Random things you are good at.

BoogieBoogie Heaven Host
Those little things nobody else would celebrate 🙂
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  • BoogieBoogie Heaven Host
    I am good at knowing the time when I wake up by the amount of light in the room.
  • I am good at making up new lyrics for existing songs. At parties I used to get my friends to name a tune, name a topic, and then come up with a few perfectly-scanned lines in a matter of seconds.
  • I hope I'm quite good at installing threshold bars, because I've bought two and am installing them at the Knotweed's brother's a week today. No pressure...

    Judging by the state of v the potatoes I harvested today, I am very good at feeding voles.
  • stetson wrote: »
    I am good at making up new lyrics for existing songs. At parties I used to get my friends to name a tune, name a topic, and then come up with a few perfectly-scanned lines in a matter of seconds.

    I share this talent for parodies, and I always cringe at the poor attempts offered each year during the Holidays to the tunes of familiar carols, "Carol of the Bells" chief among them. I boggles the mind to think that people get paid for them.
  • Frogger.
  • Chess, of course.
  • HuiaHuia Shipmate
    Misplacing things.

    Mainly needlework that I really didn't want to do but allowed myself to be persuaded into by people who wanted it or that I talked myself into doing because I knew a friend would like it.
  • I'm pretty Good at painting miniatures for historical wargames but less celebrated are my Subbuteo teams. I have painted quite a few for friends and family and they always go down a treat. Mainly 1960s and 70s to avoid horrible adverts on the shirts.
  • Extemporaneous public speaking. Seriously. I don't do it often though.
  • Holding people’s hands while they die and comforting those they leave behind.
  • Holding people’s hands while they die and comforting those they leave behind.

    *heartbreak emoji*
    (could probably find one if I was on the phone but for once I'm on the laptop...)
  • I'm pretty Good at painting miniatures for historical wargames but less celebrated are my Subbuteo teams. I have painted quite a few for friends and family and they always go down a treat. Mainly 1960s and 70s to avoid horrible adverts on the shirts.

    Dukla Prague away kit?
  • I envy most of these.
  • Gift wrapping. One of my first paid jobs was in a local department store and they put me in the packing department.

    I still get quite a kick out of producing a pile of neatly wrapped presents, especially big boxes with no sticky tape so you pull on the ribbon and it just flies open, like in the fillums.

    Most awkward thing I've ever wrapped? A very large floor cushion, which the donor wanted disguised so the recipient didn't guess the contents beforehand. Judicious use of corrugated cardboard and a lot of string and I produced a banded treasure chest.
  • My late husband called me the queen of the leftovers. Living alone, that is now even more true, I think.
  • TrudyTrudy Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    NicoleMR wrote: »
    Extemporaneous public speaking. Seriously. I don't do it often though.

    Me too! I'm one of the rare people, like yourself I guess, with no fear of public speaking, and would be quite happy to do it on the spur of the moment. On the other hand, I have a tremendous dislike of making phone calls. So I've often said if church was just about to start and the preacher was felled by a sudden heart attack, and someone said to me, "We need someone to call 911 and someone else to go out and preach the sermon," I'd take the sermon without a moment's hesitation,
  • Tetris.

    And in the past couple of weeks I've learnt how to solve a Rubix Cube. Down to about 3 minutes now. Nothing special but it's been fun as two weeks ago I couldn't do it at all ..
  • I’m quite good at making crepes.
  • Knowing the authors of books I have. Also the broad content of them.

    I do have many hundreds of books, and have some memory of them all.
  • Trimming model aeroplanes ... and (confession time!) getting lost even in familiar surroundings. Or is that 'bad at?'
  • BoogieBoogie Heaven Host
    Trudy wrote: »
    NicoleMR wrote: »
    Extemporaneous public speaking. Seriously. I don't do it often though.

    Me too! I'm one of the rare people, like yourself I guess, with no fear of public speaking, and would be quite happy to do it on the spur of the moment. On the other hand, I have a tremendous dislike of making phone calls. So I've often said if church was just about to start and the preacher was felled by a sudden heart attack, and someone said to me, "We need someone to call 911 and someone else to go out and preach the sermon," I'd take the sermon without a moment's hesitation,

    Same here - I can have the whole room laughing in no time and enjoy it myself. I can speak to 400 people without nerves. I used to do teacher training and everyone was grateful for a change from death-by-PowerPoint. I spoke a couple of weeks ago at our final service to a packed Church. None of the members wanted to speak so I collated all their memories and delivered them. Many compliments ensued. :blush:

  • I am slipping a bit now, but I used to be very good at remembering people's names and the context in which I had met them. These days it takes me a little bit longer to join the dots!
  • as a young boy I was brilliant at marbles. Now, in my dotage, I've lost them.
  • RockyRoger wrote: »
    as a young boy I was brilliant at marbles. Now, in my dotage, I've lost them.

    Just figuratively or literally as well?
  • FirenzeFirenze Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    I'm very good at procrastinating.
  • I'm excellent at finding odd things around the house to repurpose into a doohickey to [solve odd problem.] At the moment we're using styrofoam and plastic packing material to hold up the edge of the pond, where we're going to be pouring concrete into a form that hangs over the edge. We could have spent days custom building a support; but I'm too lazy, get out the packing material.
  • I'm excellent at holding my breath.
  • stetsonstetson Shipmate
    edited September 2024
    I am slipping a bit now, but I used to be very good at remembering people's names and the context in which I had met them. These days it takes me a little bit longer to join the dots!

    I suspect I'm not the only Shipmate who is good at remembering people's religions. For example, I went to a Catholic high school, and I could tell you which teachers were protestant(the art teacher, the music teacher and the physics teacher).

    I could also name the specific denomination of every Canadian Prime Minister going back to Mackenzie King, plus quite a few before that. Granted, it's easy to remember that the Quebecois among them were all Catholic.

    (And of course, there is the issue of rumsfeldian "unknown unknowns", ie. it's possible that there are people whose religion I have been told, but forgotten that I was ever told. I wouldn't think too many cases like that, though.)
  • I know a lot of pop trivia.

    I’m good at making pastry (I have cold hands) and at making omelettes.

  • Stetson wrote: I could also name the specific denomination of every Canadian Prime Minister going back to Mackenzie King, plus quite a few before that.

    Caissa wonders if Stetson can name all of the prime ministers in order since Confederation.
  • stetson wrote: »
    I am good at making up new lyrics for existing songs. At parties I used to get my friends to name a tune, name a topic, and then come up with a few perfectly-scanned lines in a matter of seconds.

    I can do this. Another completely pointless talent is I can sing you a song (or recite a poem, choice of the victim) swapping the first letter of each word with the subsequent word, in real time, unseen. If it’s not going to scan I swap the first letters of the syllables within words.
  • Oh, and I can also sing hymns etc sounding each word backwards (but still in word order)

    brains are odd
  • I have a talent for improvising. Not comedy improv, but MacGyver-style improvising. I am only of average ability at following instructions, but making something up on the fly? Easy-peasy.

    My beloved Penelope recently gave me the following amazing compliment: "how you uplift, inspire and energize with happiness those you encounter is a trait I am not sure you completely comprehend." To be honest, I don't see that myself, which is why she observes that I don't comprehend it.
  • Please bear with me. I will think of something to tell you about asap.
  • HuiaHuia Shipmate
    Telford is good at truly bad jokes. I know because I have a weakness for them and his jokes have often lifted my mood when I'm feeling down.

    I'm really appreciative he shares this gift on the Ship.
  • As a secondary school teacher I was good at learning all my pupils’ names. Not sure my memory for names is as good now.

  • Puzzler wrote: »
    As a secondary school teacher I was good at learning all my pupils’ names. Not sure my memory for names is as good now.
    Full Names? None of my teachers used my first name

  • HuiaHuia Shipmate
    I taught junior classes up until I went to university. We used first names, and sometimes nick names if that was what the parent told us the child was used to and preferred.

    I remember a mother coming in to ask that I not call a child by his full first name because that's what she called him when he was being naughty.
  • SpikeSpike Ecclesiantics & MW Host, Admin Emeritus
    I have an amazing memory for dates. Play a song or talk about an event and I can probably tell, you which year it’s from
  • Nothing. I have lots of things I'm OK to reasonable at, but nothing where I stand out.
  • Telford wrote: »
    Puzzler wrote: »
    As a secondary school teacher I was good at learning all my pupils’ names. Not sure my memory for names is as good now.
    Full Names? None of my teachers used my first name

    @Telford, I taught in a girls’ school. Girls were not addressed by their surnames, just first names. Pupils had to call staff Mrs P, never just Miss.
  • Sorry, I should have written Mrs Puzzler, for clarity.
  • Playing music 'by ear'. The downside is I've never felt the need to read the dots proficiently and other musicians assume that I can.
  • I used to be able to write villanelles, and many other verse forms, but that ability has now gently gone into that good night..
  • Diomedes wrote: »
    Playing music 'by ear'. The downside is I've never felt the need to read the dots proficiently and other musicians assume that I can.

    Ms. Marsupial has an excellent ear, both for music and for language (helpful because she had to learn three different languages as her parents moved around while she was growing up), but likewise is not a good sight reader.

    I’m known for having a good memory - not that I remember everything, but once a memory forms it tends to stick.

  • FirenzeFirenze Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    There's an inherent trait - in my maternal grandfather, my mother and me - of being able to work out the construction of crafted* items just by looking at the finished article.

    I am quite good at drawing and getting better at watercolours.

    *in crafts where we know the basic techniques.
  • Parallel parking, I can do. Even easier now I have a rear camera on the car.
  • Caissa wrote: »
    Stetson wrote: I could also name the specific denomination of every Canadian Prime Minister going back to Mackenzie King, plus quite a few before that.

    Caissa wonders if Stetson can name all of the prime ministers in order since Confederation.

    Let's see.

    John A Macdonald (C)

    Alexander Mackenzie (L)

    Macdonald again

    A buncha Tories who screwed-up the Manitoba School Question

    Sir Wilfred Laurier (L)

    Borden (C)

    William Lyon Mackenzie King (L)

    Arthur Meighen (C; the whole King-Byng thing there)

    Richard Bennett (C)

    Mackenzie King again, for years on end

    Uncle Louis (L)

    John Diefenbaker (PC)

    Lester B. Pearson (L)

    Pierre Elliot Trudeau (L)

    Charles Joseph Clark (PC)

    PET again

    Brian Mulroney (PC)

    Kim Campbell (PC)

    Jean Chretien (L)

    Paul Martin (L)

    Stephen Harper (CPC)

    Justin Trudeau (L)

    I can vouch for everything from Bennett onwards. Everything before is kinda blurry, eg. I'm not quite sure where Meighen was in relation to everyone else, just that he was in for a short time and there was a constitutional squabble with Mackenzie King.
  • Errata...

    Looking it up, the four tories after Macdonald's death were Abbott, Thompson, Bowell, and Tupper. I coulda named the last three, but not in order.

    And Meighen had two brief governments, bookending the first term of Mackenzie King.

    On religion, I would have assumed that Alexander Mackenzie was Presbyterian, but apparently he converted to Baptist upon marriage.

    Interestingly, despite its Loyalist roots, Canada has had only three PMs of the Anglican faith, all of them tories: Macdonald(who swam the Thames from Presbyterianism), Robert Borden, and Kim Campbell(not devout, and very short term in office).
  • agingjb wrote: »
    I used to be able to write villanelles, and many other verse forms, but that ability has now gently gone into that good night..

    After my wife explained about villanelles, and I looked up the precise rules, I wrote one, or a villanelle-adjacent poem, but each line had only 3 syllables. It was hard enough and a great deal of fun. It's the story of a guy trying to pick up a girl at a dance, and getting shot down.
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