Rabbers wrote:
I think it depends on what bothers you more. Would it bother you more to lie or would it bother you more that someone is sarcastic and gives you a weird look?
If it's the first one then I think you gave a sensible response. If it's the second one then give an excuse in future.
Yeah, it would bother me more to lie. So perhaps the response was mostly OK, except that, like Sweetleaf said, they may have thought I was being sarcastic with the way I phrased it. Whereas I really just wanted to say "I have no problem with you asking, but I refuse". The whole thing wasn't a big deal to me, really, I just wondered if there was a better way.
The "would you mind if I refuse?" idea is an interesting one, but that sounds like it would only confuse things more. I mean, what does one say to
that? I think that could also come across as a bit sarcastic, like I'm mocking their question by paraphrasing it.
"No, thank you" seems confusing, too, since it implies "no, I don't mind" in this case... and "thank you"? It's unclear, but could be taken as "thank you for the opportunity to do this, I love taking photos!" or something like that. If they asked "would you (do this)?" then "no" would work.
"I don't really want to, sorry." might be a good one! It avoids the words "yes" or "no" and the whole reverse wording of the question, but still communicates refusal and doesn't sound sarcastic. I think
serenaserenaserena is the winner so far.
Waterfalls wrote:
To me this is a bit like asking how can you say no when you're sitting on a train to someone who asks to sit next to you as the train gets more crowded.
No, the two situations are quite different. I have no right to disallow someone to sit next to me on a train, but I have the right to not do them a favour they asked, which I don't owe them.
Who_Am_I wrote:
I'm just wondering, why didn't you want to take the photo?
I intentionally avoided saying that, so the discussion wouldn't get off-topic, but some people went ahead and assumed a reason anyway. Alright, my reason was: you were not supposed to stop and take photos there, you were supposed to keep walking. There were signs about this and security guards saying this verbally at the entrance as well. Plenty of people ignored this and were taking photos anyway, but if I was take one of this group it would
totally block the way and hold many people up. So really, they shouldn't have asked me to begin with, but the whole point is that I didn't want to get into a discussion with them about whether they should do it or not (hence not giving reasons), I simply wasn't willing to help them with it.