Chris Bonds wrote:
>It's usually better to make your point by saying something polite
I agree. Going down some "combative" path is a bad idea, but difficult
to avoid sometimes, at least for some people.
One of my most humorous moments in a classical music store was having
a clerk of some imagined refinement trying to explain something, showing
a recording, and having me say casually "Oh, yes," as I flipped over the
disc and pointed to my name, "That's me." Bad luck on his part.
Of course, not being a part of automotive society, I tend to be severely
dressed down when I go to stores, wearing t-shirts and sweaty. I really
don't care. I walk around as if I owned the place, which may or may not
be good, but I know some other patrons are taken aback.
For my radio anecdote early in this thread, it was my grandmother who
gave me an old transistor radio when I was about 5. I happened across
the classical station on it, and would listen to it any chance I got.
I am quite certain there are people in Indiana who are involved with
classical music or at least collect it, but while I lived there, I never
met one aside from teachers. It was all me being eccentric, basically.
Todd McComb
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