Polite men do still walk among us | Brief letters
Brief letters: Making room on the street | Trump’s rash | Cognitive shuffling | Belling bed-warmers | Neighbours’ dog
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Regarding your letters on men pushing women in the street (20 February), I have just returned from an hour’s walk, and I’m pleased to say that, on two separate occasions, men walking towards me voluntarily changed their trajectory to let me past. I just kept walking in a straight line. Maybe they read the Guardian, or maybe men in Bradford are considerate.
Jane Thewlis
Thornton, Bradford
• If it’s a preventative treatment that has caused a flaring up, maybe the US president would have been better not applying it (Trump neck rash from ‘preventative’ skin treatment, White House says, 2 March). Perhaps there is a foreign policy lesson there, too: a guide for the rash.
Mark de Brunner
Harrogate, North Yorkshire
• I say “snap” to Melanie White’s method of “cognitive shuffling” (Letters, 23 February). I’ve developed quite a cache of topics to aid falling to sleep, my latest two being job titles and puddings.
Gwyneth Haylock
Marchwiel, Wrexham
• Your letter writer calls their Belling bed-warmer Horace (20 February). My parents were given one as a wedding present in 1961 and that one goes by the name of Uncle Alfred, after the donor, my late father’s uncle. It continues to warm my family’s beds to this day.
Tom Morrish
Leeds
• In the 1960s, my brother and I had to rely on our two labradors and the neighbours’ dog for our bed warming.
Chris Maher
Wallasey, Merseyside
• Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.

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