Around that same pub table I described last
week we also discussed the merits of being boring. All agreed that I was very
boring indeed, true friends in other words, but that the advantages of being
boring were there for all to see. As is often the case with discussions in pubs,
I cannot precisely remember how this conversation came about, but it may have
been to do with stability and family harmony. Whatever, though I am actually 40
now, I have been 40 since I was 20 if you see what I mean, and that has a lot
going for it.
My mate Richard, whilst perhaps not meeting
the same ‘boring’ baseline, an area where I truly set the bar, agreed he too was
a pretty level-headed kind of guy and that he liked that. Neither of us will
ever set the world on fire, neither of us will ever go on to achieve great
things that are talked about for generations to come. And we’re both absolutely
fine with that. Steady as she goes.
So what is good about being dull? Well, I am
unlikely to ever spring any surprises on anybody, especially my family who know
me best. Mrs L generally knows what I am thinking before I do, or what I am
about to do. She catches me “tasting” in-progess cooking before I have even
reached for the spoon for instance. My children have this talent too – this is
good. Being predictable means that expectations are generally always met. Having
a firm footing in an unexciting home life (by which I mean no fits, no
screaming, no emotional angst) means that my kids are level-headed, sensible and
nice individuals, who at this stage we feel will develop into level-headed and
sensible teenagers, hormones not withstanding. This may have been the gist of
the original conversation, but at this stage we can’t see where the “I hate
you I wish I’d never been born!” is going to come from. Perhaps being boring
also brings with it massive amounts of parental naivety? Time will
tell.
And of course I like birds. There's a boring badge right there. One of the best you can get in my opinion, my head full of useless avian facts, latin binomials, calls and songs, and a mental archive full of what rare birds I've seen where. I've been known to wear green, and I even have a camo hat (kind of). Not forgetting my ground-breaking musical tastes....
And no, no migrants yet since you ask.
Dull is just dull, it simply means you don't give off any air of charisma.
ReplyDeleteBores are people who tell you everything.
You're a charismatic bore.
Possibly the best blog comment I have ever had!
DeleteCan't better the above comment but achievement is relative etc. From what I've seen you have achieved plenty. Security for your family, being a great dad, lots of trips abroad. Nothing dull or boring about that!
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