I've never been an avid "FUCKING WOMEN INTERRUPTING MY MAN TIME WITH THEIR VAGINAS AND FEELINGS' guy. I actually love talking to geek women, as I normally get along better with women than I do guys. If you're a geek, whatever race you are, whatever gender you are; You're my brother and sister. I love running into fellow geeks at the gym. We strike up a convo and we can work out. It's a great feeling. especially when so many feel intimidated because it's 'not their space', and they stick it out knowing that there is someone there they can connect with.
If you're a woman or a man and you bleed geek, you got me on your side. That's the end of it. If you want to learn about it because you never were exposed to it before, or you knew about it but were afraid it would get you ostracized... still welcome. There's plenty room for all and let's see where you fit in. I might not be to your flavor of geek, but I'm sure I can get you in front of someone who can be
However.
I don't like my identity to be apart of a fashionable trend. It's why I hate young kids in the suburbs who see me walk into a party and go "YO, WHAT'S UP DAWG?!" (yes, that still happens and yes in that same phrasing) because the party just got legit because there's a black guy there. I mean, that's what I don't get about all the confusion of why there's so much backlash to fake gamer girls or fake anything. It's
fake. Who likes fake anything?
from the early 90's until... now, most of the thing the ghetto black male popularizes, most of the world apes. It's a very, very weird feeling having people talk to you and solely you differently because they saw a music video and they feel that's exactly how everyone must be like. I used to take comfort in the fact that even though I was born in the ghetto, I was never ghetto (although I can adopt ghetto characteristics for survival purposes) and that I had my geek side to fall back on. Something certainly never to be aped and used as a trend.
Fast forward to today.
Look, I don't want to burn all the fake geeks down. I don't want to take to the streets and damage them. I just don't think what I am should be the favor of the month, to be 'adopted' (mocked) for a little bit and tossed to the side when done. It sounds very hipster, but it's true... I was geek before it was cool.
Before I grew into my body and could pass for a jock, i moved to the Suburbs during middle school... where I was beat up, mocked, bullied, spat on, farted on, made fun of, and harassed. Come high school and I outpaced most people in growth spurts, all they could do is mock me, but I was always afraid a group of them would come up and do it Middle school all again.
I carry that chip on my shoulder. I admit it freely. I don't use scorn though. I don't want to beat someone up. And I don't want to keep anyone from joining the geek ranks. Now, I'm so proud of being who I am. And if you want to be apart of it, I can't suggest it highly enough.
BUT.
BUT! Be earnest. Want to really be apart of this culture. If this is a placeholder until the Big Bang goes off the air and being an environmentalist is the next cool thing, don't engage me. Don't try impress me with the list of cool buzz words you memorized to fit in. I won't attack you, I don't want to attack you, but I don't want to talk to you. A part of who I am isn't a fashion accessory, and I don't have patience to treat it as such.
Now, again, if you have a vagina and you're a geek; I'm glad to meet you. If you happen to look like a bodybuilder and you're a geek, welcome. If you don't fit into the typical pasty, skinny or fat, funny looking white male stereotype of being a geek or nerd; come on in, I have pie. I have the same thing for non black people who grew up in the ghetto speaking ghetto to me. That's what you know. That's who you are. You don't have to be dark skinned to grow up in the ghetto. That's just who you are.
sethisjimmy said:
This is the exact sentiment I brought to the other thread. My argument is that pointing out and harassing these so called "fake geeks" serves no purpose. It makes us all look bad, and tends way, WAY more often than naught to offend people who really are "true" geeks. It creates an air of exclusion in the community and creates pointless apprehension.
Unless you just happen to know every detail of someone's life from birth to present, you shouldn't make stupid, baseless, assumptive accusations against anyone.
I agree with this statement, and also see fault in it. Admittedly, I had to go through MANY tests to prove my geekiness. Still do. It's not my favorite thing in the world.
However, there are people who are using our identity as a trend. and I'm for one am simply sick of people doing that with parts of my identity. Again. I will not yell, curse them out, or do anything bad. but I do have disdain and I will not socialize with them. Is that fair?