experience.
Another traveler, who already had four confirmed upper beds, harassed him. When the other passenger, who was traveling with family, asked the man to move so that their family could seat together, the argument started.
The man indicated that switching berths would be quite inconvenient for him because he had settled into his seat for his 24-hour travel with all of his belongings.
For several minutes, the other passenger yelled at him and made fun of him instead of showing empathy. He insisted that he demonstrate humanity and questioned his manhood. The man chose to remain seated rather than aggravate the issue.
He clarified, “I boarded from Badarpur station (Assam),” in a Reddit post titled “Man got angry and demanded humanity from my side just because I didn’t give up my side upper berth for another side upper.” For the previous twenty-four hours, I have been seated on the same side upper bunk.
(Only frequent travelers on the upper side would concur with me over how difficult it is to settle into a seat for a lengthy, nearly two-day trip.) The man and his family boarded from Bhagalpur, Bihar, and were given three upper berths and one side upper berth, which is located next to the four upper lower berths and my side upper berth.
The traveller was forced to give up his seat in Rajdhani
In order to keep their family together, he abruptly requested me to go to his son’s side higher berth. “Main actually change karne mein comfortable nahi hun, yahan pe mere saare saaman pade hai aur yahin main adjust chuka hun, dobara change karunga toh saman leke phir wahi problem face karna padega,” I gently informed him. To be honest, I don’t feel at ease switching seats.
I’ve already moved in and all of my possessions are here. “I’ll have to relocate everything and deal with the same issue again if I change again,” he continued.
The child said that the situation continued, saying, “All of a sudden, he tried to mock me by saying ‘pair toota hai tumhara?'” “Ladke nahi ho tum?” moral policing before yelling, “Humanity seekho tum mard ho,” for two more minutes. Ultimately, I stopped escalating and refused to give up my seat. He was obviously exhausted and upset, but that doesn’t mean anyone should do this.
“These guys will always exist, just smile and wave, if it seems to go on more than normal, then call up the train helpline, those guys deal with these matters well usually,” a person commented in response to the post.
“Instead of being a self-centered idiot, he ought to have been modest and courteous when requesting something from someone.”
“You’re not required to give it to them, of course, but I’ve been on the other side, and it’s extremely beneficial if someone moves seats so my buddies can be together. In general, I am really appreciative of them. However, a remark stated, “I have never started making fun of someone because they said no, that’s just asshole behavior, it’s just sad.”
“While he is giving you the moral lecture, scratch your ears vigorously with your left pinky and then put big headphones over them,” someone else said. Nothing else will calm Uncle Ji down if that doesn’t.”
He was commended by another for maintaining composure and avoiding a confrontation. They claimed that although they frequently grant requests to switch seats, they only do so after confirming that the other passenger is getting down at the same station and is prepared to assist with luggage. They went on to say that there is no one best option for everyone and that giving up a seat or keeping it relies on personal comfort.