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25 Stupendously Boring Things You Didn't Want to Know About Me
- 02/08/09
- 36
There is some “25-Things” meme making its way around Facebook (and, from there, to the web beyond). I’ve been tagged a whole bunch of times. It has, after all, apparently been completed some five million times. Such memes are not really my thing. Some people take these things way too seriously and offer facts that, in other context, would be terribly humiliating. And yet they are kind of fine. I’ll take a different approach. Here are twenty five stupendously boring things you didn’t want to know about me. Do note that in order to compile the list I had to enlist the help of Aileen since she is one of the world’s foremost experts on me.
- Until seventh grade I was known as “Timothy” because there were two boys in my class by the same name and I wasn’t cool enough to be the one who rated “Tim.” Even today you can tell the old family friends because they will still call me “Timothy.”
- My middle name is John (after my dad). I was given a second middle name (Belford—my mother’s maiden name) but it never appeared on my birth certificate and, because I was embarrassed by it, I quietly dropped it in high school.
- My parents were both born and raised in Quebec but both spoke English as their first language. I’ve been to Quebec only a handful of times.
- I hated school so much that I trimmed a year off high school, a year off university, and six months from my year-long college course. My goal was to earn grades that were just good enough while spending the least amount of time possible in school.
- I was a very unmotivated student. One teacher told my parents “Timothy is a very average boy.” My parents mentioned this to their friend (the principal) who replied “[Teacher’s Name] is a very average teacher.” I always though that rejoinder was hilariously Churchill-like.
- When I order ice cream I almost always order strawberry even though I don’t really like it. It became a habit as a child when I wanted to copy my much cooler cousin who always ordered the strawberry.
- I am a “Belford” more than a “Challies,” which is to say that in many ways I inherited the traits of my mother’s family. The dominant careers in my mother’s extended family are journalism, teaching and ministry.
- When I was in seventh grade, I spent just about a year of my life in Scotland. I cut my time short by returning to Canada and spending the summer with a friend.
- I have a strong dislike toward swimming and utter disgust toward swimming in public pools. Though I can swim just fine, I never learned to dive.
- I learned to drive stick on the way home from the car lot after buying my first car (truck, actually. I was a Chevy S-10). That truck was wrecked in an accident I caused even though I was not in the vehicle when it got wrecked. Long story.
- Occasionally I convince myself that, given the chance, I could have been good enough to play baseball professionally.
- My grandfather was a Supreme Court Justice. He had a long list of cool titles like The Right Honorable, Lieutenant-Colonel and Chief Justice. I never met him as he died before I was born.
- My favorite candy is Sour Patch Kids (replacing Cherry Blasters which were the former favorites). High quality Dutch or English wine gums rate high on the list as well.
- I’m color blind. I discovered this the day a teacher asked me why I had colored all the lakes on a map purple instead of blue.
- In tenth grade I won the school’s General Knowledge contest, beating both the older students and the teachers. I threw out the ribbon and did not enter again the next year.
- I did not attend my graduation ceremonies for high school, university or college. I hate being the center of attention. Plus, as explained earlier, in every case I would have graduated with the year ahead of mine, and hence people I did not know.
- When I was a kid I had a pair of gerbils whose litter of babies fell one short of the Guinness Book of World Records. I didn’t bother calling to let them know.
- For two years while I was in university, I ran a student painting business, employing six or eight other students. They did the work while I drove the truck around. They also made all the money as it turns out. This was a good lesson in business for me.
- In high school and/or university I studied French, Latin and Greek. I still remember a surprising amount of Latin. I’ve forgotten most of the Greek (which may or may not be related to the fact that I attended only one or two out of every five classes. It was their fault for scheduling classes five days a week at 8 AM).
- I was entrepreneurial as a child. I would put coins on a train track near my house so they would get flattened. I would then sell them at school at a profit. I also ran a black market candy business in grade school where I would sneak off-property, buy candy, and then resell it at higher prices.
- I married the first (and only) girl I ever dated.
- The first rock concert I ever went to was Petra during their Unseen Power tour. The first Christian album I ever bought was Petra’s Beyond Belief. I organized and promoted a Petra concert during their God Fixation tour. Altogether I saw Petra in concert six or seven times.
- When I was eight years old I was outside playing when my mother and sisters came running out of the house saying the kitchen was on fire. I ran inside and put the fire out using what I had learned at school about grease fires.
- The first book I ever remember reading on my own is Pilgrim’s Progress.
- When I was in high school, I went to an aptitude counselor and did a long battery of tests. He told me that the two most likely careers for me were clergy and computers.

I am a follower of Jesus Christ, a husband to Aileen and a father to three young children. I worship and serve as a pastor at
Releasing on April 1, The Next
Comments (36)
As one who enjoys lists, even lists of boring details about one’s life, let me be the first to comment on your list, Tim!
Yes, you’ve lived a boring, uneventful life but your blog is the best I’ve ever encountered so keep being clergy-like and a computer geek.
Will I see you training with the Jays this spring or did you give up on that dream long ago?
David
I miss you bro! Another thing you did not mention is that you caught a ball hit by former Blue Jay Pat Borders and GAVE IT to me…your baseball loving younger sister! I still have it and have never forgotten that gesture!:)
I find the “25 Things” fascinating, including yours. Please explain to one from the U.S. the difference between “university” and “college”. They’re pretty much interchangeable here.
Fascinatingly dull.
Nothing is boring when one doesn’t know much, or even anything about that person. God has uniquely equipped you to serve Him the way you do. I enjoy your blog.
Noooooo! Not you too, Challies!
Vicky, I believe the difference between college and university is that in order to be a university, all the professors must be PhDs. Still, Americans generally “go to college” either way.
Whoa! My favorite candy is Sour Patch Kids too!
I refuse to give in to the 25 Things phenomenon, however.
The most fascinating part of the whole list, to me, is that you KNEW what the Guinness record for a gerbil litter was! I would have never thought to look.
Please explain to one from the U.S. the difference between “university” and “college”. They’re pretty much interchangeable here.
Ignore David’s answer. He has always wanted to be Canadian so is trying to play the part…badly.
Generally speaking, Universities are accredited and able to give out degrees. Colleges tend to be more vocational and give out certifications and diplomas. So I went to university to get a BA in History and college to get a fistful of computer certifications and diplomas.
Ignore David’s answer. He has always wanted to be Canadian so is trying to play the part…badly.
Okay, the gloves are off! Um … how do you insult a Canadian?
Anyway, after looking around for definitions, it seems in the U.S. we’re not sure what the difference is. Which, of course has nothing at all to do with Tim’s alleged education.
I married my first and last date as well!
While the words college and university are used interchangeable in the U.S., the difference between them, in the U.S., is that a university offers a PhD program while a college only offers bachelor and/or master’s degrees.
I think I must have taken that same aptitude test, though I remember it as suggesting I was best suited to become a priest, not generic clergy.
I opted to go with the computer option instead, since aptitude alone seemed unlikely to qualify me for the other.
Mr. Belford-Challies,You are a grown man. Cross #6 off your list and broaden the scope of your tastant responses. It may be difficult to teach an old dog new tricks, but it’s not impossible. You’re merely color blind, not ‘taste blind’. I don’t know the current general quality of Canadian dairy products, but when I was blessed to travel up there, I don’t remember any negative reaction to their Rocky Road or Mint Chocolate Chip or Cookies ‘n Cream. That’s just for starters; then you move on to the Cookie Dough or Cotton Candy or Rum Raisin or Black Walnut or Georgia Peach…………Go ahead, live a little!
Tim, can’t imagine why you would leave bonny SCOTLAND one moment early! Och, are ye daft?? I did enjoy the “regular teacher” Churcill-like exchange. sweet. back to work. db
I see a lot of myself in your replies. Mostly in number 10. I bought my first car from a couple in our church. My mom dropped me off to pick it up (they lived about a mile from our house) and she drove home. I went inside and paid them, went out in their driveway, and in my excitement to buy the car realized I didn’t drive stick. My mom wondered why it took me 45 minutes to drive the car back to our house.
Not going to lie, number 21, is by far the worst of them all. No offense.
Hate to disappoint you but umm they weren’t boring at all..just one question Mr. Challies, top down what colors compose your blog!? :P
That’s a great list, Tim. Not boring at all. It was certainly more interesting than the list I made.
@14 give me a break, ice-cream should only be made in three flavors Vanilla, Chocolate and Strawberry - but only vanilla should actually be consumed by adults, the others are there only for children.
In the US college and University are essentially the same - wikipedia has it covered so I won’t repeat it - in any event they are both a waste of money, more can be learned through books and the internet - and in much less time.
My mom wondered why it took me 45 minutes to drive the car back to our house.
I got the following advice: down with the left, up with the right; down with the right, up with the left. It worked great until the stop light, the busy road, and the giant hill all coincided.
.just one question Mr. Challies, top down what colors compose your blog
Brown. That’s apparently just about all I see!
#25 “Clergy and Computers” eh? How perfect of God to combine the two for you!
Hey, Beyond Belief was my first Christian album as well! I bought it just after I had purchased The Beatles’ Revolver.
Although I still like Revolver, my tastes in Christian music have changed considerably…more alternative, more folksy and less semi-hard rock.
Last summer I found my tape of Beyond Belief. I have to admit that I listen to it almost every time I’m in the car. So classic!
I really enjoyed number #5 - that’s a great speaker’s illustration as well, i might have to quote you on it if i have the chance. I object to grade inflation intensely but that was rather uncharitable of your teacher and intensely satisfying of your headmaster!
It sounds like aptitude tests did their work at least - even if they offered no guidance per se.
Like you, i was facebooked into submission on this - not sure how i feel about posting it on my blog though!
For an unmotivated student, it’s amazing you shaved so much time off your education. I simply don’t believe you about being unmotivated. :-)
What does the name Tim has to do with being color blind? My son Timothy who is called Tim is also color blind. At school he painted all the trees in bright orange.
“Brown. That’s apparently just about all I see!”oh wow!
Did you go to DC 88 and see Petra?
I go by Tim, I only put Timothy so you don’t think I’m the author of the same name…RE: 28 I am not Colorblind…..
I must say, for a “boring list” I am disappointed, I mean, some of these things are mundane and boring… but others are interesting to me.
The Family History ones for example, I like to know where someone comes from, who they are, who they are from…. take for example this case:
“Max Jukes, the atheist, lived a godless life. He married an ungodly girl, and from the union there were 310 who died as paupers, 150 were criminals, 7 were murderers, 100 were drunkards, and more than half of the women were prostitutes. His 540 descendants cost the State one and a quarter million dollars.
“But, praise the Lord, it works both ways! There is a record of a great American man of God, Jonathan Edwards. He lived at the same time as Max Jukes, but he married a godly girl. An investigation was made of 1,394 known descendants of Jonathan Edwards of which 13 became college presidents, 65 college professors, 3 United States senators, 30 judges, 100 lawyers, 60 physicians, 75 army and navy officers, 100 preachers and missionaries, 60 authors of prominence, one a vice-president of the United States, 80 became public officials in other capacities, 295 college graduates, among whom were governors of states and ministers to foreign countries. His descendants did not cost the state a single penny. ‘The memory of the just is blessed’ (Prov. 10:7).”
So to list your ancestors as boring facts, is to do a disservice to them and to yourself sir.Now things like Strawberry Ice cream that is truly mundane and boring.and we all have dreams like #11 that we could have been a contender, we could have been somebody… that is a boring fact… interesting only in that yours is Baseball and when I was younger, I dreamed of playing baseball, until the strike spoiled it for me at a young age.
Most of the memes that I’ve seen are silly and/or boring and/or stupid. But the ones floating around FB lately have been kinda fun to write and read. Glad you decided to play, Tim.
You should try making one for the Gospel. But instead, title it something like “25 Not So Random Things About the Gospel”.
Um … how do you insult a Canadian?
Speaking from personal experience as an Aussie, here’s an opening line guaranteed to get you offside with any Canadian you meet:
So, whereabouts in the States are you from?
Did you listen to Russell Moore’s sermon, Desert Reign: How the Temptations of Christ Can Wreck Your Life, Your Ministry, and Your Future (Part 1), from February 5th? Starting at 32:38, he says, “And, so, right now, when you are spending your time simply drooling into the screen of your Mac book, writing another 25 Random Things About Me [crowd bursts out in laughter]…” Is this where you got the idea for this post?
By the way, the html tag doesn’t seem to work in the comments. Is that by your choosing?
I should have remembered that the tag wouldn’t show up at all. I was referring to the sup tag.