For Easter weekend I went to visit my family down in
Spring Branch. Not expecting to get much done in the realm of
schoolwork I indulged in quality family time and good eating. Little did
I know these things would eventually lead to the perfect eavesdropping situation. My
aunt and I were in the kitchen cooking with the screen door to the patio
open letting in cool spring air. My uncle, cousin and the neighbor were
all having guy talk out on the patio and in just a few moments of
quiet/alone in the kitchen I was able to eavesdrop on their
conversation.
My findings? Guys are weird.
The conversation was about 50% guns and
airplanes talk and 50% random movie quoting. (You will not survive 5
minutes with my family if you don't have a huge repertoire of random
knowledge and witty one-liners to throw out.) This bizarre family
dynamic is even more amplified when the women aren't around to mediate
(in other words dominate) the conversation or ruin the manly quoting
banter with sheer confusion. I'm still not really sure what I
eavesdropped on. Jason, the neighbor, went from talking about his golf
game (laughing and making self deprecating remarks about his golf
abilities) to talking about going to fly a plane this afternoon both randomly
strung together making no sense.
I was not the only one confused by this shift in topic. The rapid shift
caught Jason's conversation partners off guard eliciting a chuckle.
Laughing was interspersed throughout the conversation flowing from quote
to random stories from the week. My cousin is the master of quoting any
humorous movie in the last 3 decades and was just on fire, or at least
my uncle and Jason thought so, for the few minutes I could hear.
I don't know that this is a fair representation of what an average
conversation is really like. My family considers Spring Branch a little
slice of heaven with family, near perfect weather year round and great
food. We are all so at ease on the weekends we get to spend together.
The neighborhood that they live in is also extremely close-knit (Jason
literally just walked through the front door and joined in on our
afternoon.) I think these factors led to a very personable and laid back
conversation where laughter is mostly expected and doesn't seem out of
place, even to an eavesdropper. Other than the fact that guys talk about
weird things, like pop-up backpacks and pawn shops they frequent, I
wasn't surprised by my findings and the frequency of their laughter.
We have said humor is very contextual and social. My cousin's use of
movie quoting made me think about these aspects of humor. Quoting things
by nature takes something out of its original context and into a whole
new element. Sticking these well-know witticisms into a new light is
often funny and I think that this is for 1 of 2 reasons. (1) the quote
actually fits into the current situation and the irony just makes you
laugh or (2) it just reminds you of it's original context and you laugh
thinking back about whatever the quote's source is.
In my eavesdropping both forms of "quote humor" were exhibited. For the
latter, my cousin randomly threw out a completely irrelevant Talladega
Nights quote in a brief lull in conversation that led to a 30 second
back and forth quote-a-thon with the 3 conversationalists.
Like I said, turns out guys are weird.
Elle,
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed your post! It seemed like you enjoyed your time at home. I was able to go home for the Easter break as well, and much of our laughter was similar to that of your family's. My dad is very big on one-liners (especially from Talladega Nights!) so I was able to easily relate.
It is great to spend time with family and recognize that our time together brings out the laughter and enjoyment within all of us!
Great post!
Amanda