My daughter was chatting to my mum on the phone yesterday when a knock came on Mum's door. She popped the receiver on the table and went to answer it to find a salesman, there to try and persuade her to change her phone provider. Mum wasn't interested, she's had the same line for 50 years and started out with a 2 digit number, which has had extra ones added to front and back over time until now it's up to six digits, but still the original 98 is in there. (it wasn't 2 digits for very long) Mum is settled, she's very happy with her phone/gas/electricity supplier and just doesn't want the hassle of change. Normally telling the salesman this is enough, yesterday it wasn't - he was leaning his shoulder against the door frame so she couldn't close it and eventually he had become so heated he was shouting. A colleague of his joined him, but instead of calming the situation down he waded in too. My daughter was listening to every word and at this point, using her mobile so she could keep the connection to her Nan, she phoned me. Daughter and I both live a good 20 miles from Mum and as Mum's in a small village the local police would have taken almost as long to get to her as we would. Fortunately a friend of my son had just bought a house nearby so phoning son at work I managed to get his friend's number. As luck would have it not only was his friend home, but his father was visiting and the pair of them raced round and saved the day by politely but firmly asking these people to leave.
This whole situation, from Mum answering the door until they left, lasted 35 minutes. She's still very shaken.
My daughter immediately phoned the company involved to complain. I am going to follow this up with a strongly worded letter. If it had just been the one man I would have thought that he was probably just an isolated problem, but the second one appeared and made the situation worse. My daughter also says that he seemed to turn up just at the right moment, almost as if it were a well orchestrated plan. I don't know if this is something that has been cooked up by this pair or if it's company policy. I just want everyone to be aware of this, tell any elderly relatives not to answer the door unless they are certain of who is there, and if anyone calls trying to sell anything ask the salesperson to push leaflets/information through the letterbox and tell them they'll be contacted if the homeowner is interested. It's just common sense really I suppose, but Mum's lived there all her adult life, it's a quiet little backwater and most of her neighbours bought their homes around the time she did and they've all grown old together, things like this come as a surprise to them and they're not well equipped to deal with it.
This whole situation, from Mum answering the door until they left, lasted 35 minutes. She's still very shaken.
My daughter immediately phoned the company involved to complain. I am going to follow this up with a strongly worded letter. If it had just been the one man I would have thought that he was probably just an isolated problem, but the second one appeared and made the situation worse. My daughter also says that he seemed to turn up just at the right moment, almost as if it were a well orchestrated plan. I don't know if this is something that has been cooked up by this pair or if it's company policy. I just want everyone to be aware of this, tell any elderly relatives not to answer the door unless they are certain of who is there, and if anyone calls trying to sell anything ask the salesperson to push leaflets/information through the letterbox and tell them they'll be contacted if the homeowner is interested. It's just common sense really I suppose, but Mum's lived there all her adult life, it's a quiet little backwater and most of her neighbours bought their homes around the time she did and they've all grown old together, things like this come as a surprise to them and they're not well equipped to deal with it.
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