Groucho Marx said he wouldn’t
want to be part of any club that would have him as a member.
I own to being unclubbable and
blame Hitler and Lord Baden Powell. As a young nerd I delved into Alan Bullock’s
seminal biography of der Führer. The mass hysteria of das Volk determined me to
resist any movement or opinion held by any three or more people. I’m happily used
to my asocial status.
At age 12 I graduated from cubs
to scouts. The delight of the scoutmasters in the sexual high jinks involved in
initiation practises perpetrated by older boys on younger boys prompted my
first resignation from a group. Plenty more followed.
As a young teacher I spent a
term as president of our school’s branch of the teachers’ union. But knee-jerk
responses for the sake of industrial solidarity soon turned me into a heretic.
A diffident young man’s desire
for solidarity inspired other joinings: I smoked a pipe at meetings of a minor
political party in my early twenties and tried to look erudite at university
film society screenings, but I quickly lost the sense of whatever made me join.
I was better at football clubs.
As a teetotal vegetarian the Aussie Rules club should have been no place for
me, but footy was my obsession and I was a skilled player and endearingly
eccentric enough to win acceptance. Nonetheless, the piss-ups and pie nights
went on without me.
Much later I found myself
presiding over a staff association and its social activities, initiating and
driving a staff book club and a film group. I managed to enjoy the company of a
tiny core of diehards for a few years until I left the job.
So at 60 I’m again unclubbed,
not interested in good fellowship, a department of one. I usually cycle alone,
visit the gym but talk to no one, and regard humanity as an association of
dubious repute. The society of dogs is preferable most of the time.
Rock on.
1 comment:
I share your feelings expressed in the last para. I have not yet reached the six O mark but see it as a significant milestone and when I stop to analyze I'm more and more feeling detached from mainstream society, which is in the grip of hipocracy.
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