Working away from home during the week, I have the company of a hotel bedroom 4 nights a week and the company of an airport departure lounge on a Friday night. It's a bit of a dull and repetitive time. Like GroundHog Day I sometimes look for ways to brighten up the routine to make each week more interesting than the last. I've tried the gym, various local restaurants, looked into going to the cinema, hiring DVDs to play on the TV in my room via the laptop, watched some TV, gone for long walks, paid the bills, caught up on email, surfed the web, read the what's on guide, magazines and newspapers and I'm also doing a distance learning course. I even blog occassionally.
Yet the one thing that is surprisingly difficult to get is simple conversation. Having lived in the same hotel for several months, I know most of the staff, chatted with reception many times, helped out the hotel with their IT and spent a few nights at the bar people watching.
However, it was following my recent letter in the Belfast Telegraph that I managed to get to meet people socially in the evening, not eat dinner alone and spend the evening in pleasant conversation about life, politics, language, culture and all manner of things.
How much more interesting and less lonely it would be if it was easier to do this on a regular basis. It isn't most people's cup of tea wandering up to complete strangers in a bar to make conversation not knowing if they think you are either weird or misinterpreting it as a chat up. There needs to be a context and in the world of frequent travellers there must be hundreds of thousands of people each worknight bored out of their minds in dull hotel rooms. Yes, I appreciate there are probably more exciting things to do but not if you're already married....
So the context is the conversation club. A place for the traveller who wants to meet up in a strange city with other business travellers, have some conversation and company, meet with people staying for anything from a few nights to many months and possibly network for opportunities, find out what's going on and make a global network of contacts. Could just be a social drink down the pub and some food in a local cheapish restaurant or whatever.
Imagine a network of places around the world where you can go on business and simply meet up with people for conversation and company. No dodgy dating club, no lonely hotel rooms.
Maybe something worth talking about.
By Craig Cockburn, IT Professional from Scotland. Computing, Technology, Politics, Ideas, News and Views.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Popular Posts
-
An article on how Agile can sit alongside PRINCE2 and where DSDM Atern fits in. In 2007, I put "used an Agile/PRINCE2 development str...
-
The #2 tablet after the iPad, the Asus Transformer has been updated and many reviews of it are saying that this could be the game changer fo...
-
I typically get a lot of calls from Recruitment Agencies. Usually it's about 20-25 a week. At 5-10 mins a call plus the inevitable telep...
-
In January 2008, I posted an article on PRINCE2 and Agile which it seems has been #1 in Google for those search terms ever since and conse...
-
I am a certified PRINCE2 Practitioner if anyone knows of any current jobs (pref contracts) on the go just now in the UK. Alternatively, i...
-
I haven't written a long blog in a while so I thought it was time to post this missive now that I've been living in London for 7 wee...
-
Tested with Thunderbird 8 on Windows 7 On the old computer: 1. Menu option: Tools->Options->Import/Export Tools->Save All Pr...
-
For many years, The Scotsman publications has seen fit to publish letters and correspondence which put down Gaelic, usually citing "it&...
-
Many of us can't be bothered to prepare a real Will, with the resultant tax confusion and uncertainty that this causes especially in the...
-
Joy Dunlop and Twelfth Day Fiere Scottish Women: A 21 st Century Song Cycle Fiere is a unique collaboration between Gaelic si...
No comments:
Post a Comment