by Syeknom » Fri Jul 12, 2013 8:18 am
When I tempted back in the UK people would always ask that same thing as well, and were rarely impressed by my answers of "raiding dragons" or "gaming and chatting on irc". I hated the banality of its question as well. (Strangely I've never had anyone ask it here, partly because nobody even pretends to be interested in anybody else here)
However I must make a spirited defense of extra-curricular activities if not the value these people place on them. Working 5 days a week your life suddenly has most of it forcibly removed from you. The temptation to stagnate and simply lie on the sofa eating crisps every evening before bed is enormous and you watch with mounting horror the months and years fly by where you've literally just showed up at work and fought the urge to hang yourself when you get home. It's worse when you live with somebody because the passions and dynamism of youth can so easily be replaced by routine, chores, trite discussions about your bowel movements and so-forth. "Having a life" does not need to involve leaving the house, but it is actually rather fun to incorporate some of those "aspirational" classes into your life especially if done as a joint activity. We used to go dancing at clubs a lot but are both too exhausted most weeks (although I had a rowdy sesh last week, all the grls scoping on me) so one evening a week of learning tango is a great way for us to structure an activity together and to learn something interesting. My girlfriend's learning Spanish for fun and I've been learning Dutch out of duty and although I grew to hate being obliged to spend two nights a week out of the house it was good to do so. Likewise, swimming two-three times a week keeps the ridiculous office-drone-weight-gain at bay and makes me feel better about myself plus it's enjoyable enough.
The problem is that while the activities themselves are fun and doing them or not is cool, people who equate these activities with "having a life" or "interesting things" are grasping at straws. Extra-curricular activities are pretty much existential depression manifest, like support groups where you all pretend to not be wasting your life in an office waiting for the end-of-month payday. They're not something I define as being a yard-stick for how interesting I, or anybody else, are. If I ever ask anybody what they've been up to lately it's in the desperate hope that they've done something genuinely interesting so that I can live vicariously through them.
And to be fair to your bit of fish, most people at work are frightfully boring. It's unrelated to what they do after work though.
Coupland is great, JPod is really fun to read