> Still, he now sees that it wasn’t so much the elevator that changed him as his reaction to it.
It's crazy how our interpretation of the events around us is even more potent than the event itself. Some people could have gone through this and it would have been a funny anecdote at office holiday parties, for others, complete life upheaval. (Not to diminish how terrible this must have been for Nick.)
But I'm reminded of this constantly now with a 5 month old baby. I'm exhausted. So much sleep deprivation. And the things that happen around me take a much different "color". I have to constantly keep asking: is this event occuring like I think it is, or is it simply my exhausted interpretation of it. And more often than not, it's the interpretation. When I finally get a nap in, things go back to looking just great.
> In most elevators, at least in any built or installed since the early nineties, the door-close button doesn’t work.
This sounds likely, but also sounds too cute to be true, i.e. a perfect candidate for an urban legend.
It’s of course possible that this is the result of the manufacturers having to serve some markets where a functioning door-close button is needed/wanted, and simply disable the button where customers do not want or need the functionality - i.e. a similar reason as the reason there are braille dots on the drive-through ATM.
The close-door button definitely does work in some installations. At a minimum, the button works in most hospitals. They tend to have very long open-door periods (to give people extra time), but also frequently need to get someone to another floor as quickly as possible.
The door close button is a perfect solution to this problem.
The door close buttons are for when the elevator is in fire service mode. In that mode, the lift only does what the operator (a fireman) tells it to do, for good reason. If they take the lift to the fourth floor, say where a fire is, the doors will only open when the "door open" button is held. Same for the opposite with the "door close" button.
I always thought the braille on drive-through ATMs was for scales of economy - it's easier and cheaper to have N molds than to have 2N molds (in this case N molds for "everything has the braille and 2N for the case where there is and is not braille).
Yes! Exactly the same. I am always hitting the "close" button when I'm wanting the open. And contrary to legend, in at least some elevators the close button definitely initates a door close immediately.
This has happened so often that when I want to hold the elevator for someone I actually hold the door with my hand or foot rather than try to figure out which button to push.
"Let's see...29, 31, 32. Seems like we're missing something here, but I can't put my finger on it...hey, you see the Braves give the Mets a pounding? What a bunch of lazy bums. Well, see you tomorrow!"
>>The Bronx family-court system, for example, was in a shambles last year because the elevators at its courthouse kept breaking down. ((The stairs are closed, owing to security concerns.)
Anyone has any idea why the stairs would be closed, and what are those "security concerns"?
It could be that floor access is governed by key cards. The elevator having a key card reader, but the doors in the stairwell not, maybe because they hadn't yet been retrofitted.
It's crazy how our interpretation of the events around us is even more potent than the event itself. Some people could have gone through this and it would have been a funny anecdote at office holiday parties, for others, complete life upheaval. (Not to diminish how terrible this must have been for Nick.)
But I'm reminded of this constantly now with a 5 month old baby. I'm exhausted. So much sleep deprivation. And the things that happen around me take a much different "color". I have to constantly keep asking: is this event occuring like I think it is, or is it simply my exhausted interpretation of it. And more often than not, it's the interpretation. When I finally get a nap in, things go back to looking just great.