Hi, this is life.

thoughts, opinions & obsessions of a nomadic wanderer navigating the wastelands of postmodernism.

yourmonkeycalled:

Here’s the full text of a piece I wrote for The Magazine a few months ago. I really enjoyed writing it, and would like to thank Marco once again for publishing it there. If you haven’t checked out The Magazine yet, you should. Anyway, here’s why you’re a total snooze:

Everything was going great until you showed up. You see me across the crowded room, make your way over, and start talking at me. And you don’t stop.

You are a Democrat, an outspoken atheist, and a foodie. You like to say “Science!” in a weird, self-congratulatory way. You wear jeans during the day, and fancy jeans at night. You listen to music featuring wispy lady vocals and electronic bloop-bloops.

You really like coffee, except for Starbucks, which is the worst. No wait—Coke is the worst! Unless it’s Mexican Coke, in which case it’s the best.

Pixar. Kitty cats. Uniqlo. Bourbon. Steel-cut oats. Comic books. Obama. Fancy burgers.

You listen to the same five podcasts and read the same seven blogs as all your pals. You stay up late on Twitter making hashtagged jokes about the event that everyone has decided will be the event about which everyone jokes today. You love to send withering @ messages to people like Rush Limbaugh—of course, those notes are not meant for their ostensible recipients, but for your friends, who will chuckle and retweet your savage wit.

You are boring. So, so boring.

Don’t take it too hard. We’re all boring. At best, we’re recovering bores. Each day offers a hundred ways for us to bore the crap out of the folks with whom we live, work, and drink. And on the internet, you’re able to bore thousands of people at once.1

A few years ago, I had a job that involved listening to a ton of podcasts. It’s possible that I’ve heard more podcasts than anyone else—I listened to at least a little bit of tens of thousands of shows. Of course, the vast majority were so bad I’d often wish microphones could be sold only to licensed users. But I did learn how to tell very quickly whether someone was interesting or not.

The people who were interesting told good stories. They were also inquisitive: willing to work to expand their social and intellectual range. Most important, interesting people were also the best listeners. They knew when to ask questions. This was the set of people whose shows I would subscribe to, whose writing I would seek out, and whose friendship I would crave. In other words, those people were the opposite of boring.

Here are the three things they taught me.

Read More

Interesting read.

2 months ago
  1. pootling reblogged this from yourmonkeycalled and added:
    If you’re not a subscriber to The Magazine, then first of all you should be, but it also presuambly means you won’t have...
  2. ufallome reblogged this from yourmonkeycalled and added:
    Engage. Seriously, you should read the rest of the story and not be so boring.
  3. rithmatist reblogged this from yourmonkeycalled
  4. escape-forawhile reblogged this from yourmonkeycalled
  5. neishchavon reblogged this from alexblagg
  6. tatami-disco reblogged this from yourmonkeycalled
  7. davidfloodsterwallace reblogged this from dubiousmerit
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  9. skelepup reblogged this from yourmonkeycalled
  10. burroughsofcharm reblogged this from yourmonkeycalled and added:
    i’ve always tried to master both Boring and Interesting, but is it possible? or am i just putting both at risk?
  11. zerrinkoch reblogged this from yourmonkeycalled
  12. caaaitlin reblogged this from coletheexplorer