You may believe that you are unremarkable, but do you have actual proof? I think not.
I don't know what surprises me more: that someone once bothered to create a Wikipedia page for me, or that another industrious person took the time to delete it. (You can get to this proof of my non-existence if you click on my name in the entries for any of the magazines I worked for, or for Jane Pratt's page. She actually is remarkable.)
Also, just to clarify: I love this situation. My husband and I both laughed when we discovered it. I wouldn't want a Wikipedia page. It would probably be filled with factual errors that would annoy me, but not enough to do anything about them. And plus, I love the word remarkable, as well as its antonym, unremarkable. I think people should use them more often. I am going to try to find a place for these excellent words in every future post I write.
Furthermore, knowing that I am unremarkable really takes the pressure off. No need to finish that novel I've been threatening for 30-odd years. That sure is a relief, as the non-completed state of said book hangs over my head each day while I engage in procrastinating activities such as this one.
I disagree: I think you are QUITE remarkable!
ReplyDeleteThis is offensive. MUTINY WIKIPEDIA!!
ReplyDeleteEesh. Got to love wikipedia. If it makes you feel any better, I was mentioned in a page relating to my field. Someone bothered to go in, leave other references to other people and take me out. Lovely.
ReplyDelete