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Having Fun Yet? (Seriously, Are You?)

Having Fun Yet? (Seriously, Are You?)

Are you having fun? In your job? At home with your friends and loved ones? In your band, in your studio, or in your other guitar-related pursuits?

When you hear someone say, ā€œAre we having fun yet?ā€ itā€™s usually somebody with a sucky attitude trying to drolly underscore the lameness of the current situation. They donā€™t actually want an answerā€”they just want to bitch about life. But Iā€™m asking you seriously. Are you having fun? In your job? At home with your friends and loved ones? In your band, in your studio, or in your other guitar-related pursuits?

Iā€™m not asking because I want to encourage the sort of ā€œeat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we dieā€ revelry that some of us were warned about in church. I ask because I want to remind you that youā€™re not going to be on this big rotating sphere of craziness that long.

I donā€™t think Iā€™m having a bona fide midlife crisis yet, but recently Iā€™ve been thinking a lot about why I do some thingsā€”or why I do them the way I do. Maybe itā€™s because of how I was raised. Maybe itā€™s because I was the middle child of a very strict father. Or maybe itā€™s some complicated mix of biological, environmental, socioeconomic, and cultural factors. But, for whatever reason, I grew up to be a pretty reserved guy who thinks things out and errs on the side of caution, safety, and protecting myself from harm, criticism, or other negative ramifications.

On the whole, I wouldnā€™t say that has worked out badly, but Iā€™ll admit my reserved, sometimes over-analytical nature has had its drawbacks. It has kept me from going for it in various pursuitsā€”even sometimes in musicā€”because I was inordinately worried about consequences or what people might think. It has also been misinterpreted as standoffishness or lack of enthusiasm. But I only realized this after taking an honest look at my life, observing other peopleā€™s behavior, and being willing to admit thereā€™s room for improvement.


I think a lot of us are like this in some way or another. Whether itā€™s because of social mores, supposed morality, or something else, many of us take certain things far too seriously. Even if youā€™re that guy at work or the party (or in the band) who seems jovial and lighthearted, thereā€™s a good chance you take some things more seriously than you should. Even if you grew up in a very permissive and lax family, Western society teaches you to get serious once youā€™ve gotten out of schoolā€”and drab economic realities like the one we face now tend to ratchet that requirement up several more notches.

Hell, even when it comes to musicā€”which is supposed to be a source of joy and catharsisā€” many of us refuse to have fun because we arenā€™t satisfied with our tone for longer than a few weeks or months after acquiring a sweet new guitar or amp. And even though the average person may hear us play and think, ā€œMan, that guyā€™s really good,ā€ weā€™re always thinking about that screw-up in the last song (yā€™know, the one we alerted everyone to by making a weird face).

Certainly this restless seriousness can be good when it drives us to a healthy pursuit of self-improvement. But if you never step back and look at yourselfā€” really probe your behaviors and motivationsā€”you might not realize youā€™ve crossed the line from healthy to detrimental and wasteful until itā€™s too late.

The biggest trap is that weā€™re constantly telling ourselves weā€™ll live it up once we get that raise, or get a job we find more interesting, or get a better house, or can afford a boat or a custom-shop axe. Only every time we cross something off our list, we forget that we were supposed to be having more fun and instead start obsessing about the next thing.

But none of us are going to get all the things on our lists. Even the precious few who luck out and keep getting the things on their list will never stop adding bigger, ā€œbetter,ā€ less attainable things to it. Weā€™re junkies that way.

So here are some more questions: Even if your job is pretty mundane, do you take an interest in others and try to laugh and make the best of it? When you get home from work, do you wrestle your kids to the floor and tickle them so hard that, as they writhe around laughing hysterically, they kick you in the crotch or another sensitive body part? Do you grab your significant other, plant a huge smooch on her/his lips, and drag them out to do some crazy-ass thing you havenā€™t done in agesā€”or that youā€™ve never done? When you jam with your band, do you throw in stupid, inappropriate licks that make your bandmates laugh and lighten up? When you gig, do you make eye contact with people in the crowd and nod or smile or wink or something? Do you ever withhold judgment of popular new songs long enough to see that maybe theyā€™re huge because theyā€™re fun and make people happyā€”and then glean something from them to make your music more fun?

I canā€™t say Iā€™m great at all these things yet, but Iā€™m working on them. Decades of habit canā€™t be detangled easily from the experiences and thought patterns that engrained them in the first place. But now I knowā€”the purpose of life is to have fun and nurture meaningful relationships. And as they used to say at the end of those god-awful G.I. Joe cartoons in the ā€™80s, ā€œKnowing is half the battle.ā€

Shawn Hammond
shawn@premierguitar.com

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