A few years ago I retired from the professional "meet & greet" circuit. I mean I still shake a few hands and smile a little when the pastor says "greet the people around you" during service, but I no longer do it competitively. What's that you say, you thought that portion of the service was simply a way to build a sense of community? Or perhaps a simple method to get your blood flowing and your energy level up before worship? If that is the case, if you have held on to such beliefs lo' these many years, then you should probably stop reading this because what I am about to reveal might ruin you. You will try to greet people on a Sunday morning with a serious countenance, "Yes, yes, good to see you farmer Brown. Hello Mr. Smith, a blessed morning to you old chap," but inside you might be secretly thinking about this post. (Did you notice that in my imagination, you have a British accent and go to church with farmers? Is that weird?)
So if you long to hold on to the tradition of shaking hands with strangers with a straight face, turn back right now.
Still there? I warned you.
Welcome to the world of competitive meet and greet, or as we like to call it, "meet & defeat." The object of this underground game is simple – you try to greet more people than any of your friends. It's a game of quantity, with the winner earning a free lunch after church from all the losers. All you have to do is greet as many people as you can. Sounds easy right? Wrong. The objective is easy. The methods are anything but.
I honed my skills over a 22-year period as a pastor's kid. Sunday, after Sunday, I was there in church, shaking hands. Patting backs, high fiving until I could five no more. Slowly but surely I worked my way up the ranks, but at some point I lost my joy. Meet & defeat felt like something I did as a profession, not a passion. The thrill was gone. Until I met you. You have inspired me to come out of retirement. You readers have reminded me what is fun and hilarious about church. You have put a spring in my step. Starting this Sunday, if you see me at North Point expect to witness a whirlwind of hands and hellos, a veritable grab bag of greetings just flying around as I make my way through the crowd during the 20-second meet and greet window. If I speak at your church, plan on me coming down from the pulpit and shaking hands like a man on a mission, shouting, "don't call it a comeback, I've been here for years" a la LL Cool J.
But before I do, before I make my triumphant return to the noble sport of meet & defeat, let me level the playing field. Here are the secrets it took me more than two decades to learn:
1. Sit strategically.
A lot of rookies make the mistake of thinking that if you want to shake a lot of hands, you have to sit in the middle of a row. Bad move. After meeting everyone directly to the North, South, East and West of you, you'll only have added earned four points and you'll be boxed in. Sit at the end of the second to last row. You'll still have access to three of the four points mentioned above, but with the fourth spot unencumbered, you'll be free to run up and down greeting people in other rows. The points will pile up.
2. Analyze the people around you.
This isn't like the Marines, when it comes to meet & defeat, if you want to win, you have to leave a man behind. Avoid sitting near people that seem to be slow dancing with their coffee cup. You know the type, they're holding it with both hands, really savoring the warmth. They'll have to put down that cup if you want to shake their hand and that's going to cost you precious time. Also take note of who is right or left handed near you. Avoid lefties if it all possible. They might force a "left switch" on you at the last second, insisting that you use your left hand to shake. (If you're left handed, you can still excel at meet & defeat, but it's going to take some extra work.)
3. Use all your tools.
I don't love to give high fives or fist bumps in most social situations. But for 20 seconds every Sunday morning, I make an exception. Use the high five to run down the entire front row, slapping each hand as if you just hit a home run and are greeting your teammates. Use the fist bump for long distance greets where you can't comfortably shake hands over an aisle. Never use the double hand shake, where you sandwich your two hands around somebody else's hand. Huge waste of time. Also a little sweaty.
4. Distract and conquer.
I revealed some fairly devious tricks in my post about the "please turn to" Bible verse race. Those ideas apply here as well with one new addition. When you sit down with a friend you are playing against, begin to build doubt in his/her mind by saying things like, "wow, sure do seem to be a lot of people sneezing today. Must be flu season. So many germs going around this time of year." Then rub a little antibacterial lotion on your hands dramatically, as if you're not even going to play meet & defeat today. They'll be so focused on not getting sick they won't notice that you're ten hands deep until it's too late.
5. Get on camera.
Not every church has a video camera taping the service, but if they do, try to get on. It's always nice to have your meet & defeat victory recorded for posterity. You know, something to show your grandkids someday.
6. Small churches, big fun.
If you go to a small church, less than 100 folks or so, the meet & defeat game is a little different. It's less about quantity and more about quality. Focus on shaking the hand of every visitor. Since you'll know most of the people you go to church with, a cool benefit of a smaller congregation, it won't be difficult to identify who is new. Bear in mind, you shouldn't have to climb over pews to shake their hand. You lose points for each visitor you terrify.
7. If you tie, go to overtime.
Sometimes, when two professionals go to the same church, there are going to be ties. You shook 12 hands and so did the lady across from you. Time for a tiebreaker. At the end of service, when you are all dismissed, hold your own impromptu meet & greet. The awkwardness is cranked up a notch as you frantically shake hands with people that are trying to get to the parking lot or go to lunch. Good times.
A lot of people will tell you that it's good to do things like spiking the offering plate on the ground to distract your opponent. Others suggest letting a live badger lose in the sanctuary to cause pandemonium so that you can slap everyone's back in a friendly manner as they try to avoid the claws and teeth and fury of the badger. Not me, I'm a purist. I play for the love of the game. And I hope you will too.
Monday, August 11, 2008
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)

59 comments:
Last night Michael Phelps won the gold in the Meet and Greet without even being at church! Man, he's good.
That was so funny. I could just picture you running around your church doing this. Thanks for the laughs.
Sure, the bulletin may say "Time of Greeting", but a more accurate name for this worship service segment has been used by our church's keyboardist for some time now: "The Stampede".
I'm sorry. I have to do this.
"They'll be so focused on not getting sick they won't notice that YOU'RE ten hands deep until it's too late."
Continue.
Wow, I really am a total crankypants, because I always approach meet and greets with the goal of shaking as few hands as possible. I think three is the minimum if you don't want to appear too hostile and unfriendly.
As regards to #6, this has totally happened to me. I was checking out a pretty small church and I got totally bum rushed. Like, one of the elders literally ran down the aisle to shake my hand. Freaked. Me. Out. I never went back, though it seemed like a nice congregation.
Also, there's this dreaded dead zone a person can fall into, where everyone around you has planned their handshaking, and for some reason, no one has included you. So you're just caught in this web of shaking hands, turning 'round and 'round, looking for someone, anyone, to shake your freaking hand.
Yeah, I could do without the meet and greet.
I'll shake a hand or two when forced and then I'll sit down and pretend to be reading the bulletin.
Two weeks ago, my pastor shook hands from the pulpit to the back of the sanctuary. And this is a church sanctuary that holds 2200. So he made some 40-45 rows, pre-service. He didn't even care that the service had started. Wow, he's a rebel. His name? Ed Stetzer. And now you know, the rest of the story.
(and what about those preservice shakes, do they count?)
Well, I'm in the choir, so I'm even more limited than the person who sits in the middle of the row! I have been known to occasionally hop down and go into the congregation. It usually doesn't pay, though, cuz then I'm trying to get back before the choir special begins. It's hard to sing when you're out of breath.
Jon,
If I knew you and I were in the same congregation I'd totally take you on with the meet & defeat. I'd sit near you, veiled in secrecy, and you'd wonder, "Is that Stacy from Louisville? Without hearing her talk smack I really can't tell." which would throw you off to start with. Then, as soon as greeting time comes I'd smear my hand with a thick coat of vaseline and then shake your hand. YOU. WOULD. GO. DOWN. I realize that I would not win either, but I like me a little sabotage now and again.
Silly me. Silly you.
That's freaky.
I do have a british accent.
And there are farmers in my church.
I'm from britain, and I live in Cheshire....
Uncanny, Jon, just uncanny.
....and utterly inspired, as ever - keep it up :)
My Dad calls the meet and greet "the noisy time."
"You lose points for every visitor you terrify." Huh. Good to know.
What about the guy in the youth group who gives the funky handshake where he moves his middle finger to and fro inside the handshake? Is anyone else familiar with this? Who invented this creepy shake?
just wallpaper
Could you visit our church? I think we could use a training session on this one!
Ha Ha the creepy middle finger shake. I forgot about that.
Jon, how do you keep score, I mean what if some sweaty philistine steals your glory with a false score.
More importantly, is there anyway we could combine this with laser tag? I mean once we've added skittles and a worship eagle, I think the laser tag meet and greet would really raise the fellowship bar. Who wouldn't want to participate, that would totally fill you with joy! 96 people tagged me today, I feel so loved!
At my church this playing this game would probably get you an escort somewhere by an usher or two. The cool thing is that you would probably get to meet one of those secret but not so secret security guys.
Hilarious! I can see myself doing this on Sunday now...very much going to be a part of my thought process..thanks! You did warn me. Love your posts. Can't get enough
Tricia :)
You give me the best 10 minutes of every morning. If I ever meet you, it will be a whirlwind of Side Hugs and Church Massages... I fear no leg drop or throat punch..
Haha. I always dread the "meet and greet" so I'm definately not competitive. I go to a small church, and it feels weird to shake hands with people I see at least twice a week. I liked the rule about not terrifying the visitors. You must have visited my church. Haha. Why is it that everyone feels the need to greet a visitor? It's great to feel welcome, but when 70 people are fighting to get to you first, it gets a bit weird.
Wow - this is a totally different perspective that I have never considered. I, like Elizabeth and Graydave, simply despise this part of the service. It makes me ultra-tense and I simply hate it. Especially if I'm a visitor and the minister says to stay seated while "our members stand in honor of you." UGH! Don't lie! There's no honor! It's a devious trap!
(Amen, Pat. If you didn't, I was gonna.)
I've been reading your blog for a while now so I figured it's about time I comment to let you know how much I appreciate it. I look forward to reading a new entry every day. Keep up the good work!
Hahahaha, with my home church being full of conservative Chinese, I often find myself victim of that dead fish hand shake - how, may I ask, do you put up with meet and greet when all you get are dead fish? (I hate that)
I'm with Gray & a few others - I DESPISE the meet & greet ... there are times I am not upset to be late to service if I miss the greeting time ... I tend to use that time to "turn off" my cell phone, etc ... unless I'm sitting with people I know - then we greet each other ...
However some of the middle schoolers in the youth group would probably enjoy this game ... hmmm
Oh how I LOATHE the grab and crush
!! I have an arthritic condition in my hands that is worsened greatly by handshaking. I can count the days of pain by the handshakes I get. 3 handshakes, 3 days of throbbing. I now will not even go into church until AFTER the meet and greet. I avoid hands like they DO have the Plague. Many people know my kryptonite and wave nicley. Sometimes I just wave and say "arthritis, I'm just going to wave" and look at their faces. And smile nicely.
I hate shaking hands.
One time in a fairly large church my friend decided he would make meet-and-greet history by dashing up to the front of the church to shake hands with all of the worship team. Apparently he mis-timed this mission because "serious worship time" started while he was still on stage shaking hands. At this point he decided his best course of action would be to casually slip in among the worship team and begin singing. This did not fool the large group of people in the front of the church who realized what had happened and immediately caught on that our newest worship team member did not at all know the song he was pretending to sing. Needless to say, it was not the most serious "serious worship time" because we were all more focused on whether our friend could keep up this performance through the rest of the worship set.
lol just the thought of you running down the aisles high fiving everyone had me cracking up. And I'm a leftie, but for some weird reason I use my right hand to shake hands... lol am I still qualified to participate? Most times during the meet and greet (it feels like eternity to me, not 20 mere seconds) I just stand there awkwardly, as old men doing their routine sweep of the church notice me by myself and overload me with sweaty handshakes... lol I'm more of a side hug sorta girl :]
I vote to delete meet and greet. I hate the fake smiles and the pretend happy greetings.
...but I hadn't thought of it as a game that involves points. I AM competitive... Hey, I might enjoy meet and greet next time. Thanks for the new perspective!
Haha, sounds like a fun game. What about the other side? You know, the ones that refuse to meet and greet anyone. We should get extra points for getting a high five or hand shake out of them.
On another note, I saw a bumper sticker that said "got ninja?" today and thought of you.
I personally love the "Meet & Greet" time of church. One church I attended would, without fail sing "Family of God" during the whole thing. Another church had a 20 minute meet & greet. I used to bring a friend who I affectionately call a hermit. He hated it. But I love it. I'm all about the handshake/side hug time! And now that I know it can be a game, double love! =)
the good scout should never be fazed by the left-hand shake.
Perhaps if you really didn't like the left-hand shake you could say that you're from the middle east or India as they try the switch.
on scoring, how about carrying stickers with you, or put loads of wet ink on the hand you shake with.
I DESPISE this time in church. Do you know how incredibly painful it is for an introvert to have people FORCED on you? DO YOU?!?!?!
Also, I'll tell you what, I'm glad you mentioned us leftys cause few people realize the additional burden we carry. In school, whenever I had to receive a certificate, etc, in an official assembly, I'd be the girl reciting like a maniac beforehand:
"Take with the left, shake with the right. Take with the left, shake with the right."
Oh, with accompanying hand movements and everything. Fun stuff.
Hucklebuck- I love that line!
For all of you germaphobes, think of the germs being passed around during meet and greet. I once heard somebody say "Pass the Purell. I've got an hour's worth of fellowship on my hand."
小云,
I hate the dead fish handshake too. I had a pastor once with the limpest handshake ever. It was very disturbing.
Maybe we need an emoticon for that:
<.)))><
~~~~~~~
First off, Sarah I always love meeting and greeting with you! :-)
I always get stuck in the middle of a conversation during that time and it's like "Sorry, Sally. I guess we have to go trade our sorrows now." Grr.
Doesn't the pastor always win this game at the end of church?
And how will we know what kind of greeting we will get? Sometimes someone might want to hug you when you obviously need to stick with a quick handshake or high five. A hug would waste valuable time.
So last weekend I was a visitor, and definitely this lady hugged me that I have never met before in my life. I'm not really sure how I feel about that...It wasn't even a side hug either.
Genius, Hucklebuck! Pure genius.
My entire church went pro in Meet and Defeat. We have a good 20, 25 minutes to go around and hug everyone--handshakes are for wusses and strangers, not your brother in Christ! It takes the full worship band to reel us all back in, with most people not even noticing the music is playing for the first verse or so and even then don't make it back to their seats until the song is over. We could dominate at church olympics!
Church Olympics...hmmmm. Have you done a post on that topic yet? Lots of potential for church olympic categories!
I'm fairly new to your site and so quickly addicted!!!! Love it.
Here's an important tip: Avoid the children. They usually cluster together if you have a children's sermon, so they should be easy to avoid. If you don't avoid them they will want to hug you around the knees, and that will considerably slow you down!
Leslie
Mother of 4 knee-huggers
I didn't have time to read this this morning, so I printed it off and brought it to read during my lunch break at work. Thank you so much for the dose of hilarity in the midst of an otherwise mundane day!
our pastors say, 'before you take your seat, take a few moments and greet one another' so i always, without fail, turn around every single time and say, 'hello, one another!'
it is highly effective in figuring out who may be worth asking out for coffee later.
i'm just saying...
Ah yes, the chaos of greeting time. And the politics of what you say to each person!
Or is it just my church where you're practically a heathen if I say 'hello' instead of 'peace be with you'?!
Here's another introvert who dreads meet and greet time; it's a punishment. Maybe we could discuss how to torture the extroverts during the service too.
As for keeping score. . .since Mrs. SCL is a knitter, perhaps you can borrow her row counter (a little clicker) and keep the count to compare with other M&G pros at the end of service.
We get lots of dead fishes too, and I don't wonder anymore during the week why I am sick. I go to the fine 1-minute meet n' greet at church and voila! I have the culprite!
But I can fully understand why it's done...just wish sick people would let us know they're sick and not shake. They should bring gloves or wear a special sign.
Bobbie from Parkway....I like the meet & greet only I wish it was a little longer than approximately 30 seconds. Our church also, before & after services, have snacks, juice, coffee & donuts available on our patio to encourage people to stay & visit with one another a little longer. I look forward to seeing those I only get to see on Sunday morniongs as our parish is very large with members coming from various neighborhoods & even from other parishes.
i hate the greeting time...really, what is the purpose? you don't have time to actually talk to someone, and you feel awkward when you run out of people around you...i also shake enough hands not to be rude and then read the bulletin...i guess if i was more spiritual i would pretend to pray! :)
I hear this is going to become an Olympic sport by 2016. With badgers, however.
I should warn you that, as a professional YP, I totally own at the meet and greet. I get special privilege not extended to pastors or pastors kids. As YP I get to do all kinds of crazy things and pull the "I'm the YP card" and so people are like ... ok then. Its like when Peter learns he is retarded and keeps using that until he pours a vat of boiling oil on Lois. You know what I'm talking about but I won't say what show it is because ... well you know.
Of course this means I can't accept any rewards from winning. It is like Dr.s not being allowed to take tips. Some ethical thing or something. I don't know I didn't go to that class so I had to take it again as a applied study.
Oh and Stacy from Louisville, If you want to take Jon on and win let me give you a bit of advice. Put the Vaseline on your left hand but make it clear you are write handed by writing notes and such so he misses the trick. Then pull a last second left straight switch, where you shake someone right hand with your left as you are turning away. Then you mess up his main shaking hand while keeping yours nice and clean and get the added advantage of already being in turn to your second handshake before he even knows what happened.
Maybe this is why I should have attended that ethics class instead of skipping it all the time and making it up in applied studies.
Thanks for making me laugh today...I so needed this.
I own this game. My secret? My husband and work with the youth group AND we are in good with the elderly members of our congregation who wait eagerly to shake hands with the "cute young couple." After being tackled by the entire youth group who are wildly happy to see us and shaking hands with all the cute little elderly people, we have won before you even leave your seat.
Extra points for hugging people and screaming their name like you haven't seen them in years.
I actually know someone who is a competitive side-hugger. He will make sure to side-hug every person (approximately 600) in the church to say hi and again to say goodbye. It doesn't matter if it is an appropriate time to do so or not, he will come and hug you. You can be singing, praying, crying, having a deep conversation about a very personal issue or any other thing, and he will side-hug you. I don't think that I have ever had a proper conversation with him, but he feels that if he doesn't greet me with a side-hug, he has done me some terrible wrong. He really isn't a bad guy - I just thought that the competitive side-hugging was a bit amusing.
Lorinda, I heartily second that idea. How would one go about torturing extroverts? Duct-taping their mouths so they can't talk? Tying their hands behind their backs so they can't hug you OUT OF NOWHERE? Sadly, I don't think God would approve...
Slightly off topic...i was watch the men's 100m freestyle final in the Olympics. In the sport where all the guys shave and wax every hair in sight, there was a guy from Sweden called Stefan who had a goatie and a soul patch! Any chance that he is a youth pastor?
You know, in a high-school career/job interview prep class, the other Christian girl and I were the only ones who knew how to properly shake hands. Everyone else had to overcome the dead fish, and we got top marks in our handshaking lesson. Just sayin'.
The greeting time (and the greeters at the door) taught me to be able to make polite conversation with people in other generations or that I don't know well without being (too) awkward, and it taught me to shake hands well, both of which are good workplace and life skills.
Oh, also, I think I win at the embarrassing meet and greet moment.
One Father's Day, the pastor gave a mini-sermon (it was just his warmup, but that's a different post altogether) about dads, and then gave a special meet-and-greet to go hug your dad, thank a father figure, or congratulate a dad sitting near you.
My dad was in the band that morning, so I figured I'd make use of my "go hug your dad" time, and I headed up onstage, but as I stepped up onto a riser, the back of my high heel caught on the edge, and down I went.
Face-down, hitting a cymbal and an amp on my way over (so it was anything but quiet), wearing a skirt, sprawled legs out towards an entire congregation (of about 1000 people at the time). I ended up with a bruise that swelled up to the size of a softball on my shin and a couple of badly bruised ribs.
I hope my dad appreciated the hug.
aha love the live badger...
i seriously think a 'new people' post is in order - the welcomers, the pointing out of new people in the service, the 'welcome pack', the welcome lounge (or connect lounge, or dark cavernous recluse of the SP), oh and a church I know even has a welcoming song. tack.
the things we do to have people stick around
I sent this post to my family because we have a family joke about hand shaking in church. My dad is a scientist and warns us about the passing of pathogens (germs, etc) during this time. This was his email response back to me after reading your post:
"Very entertaining. I think you should register a response, warning of the pathogen exchange aspect. Perhaps suggest latex glove or maybe hand shaped baggies (safe sacks – get it? hee hee) dispensers at the entrance to the worship center."
My husband and I instantly absorb ourselves in a very intense conversation, creating an aura of "Don't interrupt us!" during this awkward time of our service.
"You know, something to show your grandkids someday."
Jon, that was pure GOLDen!
Post a Comment