As 2008 winds down I noticed my growing distaste for the word “staycation.” When friends and family heard about my plans for the holiday season, a handful replied “oh, that’s nice, a staycation?” I, in turn, realized that behind my generally soft smile I consistently, forcefully clenched my teeth at the word. Sometimes a grimace leaked through. There may have been times when I wove a glorious yarn of adventurous plans just to avoid the word altogether. I wasn’t quite sure why I had such distaste. But Lake Superior State University helped me out.
It’s not that I dislike the coziness of home.
I am a huge fan of travel. I enjoy jaunts to the far and away, the opportunity to interact with people I've never met, in places I never knew. But I am often equally content to sit under the bright, warm winter light that pours through my home windows this time of year. I appreciate the time to go for crisp walks along familiar creeks, to check in with friends over homemade cinnamon hot chocolates, to bike over to the local bar for a drink or dancing.
But “staycation” grates on me. Its rough. It interrupts itself just to be articulated, “stay-cation.” A “staycation” does not sound at all restful or relaxing. It is a chore to hear it, speak it and even live it.
I am not alone. Lake Superior State University, (a brilliant institution from the state where I was born) informed me that my distaste is shared. Furthermore, many people have similar distaste for other words, the cousins of “staycation,” such as “maverick,” and the always-progressive-sounding reference to anything “green.” All three words of these words made it onto Lake Superior State University’s 34th annual ----
“List of Words to Be Banished from the Queen's English for Mis-use, Over-use and General Uselessness.”
Words, phrases and one symbol were chosen from about 5,000 nominations. The most irritating 15 of 2008 according to Lake Superior State University are,
• green
• carbon footprint or carbon offsetting
• maverick
• first dude
• bailout
• Wall Street/Main Street
• monkey (used as a suffix in order to invoke humor. Example: cybermonkey)
• 3 (Emoticon for 'heart' used in text messages and e-mail.)
• icon or iconic
• game changer
• staycation
• desperate search
• not so much
• winner of five nominations
• it's that time of year again
Thanks Michigan. I feel a sense of camaraderie. I can now greet the new year as a fresh page and wonder which words will be over-used throughout the coming 365 days.
Somehow only today, even though I am friends with many, many active and adventurous cyclists, I learned about railbiking! SOME HISTORY:
As the years passed, ingenuity was redirected. Automobiles moved into the spotlight. Railway tracks and their snazzy, human-powered cart-designs (those related to the railroad and those designed for independent recreation) were increasingly ignored. Today, the world continues to revise its approaches to transportation. Green technology and the, increasingly popular, self-sufficiency, back-to-basics ideas just might make the time ripe for the resurgence of the railbike.
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Jocelyn Frank is a award-winning independent journalist based in Washington DC. Some thoughts, observations and reflections are posted here. Archives
September 2011
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