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Some foreigners like Indians and Pakistanis were also there inside the bus. I was seated in the middle portion of the bus. Immediately after the bus started to move, I started to sing loudly. The person sitting next to me was an American and he asked me to stop singing. The driver also looked back and showed signs to stop singing. I did not obey and continued my singing. All the passengers inside the bus looked at me with different facial expressions, body language, and gestures.
Some of the Indians and Pakistanis inside the bus enjoyed my performance along with some of the Americans and they took this incident lightly. However, some other passengers, mostly the Americans have shown signs of agony and discomfort. Some of the passengers approached the driver and asked him to stop the bus and throw me out of the bus. Some others murmured that I have some mental disorders. Surprisingly, after five minutes, everything started to stabilize. My fellow passengers started to change their attention from me and focussed more on outside sceneries and sights.
Even though I tried to vary the volume of my sound very much to irritate my fellow passengers, many of the passengers did not care and I stopped singing after some time. Suddenly people again started to look at me. They were watching my expressions and movements with curiosity. I told them that I have no problem and I was conducting an experiment to study their responses. The above experiment taught me many lessons about social behavior. The first lesson I learned from this experiment was that any behavior which is unacceptable to society may be treated differently by different people.
Some people may show harsh signs of response whereas others may respond moderately. A third segment of people may take such behaviors lightly if it does not cause any physical harm to anyone. Different people may exhibit different responses to unacceptable social behaviors. In many cases, the responses of people toward unacceptable behaviors are short-lived if the behavior is not causing any physical damage to others. The initial discomfort shown by the public against unacceptable social behavior may be disappeared after some time when they are accustomed to it.
In short, my experiment taught me many valuable lessons about the public reaction to unacceptable social behaviors.
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