When people ask me whether I am willing to take a risk, I tell them that I am very risk averse. I am one of those annoying people who spend ages making decisions in order to minimise risk (that's according to Mrs PM anyway).
Recently, however, I read an article that may have changed my opinion of myself.
The article states that the average Briton takes ten risks a week. As I read the headline, I wondered who these amazing people were. Logically, because I am so risk averse and rarely take any risks at all, there must be thousands of my fellow countrymen who hurl themselves into risk filled situations every single day of the week.
I wanted to know what these people did. I imagined that some of them threw themselves out of aircraft, climbed mountains without the aid of a safety net or asked a policeman if his head was shaped like his helmet.
I wanted to know these people.
And then I read the article.
Foreigners may think that British people are boring stuffy people who keep a stiff upper lip and tut loudly when somebody pushes to the front of a queue. If this article is true then the boring description is also true.
Of the 40 typical “risks” that Britons take, I take 35 of them on a regular basis.
35!!
You may now consider me to be some kind of daredevil, a man who laughs in the face of fear, messes up the hair of terror and pulls down the trousers of danger.
You may think I am Superman on steroids!
You are wrong.
Here are just five of the so-called “risks” in the list.
Turning up at the cinema without a ticket.
Staying up until after 11pm on a work night.
Leaving the house without an umbrella or coat.
Leaving the house with wet hair.
Pressing the snooze button on the alarm.
Are these risks?
Really?
Now I think the opposite. If I am risk averse (and I am) then there must be people living in the United Kingdom who do absolutely nothing, people who always leave the house with a coat no matter how warm it is outside.
“I don’t care whether the weatherman said it will be hot and sunny all day; this is Britain – it’s bound to rain.”
I have to ask myself how these so-called experts came to this conclusion. I don’t recall being phoned up by a mad market researcher and asked a bunch of stupid questions to determine what kind of weirdo I am. I can only imagine the conversation:
PM: Hello.
Market Researcher: Do you go outside without a coat at least once a week?
PM: What?
Market Researcher: Do you go outside without a coat once a week? Or maybe you go out with wet hair?
PM: WHAT??
Market Researcher: I’m sorry. I just want to find out how risk averse you are.
PM: I’m very risk averse. Who are you again?
Market Researcher: A market research assistant. How do you feel about going to a restaurant without booking a table first?
PM: I do all of those things.
Market Researcher: Wow! I’ve called Superman. And I’ll bet you drink coffee just before you go to bed.
PM: Sometimes, why?
Market Researcher: (muffled) This is GREAT! Hey chaps – I’ve got a great one here. What? No – I’ll bet he doesn’t do that.
PM: Do what? Who are you taking to?
Market Researcher: Just my colleagues. Can I just ask (gulp) have you ever (I’m a bit scared to ask this) sat in reserved seat on a train to London?
PM: Yes.
Market Researcher: A seat that was reserved for somebody else?
PM: Yes – I just move when they come.
Market Researcher: What a BADASS you are.
PM: This phone call is over.
Market Researcher: Such a BADASS! Nobody would dare slam the phone on me. We’re British – we are …
PM: (slams down the phone).
It makes me wonder whether all the junk cold calls we receive are just dumb market researchers ringing us to find out how boring we all are. And how risky is it to actually answer those calls? It must be because sometimes I do and I tell them to stop phoning me about an accident I never had, or mis-sold insurance for my mortgage.
Anyway, having read the article I now know that I am a risk seeker. It is official. I take more risks every week than your average Brit.
I am a TOTAL BADASS! I use American slang in my blog posts! I just don’t care!
I listen to heavy metal in my car and, sometimes, I sing out loud.
I sometimes decide, on the spur of the moment, to have a sandwich for lunch instead of a salad. Do you know anyone like that?
I even, sometimes, actually spend money on things I want rather than things I need. How risky is that?
To quote the late great Rik Mayall: “I am a rider at the Gates of Oblivion and I am on the last freedom moped out of Nowhere City!”
Are you impressed with the new me?
2 comments:
Rats! In between reading and clicking to this page I forgot the words I had planned in my head.
I don't think you are a risk seeker, more an accidental risk taker. Besides, I don't think any of those things listed are particularly risky.
Hi RIver,
I know - those risks are ridiculous - the other 35 were too.
:o)
Cheers
PM
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