Shit that makes you feel old

[size=3][font=arial]I went to a fashionable London nightclub on Saturday. Not the sort of sentence I get to write very often, because I enjoy nightclubs less than I enjoy eating wool. But a glamorous friend of mine was there to “do a PA”, and she’d invited me and some curious friends along because we wanted to see precisely what “doing a PA” consists of. Turns out doing a public appearance largely entails sitting around drinking free champagne and generally just “being there”.[/font][/size]
[size=3]Obviously, at 36, I was more than a decade older than almost everyone else, and subsequently may as well have been smeared head to toe with pus. People regarded me with a combination of pity and disgust. To complete the circuit, I spent the night wearing the expression of a man waking up to Christmas in a prison cell.[/size]

[size=3]“I’m too old to enjoy this,” I thought. And then remembered I’ve always felt this way about clubs. And I mean all clubs - from the cheesiest downmarket sickbucket to the coolest cutting-edge hark-at-us poncehole. I hated them when I was 19 and I hate them today. I just don’t have to pretend any more.[/size]

[size=3]I’m convinced no one actually likes clubs. It’s a conspiracy. We’ve been told they’re cool and fun; that only “saddoes” dislike them. And no one in our pathetic little pre-apocalyptic timebubble wants to be labelled “sad” - it’s like being officially declared worthless by the state. So we muster a grin and go out on the town in our millions.[/size]

[size=3]Clubs are despicable. Cramped, overpriced furnaces with sticky walls and the latest idiot theme tunes thumping through the humid air so loud you can’t hold a conversation, just bellow inanities at megaphone-level. And since the smoking ban, the masking aroma of cigarette smoke has been replaced by the overbearing stench of crotch sweat and hair wax.[/size]

[size=3]Clubs are such insufferable dungeons of misery, the inmates have to take mood-altering substances to make their ordeal seem halfway tolerable. This leads them to believe they “enjoy” clubbing. They don’t. No one does. They just enjoy drugs.[/size]

[size=3]Drugs render location meaningless. Neck enough ketamine and you could have the best night of your life squatting in a shed rolling corks across the floor. And no one’s going to search you on the way in. Why bother with clubs?[/size]

[size=3]“Because you might get a shag,” is the usual response. Really? If that’s the only way you can find a partner - preening and jigging about like a desperate animal - you shouldn’t be attempting to breed in the first place. What’s your next trick? Inventing fire? People like you are going to spin civilisation into reverse. You’re a moron, and so is that haircut you’re trying to impress. Any offspring you eventually blast out should be drowned in a pan before they can do any harm. Or open any more nightclubs.[/size]

[size=3]Even if you somehow avoid reproducing, isn’t it a lot of hard work for very little reward? Seven hours hopping about in a hellish, reverberating bunker in exchange for sharing 64 febrile, panting pelvic thrusts with someone who’ll snore and dribble into your pillow till 11 o’clock in the morning, before waking up beside you with their hair in a mess, blinking like a dizzy cat and smelling vaguely like a ham baguette? Really, why bother? Why not just stay at home punching yourself in the face? Invite a few friends round and make a night of it. It’ll be more fun than a club.[/size]

[size=3]Anyway, back to Saturday night, and apart from the age gap, two other things stuck me. Firstly, everyone had clearly spent far too long perfecting their appearance. I used to feel intimidated by people like this; now I see them as walking insecurity beacons, slaves to the perceived judgment of others, trapped within a self- perpetuating circle of crushing status anxiety. I’d still secretly like to be them, of course, but at least these days I can temporarily erect a veneer of defensive, sneering superiority. I’ve progressed that far.[/size]

[size=3]The second thing that struck me was frightening. They were all photographing themselves. In fact, that’s all they seemed to be doing. Standing around in expensive clothes, snapping away with phones and cameras. One pose after another, as though they needed to prove their own existence, right there, in the moment. Crucially, this seemed to be the reason they were there in the first place. There was very little dancing. Just pouting and flashbulbs.[/size]

[size=3]Surely this is a new development. Clubs have always been vapid and awful and boring and blah - but I can’t remember clubbers documenting their every moment before. Not to this demented extent. It’s not enough to pretend you’re having fun in the club any more - you’ve got to pretend you’re having fun in your Flickr gallery, and your friends’ Flickr galleries. An unending exhibition in which a million terrified, try-too-hard imbeciles attempt to out-cool each other.[/size]

[size=3]Mind you, since in about 20 years’ time these same people will be standing waist-deep in skeletons, in an arid post-nuclear wasteland, clubbing each other to death in a fight for the last remaining glass of water, perhaps they’re wise to enjoy these carefree moments while they last. Even if they’re only pretending.[/size]

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Charlie Brooker
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]The Guardian, Monday 13 August 2007
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I find my deepening inability to cope with hangovers to be a particularly galling reminder of my age.

Charlie Brooker :clap:

Being called sir or mister by a group of teenagers

I was in a shop recently and there was a toddler running around the place. A shop attendant asked me if it was mine.

Not having any part in social networks.

Yeah, a couple of years ago some little toe-rag caused me to crash my bike in Ringsend. He was instantly up himself, while I went tumbling, and shouting “Sorry mister! Sorry mister!”

Although I was lying in the middle of the road in evening traffic possibly about to be run over, I remember thinking, not what my injuries might be, but how bizarre it was to be called “mister” by this clumsy young rogue on the pavement.

I hated them when I was 19 and I hate them today!

:clap: :clap: :clap:

As a young lad, it’s still your best bet of getting some action though- but he’s right, if you are still at it in your 30’s like thraw is, then it’s time you had a good hard look at your self.

It took me a while to get used to people referring to me as a ‘man’, as in “this man here is next” or “that man there tried to touch me.” I had to get used to the idea of people never referring to me as a ‘young lad’ again.

I very rarely go to nightclubs. Occassionally forays into town to go to Fitzsimons to try and meet Brazilian birds is about it. Best night I’ve had in the last few months was in the Dice Bar on a Thursday night, purely because the queue for the bar was quick, I had a seat and the music was absolutely brilliant. Haven’t been to a “proper” nightclub in ages. Used to love going to the POD/Crawdaddy though, purely because I’d be taking drugs. Never liked clubs really apart from that. The smoking area is the best part.

was it ??

I dont get the second glance from young ones much anymore, its the yummie mummies now

This.

On 28th March next year, I will be exactly half the age my father was when he died. That’s gotta make you feel old.

No.

Astonishingly I don’t get hangover’s anymore. I drink f-all really anyway, but had a fairly bug one Saturday and it had no affect.

I’m a couple of days away from being eligible for most Masters sports. 

Going home and realising that the last time you saw the 6 foot 5, 19 year old nephew, he was 3 years old. Or even better, having a pint with a fella I went to school with,when his 21 year old son walks in, sits down and has one with us.

when you hear a song that you remember from 1980 say, and then think that if you had heard a 30 year old song back in 1980 you would have thought it was ancient.

How old are some of you lads? Fuckin hell.

35 in a few days.