I’ve never been very good at small talk.
…nope.
At parties, you are most likely to find me
in the kitchen trying to spend a lot of time deciding between different kinds
of sandwich. A well-placed fruit platter can add a couple of minutes to this
process, and also opens opportunities to discuss seasonal fruits with fellow
kitchen dwellers (KDs).
It’s lucky for me that I live in Victoria,
Australia, where if all other topics of conversation fail, I can rely on one
that is foolproof. I mean other than seasonal fruits.
My dad, who arrived here about thirty years
ago from the USA, has always said he can’t believe how often Victorians discuss
the weather. We talk about the weather so much that even questions that don’t
specifically related to it, do. “What’s it going to be like on the weekend?”
really means “what is the weather doing on the weekend?”. “It’s going to be
nice tomorrow” isn’t a statement about one’s love of Wednesdays. Imagine where
we’d all be if we had no rain, hail or shine to discuss. We’d be endlessly
awkward and conversationless. We’d be clogging kitchens everywhere.
When I was little, I clearly remember
most summer-weather small talk revolving around what seemed to me to be the unicorn of the summer season: the cool change.
For those who don’t know (and by this I
mean dad’s sisters: the only people reading this who live outside of a 100km
radius of me and my computer), a ‘cool change’ is the point in a summer day
when a breeze lifts from the ocean and blows on over to your place, dropping
the temperature by a few degrees. The climatic equivalent of comic relief.
It’s the point in the day that you get to
stop surviving and start living. Once the cool change comes through, you are
free to do all the tasks that somehow seemed unmanageable and unrealistic
before: watering plants, cooking dinner, strolling down the street or getting
out of your chair. When I got old enough to drive it meant going to the beach
for an evening swim. The specific time of it's arrival is endlessly discussed throughout the day, though it normally arrives about dinner-time (presumably for a free
meal).
Maybe talking about the weather is the conversational equivalent of a cool change. Something that brings comfort and ease. Something that makes really horrible, tedious exchanges manageable.
And if that fails...
you can always go to
find some more sandwiches.
Could "cool change" mean evolving from awkwardly odd misfit to smoothly stylish hipster? Who confidently picks up change in the parking lot?
ReplyDeletesure can! There are a lot of them living near me, that's for sure. Maybe I am awkwardly evolving into one (I just need some glasses...)
Deletexx