Fly Shooing

(Reactive Airspace Control)

WHAT IT IS:
The timeless diversion of encouraging airborne intruders to leave without violence. Fly Shooing is not about killing — it’s about diplomacy. It’s about standing in your kitchen for twenty minutes, whispering “shoo fly, shoo” like a deranged Victorian ghost.

It’s part observance, part moral performance, and 100% ineffective.

At its highest level, Fly Shooing becomes a study in boundary-setting. You will open doors. You will gesture broadly. You will create what can only be described as an “exit opportunity.” The fly will decline.

Over time, practitioners develop a quiet understanding: the fly is not trapped in your home. You are both simply choosing to remain.


WHAT YOU’LL NEED:
• A hand
• Patience or something resembling it
• A sock
• A rolled-up magazine (preferably a low-content one with saddle stitching (stapled) for easier rolling
• At least one fly (more = advanced play)
• An open door that implies hope but delivers nothing
• A growing sense that this is now your responsibility


PROS:
• Requires just enough movement to feel like you accomplished something
• Allows you to utter the sacred incantation: “Shoo, fly. Shoo.”
• Can be practiced while wearing pajamas, crying, or both
• Builds false confidence in your ability to influence outcomes
• Offers repeated opportunities to believe “this time worked”


CONS:
• The flies
• No matter how wide you open the door, they will not leave, and more will come in
• You may begin to suspect the fly is a metaphor for your life
• Escalates into light cardio without your consent
• You will lose track of how long you’ve been doing this
• Neighbors may observe you gesturing wildly at nothing

Bonus Activity:

Never try to swat. That’s murder. This is a spiritual negotiation — and you’re losing.

Difficulty Level:
Beginner to Intermediate (emotionally escalates to Advanced when the fly becomes personal)

Time Commitment:
2–20 minutes per session (or until you forget what you were doing before the fly entered your life)

Skill Transferability:
Moderate — builds hand-eye coordination, spatial awareness, and false confidence in your ability to influence outcomes

Cost Over Time:
Free to $0.00 (unless you upgrade to premium tools like a dish towel, magazine, or “special fly swatting shirt”)

Historical Note

During the signing of the Declaration of Independence in 1776, John Hancock’s famously oversized signature wasn’t just about bold patriotism — it was also about swatting away a persistent fly that kept circling the inkpot. Witnesses claimed his dramatic flourish was half autograph, half shooing motion. Historians now agree that without the fly, Hancock’s name might have been written in a much smaller font.

Get New Hobbies, Occasionally

A quiet publication documenting low-effort pursuits as they emerge. Delivered periodically. No urgency implied.
For internal distribution only

Get New Hobbies, Occasionally

A quiet stream of low-effort hobbies, delivered periodically.

Each issue features one simple pursuit, along with light guidance for those considering participation.
For internal distribution only