I'm not sure about what happened here, but it crossed my mind that someone might have thought I was a child. I went to the ticket office at my train station and my daughter was outside, so I appeared to be alone. I asked for a 'kids go free' ticket. This just means that if you buy an adult return ticket, you get your kids on for free. It's common for people to ask for a 'kids go free' ticket, simply because that's what they're called. The station man said, 'You can't get that without an adult fare too'. I wondered at first if he thought I was buying a ticket for my 7yr old, to go on her own (as if). But, if he knew I had a child with me, it was strange for him to question my request, as I asked for the right thing and it should have made perfect sense that I was buying a ticket for the two of us. So, I've come to the conclusion that he thought I was buying a child ticket for myself and that I had assumed I could get it for free, like the name of the ticket suggests. When I explained that I wanted the adult ticket and the free child ticket, for my daughter outside, he looked a little startled and had to compose his thoughts. That was weird. Now, I just ask for a one and a half return and hope they don't have to be reminded that the child ticket is free.
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"We act as though comfort and luxury were the chief requirements of life, when all we need to make us really happy is something to be enthusiatic about." Charles Kingsley