I'm listening to Gillian Flynn's book Gone Girl right
now (which is awesome). Early on, there is a scene where a husband
recalls, fondly, how his wife misheard some song lyrics. Instead of
hearing Phil Collins sing "She seems to have an invisible touch, yeah,"
Amy hears "She takes my hat and puts it on the top shelf." This reminds
me of my friend Liz, who has delighted me over the years with her
misreading of song lyrics. Once, we were were at a bar and the Police's
"So Lonely" was on and Liz was singing along. "Um, exactly what are you
singing there?" I asked her. "Simone-y," she replied. Also, she once
thought "How can we be lovers if we can't be friends?" was actually "How
can we be lovers if we can't be Ed McMahon."
How endearing, how charming. I would never do anything like that, of course.
Until,
of course, I realized recently that while it wasn't song lyrics, I had
been misinterpreting a common turn of phrase my entire life.
I
was listening to a podcast recently, where the host and guest discussing
the difference between shoegazing and navel-gazing. I had heard of
shoegazing before: It's a type of music where the musicians stare
gloomily at their feet, refusing to interact much with the audience. But
it had never occurred to me before that navel-gazing actually involves
staring at one's own navel.
For some reason, my entire life, when
I had heard the phrase "navel-gazing," I always thought it meant
looking at somebody else's navel, and to make this more embarrassing, I
assumed it meant from a particularly, um, shall we say vulnerable
vantage point? I am talking about a sex act here, basically, because I
guess my mind is in the gutter.
I always suspected that I didn't
really understand the true definition of "navel-gazing" because whenever
I heard it used, it didn't quite fit the context I heard it in, but the
funny thing is that I assumed it wasn't me -- it was just a dumb
imprecise phrase that people pulled out when they didn't have the right
descriptor on-hand. Plus, I will defend myself here: actual, physical
navel-gazing seems quite uncomfortable and impractical. Navel-gazing, of
course, means to be overly self-absorbed, but I guess in my mind if you
were to physicalize the act of being self-involved, it would take the
shape of someone closing his or her eyes in a satisfied manner and
smiling smugly (sort of like the President/this dog), not bending over to look at your tummy.
Apparently
this is just me, however. "How did you think it meant that?" my husband
asked, when I confessed that not only did I not know what
"navel-gazing" meant, I had assumed it meant something rather dirty.
Then he laughed at me, for a long time.
So please help me out
here -- if not with song lyrics, are there any common phrases that you
completely misinterpreted, and if so, what did you think they really
meant? Maybe your interpretation is actually superior to the original.