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<blockquote data-quote="Fairygodmother" data-source="post: 2075786" data-attributes="member: 68789"><p>Dislike you? Don’t be daft, you’re the people who get what it’s like and get on with life too. </p><p>Yes, lots of tough times for people out there, it’s awful if you’re home’s flooded.</p><p>I also felt so so sorry for my seat companion who missed his flight home to India and the man at the next table who missed his back home to Cairo. There was also a woman with two small children further down the train who would have found it difficult, and people from the derailed train who had to stand or sit on the tables or the floor. They were very tired by the time we were evacuated.</p><p>It was also a bit frightening when we went back through the tunnel: dark, horn sounding, water rising. The water in the second section was above the rails and we feared we’d have to get out and walk back along the tracks, through water and in the dark. Not good.</p><p>But the Brit spirit rose in the crisis, embracing the multinational group, at least in the carriage I was in, and we all became instant close friends and quite hysterically cheerful. Except for the poor Egyptian guy who was wondering if he’d ever get home. I hope he did.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Fairygodmother, post: 2075786, member: 68789"] Dislike you? Don’t be daft, you’re the people who get what it’s like and get on with life too. Yes, lots of tough times for people out there, it’s awful if you’re home’s flooded. I also felt so so sorry for my seat companion who missed his flight home to India and the man at the next table who missed his back home to Cairo. There was also a woman with two small children further down the train who would have found it difficult, and people from the derailed train who had to stand or sit on the tables or the floor. They were very tired by the time we were evacuated. It was also a bit frightening when we went back through the tunnel: dark, horn sounding, water rising. The water in the second section was above the rails and we feared we’d have to get out and walk back along the tracks, through water and in the dark. Not good. But the Brit spirit rose in the crisis, embracing the multinational group, at least in the carriage I was in, and we all became instant close friends and quite hysterically cheerful. Except for the poor Egyptian guy who was wondering if he’d ever get home. I hope he did. [/QUOTE]
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