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[Closed] If you only read one account of a sneeze on the tube today

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I took the tube to work this morning at rush hour. It was absolutely mobbed. Carnage. You know the drill. Queues of anxious commuters waiting to board. TFL guy yelling incoherently about the doors.
Managed to squeeze on. The usual smell of bad breath and shower gel.
There’s normally a sort of blitz spirit on these occasions. Dark humour. How can there not be, when you can literally smell what the person next to you had for dinner last night?
But today was different. The crowd was tetchy. There had been some jostling on the platform, and the odd (half-embarrassed) cry of “move DOWN”. When I boarded, a lady with a strong Liverpudlian accent had started yelling at the guy next to her for squashing her arm.
So we’re barrelling along between stations, and we are squeezed in TIGHT. Barely able to move my head, I turn my head and look to the right. What I see there chills me to my very core.
About three feet away, there’s a small bloke standing with his back to the door. Must be 16/17 years old. He is truly hemmed in, arms locked to his side, his wee head like the end of a sausage poking out of a hot dog. And the look on his face is one of sheer terror.
His eyes are wide. His nostrils are flared. He’s moving the top of his mouth in a circular motion and frantically crinkling and uncrinkling his nose. The poor bastard is about to sneeze.
For a moment I wonder if he might be able to suppress it. He’s trying his best. He’s doing everything he can. But I can see that he is ultimately powerless. Like a gathering storm, the sneeze cannot be resisted. It is a force of nature.
I enter a state of high alertness. On a quick calculation I reckon that I am outside of the immediate blast radius, and so am probably safe. But there must be five people in direct danger. Five grumpy commuters. One of them is Angry Scouse Lady.
In the microsecond before the sneeze comes, I lock eyes with the guy. He looks at me like a man who has been sent to the gallows. I try to look sympathetic.
I can still see it in slow motion. It begins as a sort of spasm deep down inside the guy, an irrepressible wave of energy building from his abdomen, spreading up through his chest and neck, rushing to burst out through his nose.
His head jerks back, hitting the door behind him. His eyes are closed. In the same second, the people surrounding him begin instinctively to recoil
I can see Angry Scouse Lady’s eyes widening as she realises, much too late, what has befallen her.
But at the very moment of climax, the instant when I thought my fellow Londoners would be covered in nasal debris, something incredible happened. I’ll remember it til the day I die.
His jaw clamped shut, our man somehow takes the full brunt of the sneeze internally. His entire face – cheeks and upper neck area – expand outward like a bullfrog before rapidly contracting again. He emits two noises simultaneously: a high-pitched squeak and a deep, gutteral moan
It was LOUD. Half the carriage crane to look. No one knows what’s going on. The guy’s eyes are half-closed and streaming with moisture. Were it not for the passengers propping him up, he’d have collapsed from the effort.
I’ve never seen anything like it. It brought to mind a story I saw recently where a dude ruptured his throat trying to suppress a sneeze.
After a few seconds he opened his eyes and we again acknowledged each other’s presence. He must have seen the admiration on my face because he gave me an imperceptible nod – regal, magnanimous – modestly recognising the scale of his achievement, but without wishing to gloat
That guy is my morning hero, and I wrote this thread in homage to him.


 
Posted : 25/01/2018 12:20 pm
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So this happened to you, OP?


 
Posted : 25/01/2018 12:21 pm
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this is the 6th attempt to create this post, either failed or looked like ti created it but only visible to me

Lost the link when I cut and paste the text the last time.

*sigh*

hang on


 
Posted : 25/01/2018 12:23 pm
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Magic, what a great read. Thank you.


 
Posted : 25/01/2018 12:25 pm
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https://twitter.com/jamiesusskind/status/956458545771352065

[edit] blimey links do weird shit now. anyway I think clicking on the pic will show the thread...


 
Posted : 25/01/2018 12:26 pm
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Beautiful.


 
Posted : 25/01/2018 12:36 pm
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That is amazing.


 
Posted : 25/01/2018 12:39 pm
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apparently if you say 'pineapple' while a sneeze is forming, it stops it. Some people (OK, my wife) think that you can even prevent it by just thinking about saying it (but you have to think about saying the word, rather than think about pineapple itself)

Try it, it's weird shit.


 
Posted : 25/01/2018 12:42 pm
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That had far more of an impact on me that I could have ever imagined.

I almost gave up half way through, another tale of London where everyone seems over confident they'll happily shout at their fellow man for failing to follow one of the million unwritten rules of the tube but they're also so full of fear and doubt their inner monologue writes a million words a day, but no the punchlines left me in tears and I had to re-read the last few lines a few times to make it through without my eyes closing.


 
Posted : 25/01/2018 12:44 pm
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I've seen the devastation reaped upon a young woman’s soul after they were the victim of an unapologetic sneeze point blank into their face on a train pulling into Leeds.

The reprehensible bastard left not just a trail of sputum across her face, but also an indelible psychological scar that no kleenex proffered from a kindly bystander could ever wipe away.

This thread left me with some hope for the sake of mankind due to the heroic selflessness of that young man in such troubling circumstances.


 
Posted : 25/01/2018 1:11 pm
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I love this.

My admiration goes to the young chap. Thank heavens he didn't leave his eyes open at the critical moment.


 
Posted : 25/01/2018 1:59 pm

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