Pulling the trigger and picking up
Posted: 04 May 2020, 16:07
I love language and I do appreciate the evolution of language. Two things however have begun to annoy me on this forum.
1) "Pulling the trigger" Used in the sense of "deciding to buy" at least about 85 times on the entire nord forum. The first one who used this idiom did a great job in describing how you can feel when you have been hesitating for a long time and finally just buy the instrument you have been wanting to buy.
However, this original wording has become so popular and overused that it currently just means "I decided to buy", sometimes even used simply for saying "I just bought". Come on, we are all artists, here, right? Why are you copying others with your wannabe cool language?
2) "picking up" Used in the sense of "buy" at least about 100 times on the entire nord forum. This one is so terrible, I hardly have words for it. It's a true disgrace evidencing the complete submission to the church of commerce. Who are those people using that idiom? Do you really wanna communicate that you don't really bother spending over a thousand euro's? That's a terrible attitude! Do you really want to show off that an instrument to you is just a thing you buy? That is so loveless! You spent a whole lot of money - an amount so big that the average village in the world could eat at least a week from it - and you are happy to show you don't care?
I have been thinking really long to by my Electro 3, years ago. I was forced to "pull the trigger" when my previous board (a Hammond Xb-1) was "picked up" by a burglar from our rehearsal room. I was so happy that I could afford such a great instrument, that I, 10 years later, still love and play at multiple rehearsals each week.
Thanks for reading my rant.
1) "Pulling the trigger" Used in the sense of "deciding to buy" at least about 85 times on the entire nord forum. The first one who used this idiom did a great job in describing how you can feel when you have been hesitating for a long time and finally just buy the instrument you have been wanting to buy.
However, this original wording has become so popular and overused that it currently just means "I decided to buy", sometimes even used simply for saying "I just bought". Come on, we are all artists, here, right? Why are you copying others with your wannabe cool language?
2) "picking up" Used in the sense of "buy" at least about 100 times on the entire nord forum. This one is so terrible, I hardly have words for it. It's a true disgrace evidencing the complete submission to the church of commerce. Who are those people using that idiom? Do you really wanna communicate that you don't really bother spending over a thousand euro's? That's a terrible attitude! Do you really want to show off that an instrument to you is just a thing you buy? That is so loveless! You spent a whole lot of money - an amount so big that the average village in the world could eat at least a week from it - and you are happy to show you don't care?
I have been thinking really long to by my Electro 3, years ago. I was forced to "pull the trigger" when my previous board (a Hammond Xb-1) was "picked up" by a burglar from our rehearsal room. I was so happy that I could afford such a great instrument, that I, 10 years later, still love and play at multiple rehearsals each week.
Thanks for reading my rant.