I didn’t have many close friends in secondary school, but I got on well with nearly everyone - there were very few people I wasn’t on decent terms with. Well enough that if nobody in my village was going out on the piss in the local town, I could head in myself, walk into a pub, and know someone to go and chat to.
This probably pins me to a particular age bracket, but when I grew up there were the Trendies (people who liked dance music, the club scene, and R&B while it became popular) and the Grungers (the crowd that loved heavy rock, metal, and grunge funnily enough), and the two groups never really met in the middle. I got on well with loads of folk in both camps and never really got pigeonholed as one nor the other.
The included the hardest lads in the year group, the absolute lunatics who were on the gear even at school age, scrapped in the playground, and spent more time in detention than in class. A couple of them collared me privately and told me “remember, if anyone needs sorting out, give me a shout and I’ll kick fuck out of them for you”.
It was a favour I thankfully never felt the need to call in, but it was handy knowing that I wasn’t going to be on the business end of getting a doing off one of them.
What the fuck is this? There were never Trendies or Grungers. Whoever believes this has never lived in the UK. Grungers?!?! lol dude you really need to try harder
That’s the second time I’ve had that comment today. Must be a manner of speaking I suppose. Better than some feedback I could have had though so I’ll take it!
It happens.
I didn’t have many close friends in secondary school, but I got on well with nearly everyone - there were very few people I wasn’t on decent terms with. Well enough that if nobody in my village was going out on the piss in the local town, I could head in myself, walk into a pub, and know someone to go and chat to.
This probably pins me to a particular age bracket, but when I grew up there were the Trendies (people who liked dance music, the club scene, and R&B while it became popular) and the Grungers (the crowd that loved heavy rock, metal, and grunge funnily enough), and the two groups never really met in the middle. I got on well with loads of folk in both camps and never really got pigeonholed as one nor the other.
The included the hardest lads in the year group, the absolute lunatics who were on the gear even at school age, scrapped in the playground, and spent more time in detention than in class. A couple of them collared me privately and told me “remember, if anyone needs sorting out, give me a shout and I’ll kick fuck out of them for you”.
It was a favour I thankfully never felt the need to call in, but it was handy knowing that I wasn’t going to be on the business end of getting a doing off one of them.
I think I’m also in that age bracket but we had Trendies and Greebos. (I was a Greebo.)
What the fuck is this? There were never Trendies or Grungers. Whoever believes this has never lived in the UK. Grungers?!?! lol dude you really need to try harder
The only thing I know about trendies is that you can trade in good boy points for them
This is the most U.K. comment Ive ever read
That’s the second time I’ve had that comment today. Must be a manner of speaking I suppose. Better than some feedback I could have had though so I’ll take it!
It’s all the slang. Slang is highly regional and does a really good job to triangulate origin :)
Ah yes thank you - re-reading it, it’s quite heavy with idiom and some phrases probably not used in the Anglosphere save for the UK.
I suppose one is blind to it until it’s pointed out, so cheers friend!
-secondary school “Got on with” Out on the piss
Pub
Trendies
Grungers
Lads
Scrapped
On the gear
At school age
Collared me
Needs sorting out
“Getting a doing”
“… Off one of them”
It all reads super British to me.
Fucking hell, that post makes me sound like Danny Dyer or something 😂
I’m not familiar with him. But sure.