| Choose a column below
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15 May, 2004
Learning to Ride a Bike |
10 April, 2004
Responsible Computing |
13 March, 2004
The "Low-carb" Fad |
5
February, 2004
A day at the beach |
10
January, 2004
Are you a slave to your television? |
13
December, 2003
Multi-level Marketing |
15
November, 2003
Hollywood's Anti-Piracy Campaign |
October,
2003
The Friendly Canadian Prairies |
September
2003
"How's Married Life Treating You?" |
23 August, 2003
Eastern Blackouts |
26 July, 2003
Canada's swell |
31 May, 2003
Canadian marijuana law |
3 May, 2003
Canadian Literature and Culture |
5 April, 2003
Truth in Mass Media |
8 March, 2003
Careers away from home |
8 February, 2003
Checking out Vegas |
11 January, 2003
40-hour bus ride to the desert |
14 December, 2002
Kyoto accord |
16 November, 2002
U of A becoming more selective |
19 October, 2002
Alberta's employment boom |
21 September, 2002
Thinking about marijuana |
24 August, 2002
Health care, or
Wealth care? |
27 July, 2002
The uniquely
Canadian summer |
29
June, 2002
Soldiers and freaks |
1 June,
2002
My puritannical
place of birth |
1
May, 2002
Why activism? |
6 April, 2002
Child porn or
extreme art? |
2 March, 2002
The Olympics are a farce |
2
February, 2002
Information Control |
5
January, 2002
Disintegration
of language |
8 December, 2001
Why do we live so far north? |
3
November, 2001
Brand name America |
13
October, 2001
Teachers' Pay |
1 September, 2001
Consumption: Disease Old and New |
4 August, 2001
Paying the Global Costs of Automobiles |
7
July, 2001
Whyte Avenue Riot |
9 May, 2001
Good fences make good neighbours |
14 April,
2001
A healthy relationship with parents |
14 March,
2001
Sheep's clothing
wolves' reputations |
17 February,
2001
American universities
in Canada |
3 February,
2001
Love just the
way you want to |
6 January, 2001
Alberta's barren future |
23 December, 2000
What is Christmas, anyway? |
25 November, 2000
Learning on the job |
28
October, 2000
Family-oriented community? |
30
September, 2000
Freedom and happiness |
2
September, 2000
Consumerism in Bulgaria |
3
June, 2000
Visiting Ottawa |
29 April, 2000
School Shootings:
A Year Later |
8 April, 2000
A love shop in St. Albert |
18
March, 2000
Why reality TV? |
19
February, 2000
Raves |
5
February, 2000
Try listening on Valentine's Day |
8 January, 2000
The new millennium is for thinking |
4 December, 1999
The retail Christmas |
10 November, 1999
Young people and Remembrance Day |
16 October, 1999
Wayne Gretzky Drive |
18 September, 1999
High School students protest smoking ban |
21 August, 1999
Breast Enlargement |
26
June, 1999
Witchcraft |
5 June, 1999
School Uniforms |
30
May, 1999
Corrupt St. Albert RCMP |
22
May, 1999
Littleton and Taber
school shootings
|
1
May, 1999
Gay Marriage:
Less God, more love |
3 April, 1999
Drunken grad night |
March,
1999
All-consuming materialism |
20 February, 1999
What are you so proud of? |
30
January, 1999
Try a buy-nothing Valentine's Day |
9 January, 1999
The Real Value of Education |
December,
1998
New Year's Resolution |
24
October, 1998
On Faith |
September,
1998
The Starr Report |
2 September, 1998
High school hazing crimes |
1
August, 1998
Brand name clothing
|
15 July,
1998
Smoking is rude |
17
June, 1998
Sex and Violence |
20 May,
1998
Hockey Fever |
22
April, 1998
Religion is not Law |
11
March, 1998
Gay Bashing |
18
February, 1998
It's Only Hair |
17
January, 1998
"Riot" at a St. Albert heavy metal show
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| Babe's Official Music Site |
| The
guestbook |
| The
Personal Pages |
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Audio Pages |
| Inside
the Matrix |
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"Like it is"
How's Married Life Treating You?
September 2003
|
I was always a bit different as a youngster. I liked crazy clothes, crazy music, crazy dances, and Monty Python videos. (Not much has changed.) Of course, this inevitably brought comments from others.
When they weren't mean or rude, they were merely irksome. Even the most well-intentioned person could say something totally awkward and banal. The most popular comment of that nature was "What's up with the [insert thing that is unusual]?". If I wore a tuque in July, I got "What's up with the tuque?" If I listened to rap music, I got "What's up with the crap?"
This phenomenon bothered me to no end, mostly because it made
no sense. I could never really discern what exactly the asker
was asking. My thoughts would run the gamut: "What's up
with my tuque? Why? Is it stained? Ripped? What do you mean?
Does it offend you? Or does its colour merely clash with my
shorts? Does it smell bad? What's the issue here? Are you
asking why I'm wearing a tuque, or where I got mine?" I would
invariably just wish people would say something intelligible
or not say anything at all.
Of course, now that I'm an adult and I get paid to dress conservatively,
(among other things) this doesn't happen so often. That is,
it didn't until I went and did something really wild.
I got married.
Now my wife and I get a kick out of commiserating about the
adult version of "What's up with the neon pink station wagon?"
That, my friends, is "How's married life treating you?"
Type that very phrase into the search engine at www.google.ca. You see? I'm not the only crazy, radical, hyper-sensitive hippie to be annoyed by that most hackneyed quasi-inquiry.
What do people want when they ask that? Is the question up there with other such rhetorical stand-bys as "Where's the beef?", "Whatchoo talkin' 'bout Willis?", and "Wazaaaaaap?". Or does it translate roughly as "The most prominent news item in your life is your recent wedding, so I'll make a gauche semi-joke about that to kickstart the ol' small-talk machine"?
Many of the irked opt for sarcasm as their tool of choice for highlighting the ridiculous nature of this all-too-popular question: "It's awful", "What a let down", or "The beatings are bearable now that we're right with God."
To me, that's too obvious. I prefer the direct approach: "We've lived together for two years. We were engaged for a year. Why would our lives be any different after one day?"
Oh sure, some people try to make us look like bad people for being fed up with the ad nauseum monotony of this pointless silence-filler. They say "Well, people are just trying to be nice. Can't people just be nice?" Sure they can. But I'd like to propose a radical idea: let us all stop equating "nice" with "blithely following the established norms of human interaction."
This question may appear to show an interest in the
person's life, but it actually shows that the asker hasn't
stopped to think that the marriage they're alluding to was
not arranged, shotgun, green card, same-sex, or a dumb joke.
Whether or not the asker has taken the care to consider it,
their question suggests doubt that the newlyweds were stable
enough to justify marriage. It is not nice; it is thoughtless.
Let's start a little pop-culture trend away from this question. It's trite, it's unoriginal, and it's got to stop. If you must try to be nice, ask about the honeymoon, or life without the stress of wedding-planning. Now that's worth talking about. |
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