The Call of the Not-So-Wild,
or A Gentle Reminder of How Awesome My Friends Are
I went to happy hour on
Friday with a select group of folks from work. This came about because of a
lunch conversation during which we mentioned how blah and vanilla everyone
seems to be in our office. This bunch seemed to have the potential to be a fun
bunch, able to riff about pop culture nonsense on the same level as me, and
liked most of the same things I did. Add some alcohol to this mix and we should
have the recipe for a pretty good time.
Or so I thought.
We carefully selected our
test group for this first happy hour, making sure to only bring people we
wouldn’t mind knowing how we behave outside of work. A fun and well-stocked bar
near Boston Common was selected and we made our way. During the 10 minute
subway ride, the discussion was mostly work stuff…I figured they’re probably
just waiting until we’re in a more comfortable setting to start up the stories
of times they drank 22 beers during a 4 hour car ride, and other stories of
high jinks that every normal person gets into.
We arrived at our location, bellied up to the bar, and placed our orders:
A house red wine, not the most fun, but whatever, to each their own.
We arrived at our location, bellied up to the bar, and placed our orders:
A house red wine, not the most fun, but whatever, to each their own.
Another wine, this one
something I can pronounce, but not spell, so I’ll just say it was red-ish.
A draft beer, one of the
funky brands on tap; good selection, ok, now we’re getting somewhere.
A double IPA (my order), in
the bottle, thank you, no glass is needed. I have no time for pouring! Besides,
my beverage was immediately enveloped by my trusty coozy, all the better to
keep it cool and delicious, you see.
After ordering, the
conversation picked back up and was still work-based. Hmm…this is got to stop
before it makes my Friday evening suck. So I asked what plans everyone had for
the weekend. One was hanging with her sister,
catching up on some DVR’d TV, the other was relaxing after just coming back
from vacation, and the third was heading to a late dinner that night with a
friend, then probably shopping with her boyfriend that weekend. Jeez, it sounded
blah. All I needed was Frank the Tank saying there might even be a trip to Home
Depot…you know, if there’s enough time.
We eventually moved to a
table, and chatter bounced from work to some of the places around Boston that
are fun to go for a beer and an appetizer. Helpful restaurant suggestions to be
sure, but still a little tame. No one felt the need to share any new
ridiculously convoluted sexual positions with colorful names, like the Jamaican
Chimney Sweep or the Mexican Avalanche.
No one decided to randomly break into song, or serenade the next table
with Journey, or even John Cougar Mellencamp. And no one really seemed all that excited to
be out and about in a wonderful city on a Friday night, pay day at that, a
little money in our pockets and an appetite for silliness.
What the shit?
That’s when I realized something:
Florida isn’t the most delightful place; that’s why I left. But it’s not
necessarily things in a place that make it wonderful. It’s the people. And in Florida, I know a lot
of people who live there amongst the riff-raff (quite possibly making up a
significant part of the riff-raff population) who are delightfully whimsical
and with whom a good time can be had anywhere, anytime, doing quite literally
anything. After six months in Boston, I’m
still on the lookout for similar personalities up here.
But it appears these folks, these
co-workers so carefully plucked to partake in a happy hour/get-to-know-you
session, whose potential hinted they could possibly develop into outside-of-work
friends, and maybe even partner-in-crime level buddies…just don’t cut the
mustard. So my quest to meet fun people
in Boston will continue, and it will continue outside of my workplace. I tried to find some panache beneath the beige
facades some people put up at work, but apparently underneath the beige are
layers of off-white, eggshell, and mother-of-pearl.
So what does this mean? Am I
far too rowdy to hang out with work people? I refuse to believe that. In fact, some of my best friends, those I’ve
had the zaniest of times with, are people I’ve met through work. Maybe all my
wonderfully insane friends back home have set the bar too high for these mere
mortals to live up to. Maybe I’ll have
to lower my standards, or at least my expectations. Not everyone can be Big Jim
P, or Chuck Deuce, or Keef, or the Panda, or Rico, or Ska Mike, or Wild Turkey
Pete, or Scuba Steve, or Frankie Slims, or Lumpy, or…well, you get the idea.
So, I guess it’s safe to say not only should you not dip your pen in the
company ink…you probably shouldn’t go drinking with it either, lest you be
disappointed at how bland it is.
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