Sometimes You're Soft and Sometimes You're Hard

So everybody likes to say they are "hardcore," whether you claim to be a hardcore surfer, hardcore mountain climber, or hardcore shopper . . . but what if you're not hardcore? . . . what if you're just moderately into the thing you are talking about-- I purchased a new mountain bike the yesterday and I told the guy at the bike store that I used to mountain bike, but I didn't tell him I was a "hardcore" biker because that would have been exaggerating-- I certainly took my bike to a lot of difficult single-track and rode often, but I wasn't "extreme" or a "gear head" . . . so I suppose I was a "soft-core" mountain biker, but I'm not sure if you're allowed to say that in any context other than the pornographic-- telling someone you're a soft-core mountain biker makes it sound like you do niche films with lots of bikes, oil, and spandex-- so I didn't say this . . . but perhaps someone braver than me will try out the phrase . . . perhaps you can tell the guy at the camera shop that you're a "soft-core" photographer or tell the Boy Scout den leader that you're a "soft-core" camper . . . I think if we all cooperate we can make this phrase as permissible as it's more explicit companion.

5 comments:

  1. Similarly, I've often wondered why fans are always die hard. Why must they die? Are their bodies hard? Or is their death hard? I'd like to die softly.

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  2. Do people who ride bicycles call themselves "bikers"? What do the Hell's Angels think of that? I believe you'd get you're ass kicked calling yourself a biker in a biker bar. If you called yourself a "softcore biker" in a biker bar you would be murdered.

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  3. Dave, Canada is eliminating pennies. I would think this would make you appreciate Canada a great deal.

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  4. i'm not a mountain cyclist, am i?

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