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It Happened to Me

Being Boring, Part 2

A couple of phone conversations further underscoring the fact that I’m not boring enough. What is it with you people?

A Telephone Conversation, Sometime in April

M: You’re pretty urban, aren’t you?

Me: Urban?

M: Very at home in the city. The noise, the traffic, the craziness, the things that happen when you carry your accordion around…

Me: I guess so. Until I went to Kingston, Toronto was the least urban place I’d ever lived in.

M: Your life is a little…fast. I don’t know if I could keep up with that kind of thing.

And shortly after that, she stopped returning my messages.

Maybe what happened on our date freaked her out more than I thought.

A Conversation in May

Me: So, hypothetically speaking, going out with me would be a bad idea because…?

R: Our lifestyles are way too different. I wear suits to work, you wear skater shirts and running shoes. You like to go out; I like to stay in. I like well-planned weekends; you once flew to DC so that some girl wouldn’t have to see the Dalai Lama alone…

Me: Hey, I had some airline points and she was cute. Besides, the Dalai Lama is one deep brutha.

R: Last week, you just hopped in your car and drove to Guelph to gather around a bonfire with people you didn’t know!

Me: I was invited, and I needed to get outdoors. I’d been cooped in a conference hotel in the blandest part of NoCal all week!

R: All that stuff — it’s just not my kind of thing.

How boring — or is stable a better word — do I have to be?

I don’t have any tattoos or piercings because I hate needles. I take my vitamins every day. I’m a non-smoker, I have no drug addictions and I don’t go on serious benders very often. I clear my credit card balance at the end of every month. I visit my parents every Sunday for our family dinner. I know which fork is for salad and which is for the main course. I have never had to phone for bail money from a Mexican holding cell. For Chrissake, I have white couches!

(Seriously, if white non-IKEA, non-discount, non-hand-me-down couches don’t say “stable”, I don’t know what does.)

More later…

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Being Boring, Part 1

A conversation with a table full of women eating ice cream and brownies leads to a shocking discovery: apparently, being a little boring is good.

Before I begin, let me set the mental soundtrack. Think of Being Boring by the Pet Shop Boys, the opening track from their very excellent 1990 album, Behaviour. It’s lush, loungy, and I really love this song, both musically and thematically. I also think it’s appropriate for this story.

(If the song doesn’t ring a bell, you can find a fair-use-friendly 59-second sample of Being Boring on this page.)

Here’s the last verse and chorus:

Now I sit with different faces

In rented rooms and foreign places

All the people I was kissing

Some are here and some are missing

In the nineteen-nineties

I never dreamt that I would get to be

The creature that I always meant to be

But I thought in spite of dreams

You’d be sitting somewhere here with me

‘Cause we were never being boring

We had too much time to find for ourselves

And we were never being boring

We dressed up and fought, then thought: “Make amends”

And we were never holding back or worried that

Time would come to an end

We were always hoping that, looking back

You could always rely on a friend

Got that tune running in your head? Good. Let’s begin.


Monday, July 1st

The scene: Tequila Bookworm (here’s a photo), a cafe-meets-magazine store-meets-used book reading room with cute staff. There’s a bar and tables in the front and ratty but comfy couches in the back. It’s been a neighbourhood hangout for years; many of my stories start here.

I was sitting with a table full of women eating ice cream and brownies. My friend Z was there; she’d given me a ring and asked her to join them. I arrived just in time to catch the part of the conversation where she was talking about some guy she’d been set up with:

Z: I went out for drinks with Q today.

Me: How’d that go?

Z: He’s nice. He’s got lots to talk about, he’s well read, he’s well travelled, and another good thing about him is that he’s a little boring. I’ve grown to like that.

Me: Boring?

Z: Yeah?

Me: Boring is good?

Y: Maybe a little is okay. It means they’re stable.

X: I can see that.

Me (still trying to grasp the concept): But boring is good?

W (to me): Let me guess: you’ve already bought your Burning Man tickets and now want a refund?

Y: Are we going to see a new Joey next week? Wearing a cardigan, driving a mini-van, maybe with his natural hair colour?

Me (in a Mr. Rogers voice):The missionary position. Not just a good idea; it’s the law!

W: Ha!

X: Now that’s boring.

Z: You’re far from boring.

Me: Uh, thanks, but isn’t that a bad thing now?

To be continued…

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Happy Canada Day, eh?

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Bjarne. Cats.

A pointer to the lastest posts on my other blog, The Happiest Geek on earth.

I’m killing a little time waiting for Will to return from the ‘burbs, so allow me to point you folks to these two latest entries in The Happiest Geek on Earth:

Bjarne would be proud. Inspired by my Lisp porn, which was inspired by the Perl porn that Brit journo/Warchalking inventor Ben Hammersley pointed out, Martin “Coderman” Peck has made his own C++ porn.

It’s all Dvorak’s fault. But before I begin, a riddle:

Q: What’s the difference between John Dvorak’s office and a cactus?

A: On a cactus, the pricks are on the outside.

But seriously folks, the animal chosen for the cover of O’Reilly’s upcoming book on Blogging is probably his fault.

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Queen Street Stories, part 5

Yours truly and two cute salesgirls on a Queen Street store talk about e-mail addresses.

More e-mail address silliness

This afternoon, at an undisclosed store, chatting with two female staffers:

Me: So I observed earlier today that people who have the word “sexy” in their e-mail address usually aren’t.

C.: Too true.

K.: Wait — one of my e-mail addresses is cutiepie@[server name deleted to protect the innocent].

C: Really?

I could see that.

Me: Okay, so the law doesn’t apply for the phrase “cutie pie”. Do you have any other e-mail addresses also like that?

K (getting all faux coy): Well…

Me: ‘Fess up…

K: I have this other e-mail address, pinkpearl@[server name deleted to protect the innocent].

Me: Pink Pearl as in the eraser?

K (looking at me with a you-should-know-better expression through the world’s cutest set of bangs): No, Joey.

C: Whatever could you mean then?

Me: The little man at the front of the boat…

C (getting the picture all of a sudden): That’s your e-mail address?

Me: You pretend your tongue’s the bad cop, and you’re beating on the little man like the perp who killed your partner.

K (laughing, slapping her palm on the counter): That’s hilarious!

Me: So’s the fact that I’ll never look at my Pink Pearl eraser in the same way again.

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Just an Observ@tion

People who have the word “sexy” in their e-mail address usually aren’t.

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Queen Street Stories, part 4

In which your ‘umble Accordion Player talks about the gym where everybody in the city seems to go and gets suckered into a physical activity whose practitioners he used to mock mercilessly.

Douglas Adams would’ve worked out here, and my unwittingly shameful act

I joined my gym in the middle of March, and over time, it’s turned out to be the Gymnasium at the Centre of the Universe. I ran into a half-dozen people I knew when I first set foot into the place to sign up for a membership, and I’ve been running into more friends there ever since. My plans to become the accordion-playing King of Queen Street are slowly falling into place.

There are two people I no longer see at the gym are my friend Will “Dean Cain” McLean and my trainer Mike “The Vollminator” Vollmer. Will no longer works at the gym, and Mike’s just…missing. Nobody, not even his co-workers, know where’s he’s run off to. Someone mentioned that he was in serious training for some kind of bodybuilding competition and that he was looking more ripped than ever, but that was over a month ago. Maybe he won, and he’s part of some touring posedown show. It may also be that the KISS tribute band in which Mike plays guitar is touring, in which case there’s an unusually musclebound Bruce Kulick impersonator in full makeup playing in a small town bar near you.

Some of my friends at the gym have been trying to get me to join Body Attack. I watched it for a while, and while it was tempting — what straight guy doesn’t want to spend an hour in a room full of women throwing punches to Fatboy Slim? — it seemed more in the league of my friend Amber, who’s a dance instructor and find nothing strenuous about teaching dance for eight hours a day and attending two hour-long aerobics classes to top it off. From a cardiovascular point of view, it seemed pretty out of my league. I’m usually knackered after 45 minutes on the elliptical exerciser (a machine that mimic the motions of cross-country skiing), so I was sure that I wouldn’t make it through a full hour of Body Attack. I had visions of me slinking out of the room with all the women going “tsk, tsk, boy’s got no stamina.” I’d have to throw myself in front of a speeding truck after that.

I think it was my friend Danielle who first suggested that I join Body Attack. Then Amber suggested the same a couple of days later, followed by Michelle, whom I’d met the week before at a barbecue thrown by Amber. My co-worker Mark suggested that most guys, especially computer programmers, would kill to have three women invite them to their gym class. It turned out that Mark, along with Bryan, antoher co-worker, also went to that gym.

“We should go check out Body Attack,” Mark said. “Might be fun.”

“But we can’t bow out partway through,” I replied. “Not in front of the women. Death before dishonour.”

“Death before dishonour!” he called back, raising a Diet Coke in a toast.


We arrived at the gym, got changed into our gym clothes and found what little free space was left in the aerobics studio. Aside from one scrawny little guy in floral shorts at the front of the gym, we were the only men there (“and with those shorts, he doesn’t count,” I whsipered to Mark).

The instructor, a very athletic blonde woman with short wavy hair, said “ah, we have some new guys here. And they’re quite close to the door.”

I hadn’t noticed that we were right by the exit.

“That’s okay,” she said. “The first time’s always the hardest, and if you need a break, don’t worry about taking one.”

I turned to Mark and quietly said “No backing out — death before dishonour!”

Mark replied “No wimping out in front of the women.”

The workout was incredibly intense and the choreography was unfamiliar. We did our best to follow the others, who seemed to know the sequence of steps. The combinations really threw us off.

“Punch!” yelled the instructor. “Jab-jab-jab-uppercut-kick!”

Was that kick right or left? I opted for left and got some girl’s foot planted in my ribcage. I guess I was supposed to kick right.

“Sorry,” she said, and I smiled and said it was all right. After all, my last girlfriend was into this kind of stuff.

When I finally decided to look at the clock, forty minutes had passed without my even noticing it. Before we knew it, it was over, and we’d made it all the way through, and without wimping out. The instructor congratulated us, as did Danielle, Michelle and Amber.

“What are you doing?” I asked Michelle, who was getting a barbell.

“I’m going to do the next class,” she said, which was Body Pump, a kind of sadistic torture exercise that combines a “step” workout with weightlifting. Michelle must be bionic.

Mark and I walked out of the class and drank two Gatorade bottles of water each.

“Death before dishonour!” we yelled and high-fived each other. We’d have to get our co-worker Bryan to join us next time.


A couple of days later, I told my Mom about the class at my weekly dinner with the folks. Mom’s a cardiologist, and it makes her happy to see her number one son doing cardiovascular exercises.

“You know,” she said, “that sounds a lot like Tae Bo.”

Oh, crap.

I’d just participated in an act whose participants I mocked regularly. I once made fun of someone who did Tae Bo by saying “Ooooh. Tae Bo. The martial art that’s only useful in the parallel reality where aerobics can kill!”

NOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!! I felt like Larry the Cable Guy after discovering that the delicious ham-and-egg pie he just ate was actually quiche.

Damn you, Billy Blanks.