Well the evil retro has returned to the thread.
Spot on retrochic.People who work in the emergency service industry and the armed forces do develop a dark macabre humour and I ,for one, am not going to apologise to anyone on this site for that.
This scenario is an everyday occurrence and if people who worked with this allowed their emotions to rule then they would be unable to function and carry out the nasty, unpleasant tasks that others here find shocking.
To listen to an adult man proclaim he has had a nasty shock and cannot sleep because he saw flies in a window is unbelievable. A man,he never knew and was not related to him died and this happened a week previously and was learnt by anecdotal accounts from a neighbour!
When I am informed "we all live in the real world" by hc, I have to reply ,"Yes but some do not get out in it enough to realise what happens regularly around their sheltered lives".
If mikey is man enough to take pot shots and snipe at the police here and the U.S. at every opportunity, from afar,always from afar, then he should be man enough to accept some ricochets.
"I had a nasty shock yesterday" because an old man died peacefully,not violently,in the comfort of his arm chair!!
I would consider shock to occur when a middle aged lady,a cub scout leader, talked calmly to two homicidal maniacs armed with a machete and a handgun to try and placate them, at no small risk to herself,whilst trying to administer comfort and aid to a young man who was dying in her arms because he had been almost decapitated.
I will not ask forgiveness for my derision on this post.
In a nasty world and and in the midst of a crisis I would sooner have a middle aged lady by my side than someone who is in shock about a natural sud death. I am sure that lady didn't wallow and expect pity.