QUOT: (kwot) Noun and collective noun.

A commonplace occurrence – any feature or characteristic of ordinary life which is ever present or predictable in given circumstances – a generalisation to this effect. From ‘QUOTIDIAN’ meaning ‘everyday’ or ‘ordinary’

About Quot

Quot could be always finding that your corkscrew has the cork from the last bottle it opened still in it, or always jamming your drawers tight shut with that last thing you crammed into them, or always coming across that one dirty sock dropped on the stairs just after you’ve started the washing machine.

It could be one of those odds-on racing certainties which you find repeatedly happens – the waiter in the restaurant always appearing with the food just on the punchline of your best story, the first person you ask for directions in a strange town always being a stranger to it too, or the train ticket-inspector always arriving just as you’ve fallen asleep.

It could be something you’re always doing like snagging your feet on the cables and leads to your electronic equipment, trying to get the shopping out of the car into the house all in one go, calling your lost mobile on your landline to find out where you left it, or – when doing a decorating job round the house – dipping your brush in your mug of tea .

Quot is what you hear yourself saying ‘I’m always doing that‘ or ‘This is always happening to me‘ about. It’s anything you use the word ‘always’ about, and if you find yourself saying ‘everybody’, ‘all’, ‘one’, or their negatives – ‘never’, ‘none‘ or ‘nobody ever…‘ –  particularly in the context of some wild generalisation, you’re probably talking quot.

It could be something everybody has, like that drawer full of instruction manuals for machines which you got rid of years ago, a key ring with far more keys on it than you have doors for or those old cocktail-sticks and raffle tickets you’re always finding in the top pocket of your best suit.

It could be simply something you’re always seeing about the place – the ‘Happy Birthday Sharon’ banner on the motorway bridge, or the sodden child’s glove sitting on a front-garden wall, a poster for a forthcoming event which happened three months ago, the furry rabbit or teddy bear which municipal vehicles seem invariably to have lashed the front radiator.

Or it could be somebody and  their predictable behaviour – the person talking to you in the kitchen who will always be standing across the drawer you want to get into or in front of the microwave door or those people who, when you have a wound or injury, can be relied on to knock and prod you just there where it hurts.

Yes, we are all already too familiar with the teaspoon that’s always left in the washing up water when you throw it away , about cleaning before the cleaner comes, and about devices which work perfectly well in the shop when you’re only there to complain that they haven’t been working anywhere else. If it’s an experience which seems designed to kick you in the teeth we usually put it down to Sod’s Law but Quot has a wider brief and includes some nice things too – like being given the unused time on a parking ticket by somebody just leaving the car park or being invited to jump the supermarket checkout queue by somebody with an overloaded  trolley who’s noticed that you’re only buying a tuna-and-sweetcorn sandwich.

Whoever, whatever, and wherever one is there are things which crop up time and time again – situations, sights, sounds, behaviour patterns, remarks,memes  – even thoughts and feelings – which seem integral to particular sets of circumstances. Pretty well every area of life has its quot element  which is not what it says on the tin and which you won’t find in any brochure yet just seems to go naturally with the territory – be it home, family, work, leisure, shopping, sport, health, driving, computing, dieting, Christmas, or hotel sofas – you name it. In fact, put it here.

This Quotmail website tickles the underbelly of ordinary life to tease out those bits of it which are overlooked in the Authorised Version. It is tasked with collecting your common experiences of life-clichés, sifting through them, commenting and attempting to establish just how prevalent they are. What may not be happening in your life at this particular moment is probably happening to somebody somewhere. You can post a quot or comment which will appear on the site but only with your approval. If it’s a quot the site will test-run it and tell you whether it’s ‘just you’ or is shared by everybody or anybody else. If nobody recognises your observation it could end up in the Rejection Bin ( along with ‘All Pope’s looking the same’  and ‘Wedding Dresses never having anywhere to keep your pens’  ) . The extent to which it is acknowledged as common to general experience is the subject of the Quotpoll, which awards the following coded Quotrating to each posting according to its findings.

(QQQQQ) = Everybody
(QQQQ*) = Most People
(QQQ**) = Some People
(QQ***) =  A Few People
(Q****)= Hardly Anybody
(*****)= Just You


A SELECTION OF QUOTS CURRENTLY UNDER INVESTIGATION