Stupid Tuesday questions, Beau Brummel edition

Russell Saunders

Russell Saunders is the ridiculously flimsy pseudonym of a pediatrician in New England. He has a husband, three sons, daughter, cat and dog, though not in that order. He enjoys reading, running and cooking. He can be contacted at blindeddoc using his Gmail account. Twitter types can follow him @russellsaunder1.

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117 Responses

  1. Saul DeGraw says:

    I have a pair of off-white jeans that I also wear during the summer only or usually. Though SF has an Indian Summer in September-Thanksgiving so I can and do wear them in the fall. I wouldn’t in New York though.

    I probably would only wear white bucks in the summer. If I owned a pair of white bucks.

    I still think that the only reason to wear gym clothing in public is if you are going to, from, or doing some kind of athletic activity. And I seemingly dislike wearing lounge clothing at home because it makes me feel lazy and kind of grungy. Yet this seems to be an age where people wear PJs and Sweats in public and put them on as soon as they come home.

    BTW I missed the Tuesday questionsReport

    • Kim in reply to Saul DeGraw says:

      “I still think that the only reason to wear gym clothing in public is if you are going to, from, or doing some kind of athletic activity”

      I’m rarely in public while not satisfying this criterion.
      I go grocery shopping: Directly afterwards, I shall be hauling 50 lbs. of groceries around. You betcha i’m gonna have some shorts on, pal.Report

      • Kim in reply to Kim says:

        This can also be filed in the “Kim walks, as a general rule, fast enough that folks have jogged to keep up with her.”Report

      • dragonfrog in reply to Kim says:

        By the same token, I have very few clothes that aren’t suitable for cycling in, and those I do own, I barely wear.Report

      • Saul DeGraw in reply to Kim says:

        @dragonfrog

        I have friends who seemingly only own clothing that is appropriate for hiking/mountaineering. Lots of marmot.

        I wonder how much of this has to do with profession or whether we have a way of dressing that leans us towards certain professions/regions. Some of my NE friends who lived in Oregon reported being more dressed by simply wearing jeans or cords instead of hiking/RMS stuff. I work in a very casual office but still can’t bring myself to wear sneakers to work except on Friday’s sometime and more often than not I wear collared and button down shirts (long sleeve).

        Though I interestingly got into a debate with someone from Pittsburgh about whether you could wear a gray suit or pants with brown shoes. I said yes and the Pittsburgher said no. She also joked that she wasn’t sure GQ magazine existed in Pittsburgh.Report

      • dragonfrog in reply to Kim says:

        It’s really much of a visual identity thing for me – I just go everywhere by bicycle, so any clothes that aren’t fit for cycling in, I’d have to change into on arrival, then change back before going home. The only time cycling isn’t a consideration is when I’m going out of town and won’t have a bike available to me.

        I try to have things that are suitable for cycling but don’t look like ‘cycling clothes’ – jeans and dress pants that are narrow enough to stay out of the chain and stretchy enough not to be encumbering, shirts that can be unbuttoned to avoid overheating.Report

      • Kim in reply to Kim says:

        Saul,
        Oh, yeah, I can totally see folks like that. (To me, a good set of hiking pants is way less casual than jeans — but I also think cop shorts look pretty professional for “about town, not actually at work”).

        Pittsburgh (particularly older Pittsburghers) has kind of an “anti-hip” mystique. Rustbelt city, more bars and pizza places per capita than any other major metro, we smoke a ton, and we are routinely mentioned on “best cities to wear a beard in.”Report

    • Patrick in reply to Saul DeGraw says:

      BTW I missed the Tuesday questions

      Me too.Report

  2. Glyph says:

    I am pretty anti-superstitious. I will ridicule people who are, and will often deliberately contravene superstitions.

    And yet.

    For some reason, on my audio devices that digitally-display volume as a number, I won’t set them intentionally at ’13’.

    ’12’ (even if too quiet) or ’14’ (even if too loud), it will have to be.

    (Obviously, ’11’ is ideal).

    I don’t really observe triskaidekaphobia in the rest of my life, so not sure why I do here. But I do, and can’t seem to stop.

    (I DO, however, like to reheat certain food items for exactly 6 minutes and 66 seconds, using the microwave’s timer, and this drives my wife bonkers).Report

  3. Maribou says:

    “Feel free to file this under Russell Talks Gay Again.”

    Um, I was filing it under “Small things that Russell and I have in common.” As I suspect many of your female readers would do. (I have no sense of what straight men think about swanning around Mykonos, or even if they do think about it.)

    As for your question, the one I have trouble with is “Speak politely when you are spoken to.” Which is actually a pretty good guideline for life, but it’s a terrible rule when applied to every situation. That super creepy guy on the street corner asking me loudly if I will fish him? There are many good responses, but politeness usually does not serve me very well. It sounds absurd, but it took me years to drill “if someone is scary you can ignore them or scare them off” into my own head, and decades of customer service work really doesn’t help with remembering that. I do my best to drill it into the heads of my student workers, so they learn it quicker than I did.Report

  4. Mike Schilling says:

    “The reason for A is because B” drives me up the wall. It’s either “The reason for A is B” or “A because B” Not both. And don’t get me started in “If I would have done that” instead of “If I had done that”.Report

  5. Chris says:

    When I was a smoker, I always flipped one cigarette over when I opened the pack, the “lucky” cigarette, which had to be smoked last. I do not know why I did this. I didn’t believe it was actually lucky. I never smoked that “lucky” cigarette until I’d smoked all the others in the pack.Report

    • Jaybird in reply to Chris says:

      I found that people didn’t mind taking another person’s last cigarette under certain circumstances (let’s say that there is a 7-11 nearby, etc) but they hesitated when it came to taking another’s “lucky” even under the same ones.Report

      • Chris in reply to Jaybird says:

        Yes, and even if they did, they had to acknowledge that it was your “lucky” and that that fact made your giving it away an even greater act of generosity somehow.Report

    • Johanna in reply to Chris says:

      Yup I did that too back in my smoking days. I did have to explain it to a couple of Yugoslavian soldiers we met on a train and they proceded to flip the first cigarettes of their newly opened packs. I wonder if it stuck?Report

  6. LeeEsq says:

    I refuse to wear gym clothes in public like Saul. The thing that I hated most about college is how people would show up to breakfast in pajamas and unwashed. It seemed really immature. Before I leave my apartment, I make sure I’m washed, brushed, and that I’m wearing appropriate clothing.Report

    • Kim in reply to LeeEsq says:

      If I am in public, I am either exercising, preparing to exercise, or post-exercising. (Yes, this includes work. I walk a mile to and from work, in sneakers, every day).

      I do not walk slow.

      (Lee: better than showing up to your 8am class, turning in the homework, and going back to bed?)Report

    • Tod Kelly in reply to LeeEsq says:

      Never move to Portland. It will drive you crazy.Report

    • Gabriel Conroy in reply to LeeEsq says:

      @leeesq

      I had very similar hangups. It wasn’t so much that they were unwashed, it was just….I didn’t like it. But free country and all.Report

      • LeeEsq in reply to Gabriel Conroy says:

        It just seemed very decadent in a bad way to me and immature. If your an adult or soon to be adult, you should wash up and put on clothing before going out.Report

      • zic in reply to Gabriel Conroy says:

        uhh, it really depends on what you do.

        If you farm, work on cars or boilers or paint, you know, jobs that get you dirty, you may not have a lot of choice.Report

      • Kim in reply to Gabriel Conroy says:

        zic,
        that’s different from wearing pajamas.
        jeans are appropriate work clothing for a wide range of farm tasks, I believe.

        We do have a societal expectation that workplaces like that will provide washrooms so that people can clean up (“feel human”) after they’re done with work for the day.Report

  7. Tod Kelly says:

    I wonder if no Christmas music before the day after Thanksgiving counts?

    If not, I probably have to go with eating any kind of breakfast dish for dinner. My family loves that, but they have to do it when I’m out of town because I just won’t do it.Report

    • Breakfast for Dinner is one of the more reliable meals for the Critter when we’re out of ideas that will pass muster.

      But I am entirely with you on Christmas music before Thanksgiving, because for the love of GOD CHRISTMAS SEASON [which I love, within appropriate bounds] IS FRICKIN’ LONG ENOUGH AS IT IS!! Report

    • dragonfrog in reply to Tod Kelly says:

      In Canada it’s Halloween not Thanksgiving as the boundary of acceptability for Christmas music, our Thanksgiving being way too early. Too many stores try to skirt the prohibition with suggestively jingling bells and totally-generic-not-at-all-Christmas-y pine boughs in their flyers. It’s reprehensible.Report

  8. Maribou says:

    Oh, I also put “The LAW SAYS no more than 4 cats per household within city limits!!!” in this category. Because, really? We could have 6 or 7 cats and no one would care. But we need that bright line, man, we really need it. (I think Jaybird already mentioned, but we’re back up to 4 again….)Report

  9. dhex says:

    if one must endure hot weather, linen is the way to endure it.

    dumb rule – i won’t go into anyone’s purse. i will hand her purse to my wife, but i will never go into it.

    i wouldn’t go into someone’s wallet either, but that comes up 0.0% of the time. the purse thing is rather often.Report

  10. The number 6 has for a very long time bothered me, probably because of its relation to the number of the beast (which I find it very difficult to write). Perhaps it’s because of my quasi-evangelical upbringing, and while I really don’t believe number can be “bad,” I still avoid it. If, for example, I’m writing a report for work and need to make several points, and the points I need to make number one through six, I’ll try my hardest to come up with a seventh point.

    I also have the hangup about split infinitives. It’s not that I “can’t” or “don’t” use them, it’s that I’m always strongly tempted not to, even when doing so is the most elegant way to say something. I also try to use the subjunctive correctly and tsk-tsk to myself when I read it incorrectly or not used when called for. (Not that I always be using it correctly myself.)Report

    • Mike Schilling in reply to Gabriel Conroy says:

      The “rule” against split infinitives was created by people who misunderstood pretty much everything about language, and good writers have ignored it ever since.Report

      • Kim in reply to Mike Schilling says:

        I agree. A friend of mine failed a college course for splitting too many infinitives.
        (He was an editor too. It was disgraceful, and he complained to the dean, who simply said “it said so on the syllabus, too many errors and you fail”).

        The general rule about writing is “write to be understood, first and foremost”. The secondary rule about writing is: “If you’re writing humor, write to be misunderstood and then comprehended.”Report

    • Road Scholar in reply to Gabriel Conroy says:

      I was getting fast-food the other day and the receipt had a three-digit order number on it. Yep. 666. The food (-like substance) ended up giving me heartburn. So, that happened…Report

  11. gingergene says:

    I want to be a language descriptivist, but in my heart, I am a prim, bifocals-on-the-end-of-her-nose, hair-in-a-painfully-tight-bun prescriptivist. Therefore, the data show, not “shows”. You imply something, which I infer. And “irrespective” of what you would like, I will not “conversate” with you.

    Also, the “midwest” includes any state that borders a Great Lake but not the Atlantic Ocean. Oklahoma is *NOT* part of the midwest, and neither is Kansas.Report

    • I never heard that definition of “midwest” before (not that I ever looked for a definition, so yours might very well be the standard). To me, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, and the Dakotas are all midwest. I have no authority for that view, however, and would probably lose any argument.

      I, too, act like a prescriptivist sometimes. I did so mostly when I taught, based on the assumption that for educated speech, there was a prescriptive standard and students needed to learn it, even though it wasn’t “right” in any other sense.Report

      • gingergene in reply to Gabriel Conroy says:

        Oh, that’s a midwest definition I made up, based on entirely on my predjuces. Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa are Great Plains states. I’ve lived in Michigan and Oklahoma; they have virtually nothing in common with each other that they don’t have with every other U.S. state. My secondary definition is: what do you call flavored, sweetened, fizzy water? If it’s “pop”, you’re probably in the midwest. If you get yelled at across the room by 3 different people for throwing your pop can in the trash: you’re in Michigan.Report

      • This is relevant to the whole midwest definition thing. Historically, I’ve thought of it similar to @gabriel-conroy . I’ve since come to understand that most people have a different understanding, of course.

        But seriously, of course Kansas is the midwest. Clark Kent and his family are midwestern defined!

        Oklahoma is hard to categorize. I wouldn’t say South, but wouldn’t say midwest either.Report

      • gingergene in reply to Gabriel Conroy says:

        Also, my rule of thumb on the prescriptivist/descriptivist debate: language’s purpose is to convey meaning, which includes meanings you may not like based on the particular way you’ve chosen to communicate. That ain’t always fair, but it is always true.Report

      • Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa are Great Plains states.

        @gingergene
        US Census Bureau county-level definition of the Great Plains, less a handful of Colorado Front Range counties and four Texas counties centered on Austin. Those excluded counties are border cases with large populations and economies that have little or nothing to do with being part of the Great Plains (so don’t fit the narrative where I use this map). Iowa isn’t a Great Plains state, it’s a tall-grass prairie state, which is a very different, wetter, generally lower-altitude ecosystem.Report

      • Kim in reply to Gabriel Conroy says:

        Michael,
        Does Ohio fit in the “tall grass prarie” regime? — how far east does that run?Report

      • James Hanley in reply to Gabriel Conroy says:

        The tallgrass prairie runs just past the border of Illinois and barely into Indiana. You have to be West of the Wabash to be in the prairie. Indiana and Ohio are woodlands states.Report

      • This map from the Illinois State Museum site shows the original extent of the short-, tall-, and intermediate-grass prairies. Of course, prairie is a very recent development. As best the experts can reconstruct, the area was forested until about 9,000 years ago. Then over a period of less than 1,000 years, a combination of factors led to a radical ecological shift to grasslands. Grass is well suited to surviving bison, fire, and the occasional drought; trees, not so much.Report

    • I still use “data” as a plural noun, as you do. (More on that next week!)

      And I am with you 100% on “imply” and “infer.” To my mind, the distinction improves clarity of communication. But then, I’m a prescriptivist at heart.

      And Oklahoma is Southwest. I would include Kansas. I’m from Missouri, which does not border a Great Lake but is (at least as far as I’ve always been concerned) decidedly midwest.Report

      • If Oklahoma wants to be part of the Southwest, it needs to start acting more like New Mexico and less like Alabama.Report

      • Patrick in reply to Russell Saunders says:

        We won’t take Oklahoma, full stop.

        Thus has it been written.

        The Southwest is Southern California, New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, and Nevada. That’s it. We don’t include Northern California, that’s Northwest.Report

      • Depends on which “Southwest” we’re talking about. If I’m talking about “southwest” I am not including California. I’d include Oklahoma in the southwest only if I’m referring to the southwest that includes Texas because they’re culturally appended to Texas (but not the “western” part of Texas).Report

      • gingergene in reply to Russell Saunders says:

        Oklahoma is weird, I’ll grant you- it *definitely* isn’t midwest, but it isn’t really southwest either. It’s kind of its own thing.

        Off topic- having gone to elementary school there, I still know a ridiculous amount of OK trivia and can name all five Civilized Tribes, which were drilled into us for some reason. (Cherokee, Creek, Choctaw, Chickasaw and Seminole, although the Seminole were an offshoot of the Creek). On further thought “Five Civilized Tribes” sounds very condescending. Wonder if they still use that terminology.Report

      • @james-hanley

        I consider Missouri to be South, West, and Midwest, just like I consider Texas to be both South and West (and maybe Southwest?).Report

      • One of the defining characteristics of the Southwest (and most of the West generally) is water, or more precisely, the lack thereof. Missouri is on the wrong side of the Great Plains, and gets far too much rainfall, to ever be considered either West or Southwest. One characteristic that all of the column of states from North Dakota down to Texas share is that the western part is dry high plains/desert West, and the eastern part is much wetter non-West.Report

      • James Hanley in reply to Russell Saunders says:

        @gabriel-conroy

        Missouri is one of the states I find hard to regionally classify, along with Arkansas and Oklahoma. They all seem to exist in a sort of in-between area, although not the same one. Missouri’s partly Midwestern, partly western (KC is the great in-between town, furthest west Midwestern town, furthest East Western town), and partly Arkansan, and Arkansas is simply Arkansas–it would fit in better with Appalachia, but it’s too far away. Oklahoma’s got some continuity with Northern Texas, but North Texas is just to OK what Southern MO is to Arkansas. A strange region, in a way.

        I shouldn’t say too much, though, or Michael Drew will fret about my preoccupation with geographic hostilities.Report

      • Arkansas, Oklahoma, North Texas, and North Louisiana definitely give off a “New Appalachia” vibe. In Texas and Louisiana, getting more distinctly southern the futher south you go until you start running into South Louisiana (a different bird) and the more diverse/Hispanic of Texas.Report

      • James Hanley in reply to Russell Saunders says:

        Following off of Michael Cain’s line of thought, I often think of the Midwest as being bounded on the west by the 100th Meridian, running from Kansas’ southern border (with Oklahoma) up through the middle of Nebraska and the Dakotas to the Canadian border (and, plausibly, north of that, but we’re concerned with the U.S. here), across the southern border of Kansas, Missouri, Illinois, Indiana and Ohio (although the southern 50+ miles in each state are arguable), then up the eastern borders of Ohio and Michigan to Canada (and, again, plausibly into Canada).

        Western PA is not Midwest, imo. And while I’ve known of Oklahomans who staunchly believe they are the prototype of the Midwest, I just can’t buy it; not unless we designate a Midwest A and a Midwest B and agree that the two are very unlike.Report

      • @james-hanley You characterize KC just right. (I lived there for six years, and was just there last week for a conference. It was disorienting to be in a place at once so familiar and yet so different from how I remembered it.) It’s a great combination of Western and Midwestern.

        And southern MO, on which my hometown just barely borders, feels more like Appalachia than the South to me. But I don’t know Arkansas to save my life, so maybe they’re more similar than I know.Report

      • Kazzy in reply to Russell Saunders says:

        I think you and I have “spoken” about this before, @russell-saunders , but Missouri thoroughly confounds me geographically. I think of St. Louis as being more or less an east coast city. But KC feels decidedly midwest. Not that I’ve ever been, mind you.Report

      • One of the complicating factors in Texas/Oklahoma/Louisiana is this map. Much of the distinction between Midwest, South, and West was/is based on the types of agriculture that could be supported. SE Kansas, much of Oklahoma, the north end of the Texas Panhandle, the Permian Basin in West Texas and SE New Mexico, the Gulf Coast in Texas/Louisiana… it’s all about the “awl bidness”. Oil and natural gas create their own category. In the words of my Kansas BIL, “What’s the difference between a wealthy wheat farmer and a wheat farmer struggling to keep his head above water? The wealthy farmer had natural gas on his property.” The same distinction is starting to appear in western North Dakota — ND’s new crop of millionaires aren’t wheat farmers, they’re NG owners.Report

      • Why can’t there be something called “Center” America or “Middle” America? Solves the Missouri-Oklahoma thing nicely, IMO.Report

      • Kolohe in reply to Russell Saunders says:

        Probably because people will think you’re talking about Costa Rica or Panama.Report

      • James Hanley in reply to Russell Saunders says:

        Middle America is often used interchangeably with Midwest, but has an even less clear geographic boundary. What if we just talk about Mizarklahoma?Report

      • Kim in reply to Russell Saunders says:

        I prefer “the empty quarter” to describe Oklahoma, etc.

        And Western PA is definitely Midwest (also Appalachia). A good chunk of WV is Midwest by language too.

        See, Pittsburgh historically got NOTHING from east of the state. Everything came upriver, and that’s what makes it Midwest. It’s “pop” and midwest pancakes (flat like crepes, far less eggy), and a general culture of niceness that is … very different from Philadelphia’s “boobirds” or Pennsyltucky.Report

      • Colin Woodard’s 11 nations map based on his view of dominant cultural attributes might be relevant.Report

    • gingergene in reply to gingergene says:

      Erg! I meant “irregardless”, not “irrespective”. I can’t even write it on purpose!Report

    • Maribou in reply to gingergene says:

      @gingergene, “irregardless” drives me so crazy that one particular dear friend uses it just to needle me. Usually on Facebook where he can tag me to make SURE I see it.Report

      • Mike Schilling in reply to Maribou says:

        There was a Barney Miller where they had arrested a guy who was driven berserk by a particularly illogical ad. (“Save up to 40%. And more!”) He was fulminating about how advertising made people stupid, when Dietrich interrupted him with “Irregardless, …”

        Another show I wish were on Netflix.Report

      • James Hanley in reply to Maribou says:

        @mike-schilling,

        Barney Miller was one of the most intelligently written shows ever, wasn’t it? Is that why it’s so rarely seen in sindication?Report

      • Mike Schilling in reply to Maribou says:

        I saw a few episodes recently on a cable network that seems to specialize in stuff they can get for free. I’m assuming that their copyright had lapsed for some reason. What struck me is how theatrical it is; Hal Linden in particular seems to be playing to the cheap seats. But it was damned funny, with not one weak link in the cast. It’s odd that Steve Landesberg and Ron Glass seemed to disappear after it ended.Report

      • Gabriel Conroy in reply to Maribou says:

        There’s a local tv station here in Chicago that plays Barney Miller in syndication. You don’t need cable for it, but it’s one of the special new “digital channels.”Report

  12. James Hanley says:

    I struggle to think of a silly rule I follow because it bugs me not to. I’m not much of a rule follower, period. Not that that always works out so well.Report

    • Patrick in reply to James Hanley says:

      I’m on board with the “no Christmas music until after Thanksgiving”. I’m also on board with “if your whole neighborhood decorates for a season (for any season), you ought to at least make an attempt.”

      But the first one is just a matter of taste and the second is about being neighborly, which is different from being a good citizen.Report

  13. Jaybird says:

    Two steps per sidewalk square.

    I imagine that I have a deficit that I will need to pay off before I will be judged.Report

  14. zic says:

    I split infinitives.

    I will wear white pants in winter.

    I will wear brown shoes with blue jeans.

    I will go out in public without my face on. (Since I don’t wear makeup, I always go out in public without my face on.)

    I will use the plural ‘they’ as a singular when a non-gendered pronoun is required.

    I live in Maine, but I won’t eat seafood.Report

  15. Kazzy says:

    There… are… rules…?Report

  16. Burt Likko says:

    My rule is don’t talk in elevators. Good reason I started it, but now it’s bled over to innocuous conversations too. It’s kind of like the urinal, which a lot of guys won’t talk while using.Report

  17. Rufus F. says:

    I will be dead before I call a lectern a podium. This caused difficulty at work recently when I was sent to a supply house to pick up what I knew was a damned lectern but everyone else insisted on calling a podium.

    Similarly, it’s just me and the New Yorker using diacresis at this point and nobody else spells it “perq” anymore. And I have often heard someone say further when they should have saud farther and corrected them in my head.

    As an addendum to Burt’s, when the elevator door opens, those inside exit and then those outside enter. Nothing else is acceptable.Report

  18. James K says:

    Something that annoys me far more than it should is men who wear business shirts without a tie. If you don’t want to wear a tie, wear a more casual shirt.Report

    • Murali in reply to James K says:

      I’m actually guilty of doing that. In fact lots of people in Singapore do that.Report

      • James K in reply to Murali says:

        Lots of people in New Zealand do it too. The attitude seems to be “I’m at work so I have to wear a business short, but I don’t like ties”. I’d be thrilled if the tie-less shirts they had in B5 took off, that just seems like it would work out for everyone. I understand not wanting to wear a tie – especially in Singapore’s climate, it’s just business shirts are designed for ties and they look wrong without one.Report

      • Murali in reply to Murali says:

        You also see a lot of it on the trains when people are coming back from work.Report

    • Kim in reply to James K says:

      Ex Officio has some nice collared shirts that practically scream: “no tie! no Tie!”Report

  19. Maribou says:

    Oooh! Here’s one that makes me really grumpy.

    According to APA style, “since” can only be used to indicate the passing of time and not a reason why. So all reason why “since”s should be replaced with “because”s, even at the beginning of a sentence.

    According to my mom and my gramma, it’s bad grammar to start a sentence with “because” for ANY REASON (they were fine with since).

    After 3 years of library school and writing APA papers, I have trained myself to automatically backspace over all my sinces and replace them with becauses, even in informal writing.

    And then I stare at the because for a minute and twitch. But I can’t bring myself to change it back OR to not be annoyed by it. And I’m too lazy to rewrite the sentence to be less awkward the way I should in the first place.

    Oh well. Neuroses aren’t dangerous, right? 😀Report