Saturday, 24 February 2024

HOW TO BE A RANTING BRUMMIE

Ah, the art of ranting, especially when one hails from Birmingham, that sprawling, pulsating heart of the industrial Midlands, where the accent alone can carry the weight of a thousand complaints. To be a Ranting Brummie is not merely to speak; it's a performance, a cultural expression, a way of life.

First, let's set the scene. Imagine you're in a kitchen, the kind where the walls are yellowed not by the sun but by years of cigarette smoke, a place where the air is thick with the scent of smoked fish and the sound of overlapping voices. Here, you learn the first rule of ranting: one must never rant alone. It's a communal affair, a symphony of discontent where each voice adds to the cacophony, creating a harmony of grievances.

The Brummie accent, with its 'b's and 'p's that blend into one another like the city's canals, is your instrument. Start with the basics. You must master the art of the rhetorical question, often delivered with a resigned sigh: "Oh, well, who am I to complain?" But remember, this question is rhetorical only in name; in spirit, it's the very essence of your rant, a declaration that you, indeed, are precisely the person to complain.

Your topics are endless, but they must be rooted in the everyday. The escalators at the Bullring, those modern marvels that turn simple shopping into an Olympic sport, provide fertile ground. Why, you ask, must they be so crowded? It's not rhetorical; you genuinely want to know why life must be so unnecessarily complicated.

Then there's the matter of statistics. Brummies love them, especially when they can claim something unique or absurdly specific, like having more miles of canals than Venice. It's not just bragging; it's a point of pride, a testament to Brum's character, which is as deep and complex as those very waterways.

But to truly rant like a Brummie, one must embrace the therapeutic quality of complaint. There's something deeply satisfying about airing grievances, even if it doesn't change the world. It's therapeutic, not because it solves anything, but because it connects you to a lineage of moaners, a heritage of voicing displeasure as if it were a family heirloom passed down through generations.

And do not forget the self-deprecation. It's the seasoning in the Brummie rant, the acknowledgment that perhaps our complaints might be just a tad exaggerated but no less heartfelt. "Who am I to complain?" you ask, knowing full well who you are — a custodian of culture, a guardian of the Brummie spirit, a keeper of the flame of discontent.

In conclusion, to be a Ranting Brummie is to understand that complaining isn't just a pastime; it's a way of asserting one's identity in a world that often overlooks the middle ground. It's about standing up, in your own home or at the local pub, and speaking out, not to change the world, but to affirm your place within it, with every 'mom', every 'bostin'', every shared eye-roll at the state of things. Here's to the Ranting Brummies, the poets of the mundane, the philosophers of the kitchen table, the voices of Birmingham's soul.