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Gamers and Stereotypes

iwatt said:
About the social hierarchy: in Chile most of the schools are private schools. And their really isn't much of a "melting pot", which has the effect of lack of extremism. I'll hazard a guess that the natural diversity of american society does have a large "responsibility" in this clique thing. It's easier to fit in when you have a lot in common, like it is in Chile.

Yes, I can see that helping. Also, forgive me if I misunderstood, but you go to school with basically the same people for the entire time you are in school, correct? This is very different from here. In America, you may go to kindergarten in one school, grade school in another, junior high another, and high school yet another. Then there is always people moving to different areas, like myself - I moved from a suburb of Chicago to a small town in Iowa halfway through Junior year of high school - that was rough. Not so much Culture Shock as Culture Curbstomp-Kick-You-When-You're-Down-Then-Take-Your-Wallet.

:lol:
 

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Lasher Dragon said:
Also, forgive me if I misunderstood, but you go to school with basically the same people for the entire time you are in school, correct?

yes. It does lead to very long and close friendships. which is good. :)

It also leads to entrenched power groups, and people who are "connected" which is bad. :\

By the way, this school system is typical of at least "Spanish" Latin America, and probably true in Brazil as well.
 

maddman75 said:
Another part that rang true was those at the top of the food chain really didn't pick on the lower ones. They sometimes even defended them.

This is the interesting part of my own experience...I wasn't picked on, even though I was definitely one of the oddest people at my school. Maybe it was my size, dunno. The last time I can remember being picked on was junior high, by a bully whose name I don't remember. He was inordinately strong, and a total loser (smoked, dumb as a brick, spent all his time looking for ways to act like a :):):):) ). We had a confontation in off-season once that got a bit physical, but didn't devolve into a fight (as he probably wanted). My solution? I started really taking advantage of off-season, working out hard every day. By the 5th 6 weeks, I was nearly as strong as him, and we had to spot each other on the bench, because we were the only ones other than coach that could. He quit picking on me, he still hated me, and he wasn't afraid of me, but I think he started to have a bit of grudging respect for what I'd done.

Now, I didn't change for him, I changed for me. There was a situation in my life that I didn't like, so I changed it by making positive changes in my life rather than by self-destructing, withdrawing, or becoming negative by fighting. I didn't even remember that until this thread got me thinking, and now I think it was one of the moments in my life that molded me into someone that believes in making positive changes in order to mold life to my liking.
 
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Kamikaze Midget said:
I find that I have the most in common with geeks because I don't have to go through an explaination process to explain what I'm interested in. I can say "Hey, don't you think that part is cool in Return of the Jedi where the emperor is using lightning on Luke?" and expect an answer back like "ya, but wasn't it cooler when the death star was destroyed" instead of "Umm, I don't remember that, I haven't seen Star Wars in years."

I believe if I were in that situation, rather than judging the person unworthy of my attention, I'd say: "You haven't?! Dude, swing by my place Saturday, and I will show it to you. You don't remember how cool it is."
I had a woman ask me about my email address (nerfherder@...) and I explained that it's a romantic line from Empire. "Oh, I've never seen that film", she replied. "Well, would you like to come round to mine to see it?" "Sure". We still haven't watched it, but have watched a bunch of other films... :D

Cheers,
Liam
 

Well, this is going to be long, so bear with me as I'd like to address as many points as possible.

First, for those who care, I showered right before posting this.

I didn't expect to go this far into my personality, but since we're here:

fusangite: I keep having plans to go on Atkins. I agree with some of what you say, but I think you have me slightly wrong. I agree with your methods and I appreciate what you are trying to do.

Empress: I think you have me the closest to who I am except a couple things you have are wrong. I never said I didn't shower. I just said some days I didn't. See, in a way, it is your problem if you didn't want me around. After someone smokes, they smell horrible to me. I mean REALLY horrible. I can barely stand being in the same room with them. I have an allergy to smoke as well. However, my best friend smokes. I don't like it, but I put up with it because I like him and I don't think the smell that is around him nearly constantly is enough to lose a friend over or prevent me from gaining a new one. I have the same reaction to most perfumes and aftershaves, can't STAND the smell of them and a lot of women I've met smell from 5 feet away.

Also, my place is a mess. Yes, because I'm too lazy to clean most of the time. My friends haven't stopped coming over because of it and new people who come normally accept an apology on the appearance of the place. I find that most people aren't extremely concerned if I haven't cleaned up in the last week. I guess we hang out with different people, but I haven't found it to be an issue.

I do care what other people think. A LOT actually. You are right, that's why I posted on this message board hoping for approval. I like to feel that I'm doing the "right" thing. But often, I'm not actually looking for it to be the popular thing or even have the majority agree with me. I'm instead looking to find the group of people who agree with me and spend time around them to make me feel better about myself. That's sort of my opinion on why I dress the way I do. I feel that I'd like to know the people who think that it's great that I wear what I do. I LIKE wearing it, so although some people might think it's stupid, or unkept or anti-social, I think of it as a shirt with someone I like written on it. It's much better for my self esteem to be around a person who says "Cool shirt" instead of "Can't you dress in some real clothes?" Plus, doesn't do much for my self esteem to be continually putting on clothes that I don't like just so other people will tolerate me. Feels like I'm pretending. I do enough role playing DURING the game.

Perhaps the best way to explain me is a short history lesson (I apologize if this starts to ramble):

Elementary School: I was good at math, switched schools in grade 2 and always kinda felt like an outcast in the new school. I was picked last in every sport during recess and I hung out with a couple kids no one liked except me. We'd wander around the playground using our imagination instead of playing sports when the other kids would make fun of us for not being good enough. I spent my time outside of school watching my brother or my friends play video games. I was in Ukrainian Immersion, did all my courses in Ukrainian.

Junior High: I decided to go to an english school, all my friends went to a different school. I had almost no friends for 2 years of Junior High except for the kid that everyone hated and thought was a loser but I was friends with him because no one else would be my friend. I finally joined a computer club after school where I started hanging out with the computer geeks. I started up my own BBS (Bulletin Board System for those who don't know, it's like "internet lite" before the internet was popular). I met some people on BBSes who played RPGs and got invited to a weekly session.

High School: Due to a falling out with the role playing group that I had joined, I was left with only about 10 friends. I started up my own RPG group, almost all of my friends were members. I spent most of my high school days in the computer lab, programming or trying to get this one girl to give me a chance. For about 3 years. Most people in my school would make fun of me for being a geek. They'd show up every Monday and share stories of how great their weekends were because of how drunk they got. They were all 16 at the time.

University: Right before I graduated from high school I met a girl on IRC who I hit it off with almost immediately. We started dating. I paid way more attention to her than I did school and dropped out after a year of Computer Science. I lost one of my best friends when he decided that hanging out with the Engineers at the bar getting drunk every day was more important than attending our D&D sessions any longer. I introduced my gf to gaming and she loved it. After 3 years of being together my gf asked me to marry her. I told her I wasn't ready yet as I was only 19. 6 months later she dumped me for a member of my RPG group saying that she didn't think I loved her enough. Last I heard she tried to commit suicide and was on anti-depressants after she got divorced from said guy.

Last couple of years: I met another girl on IRC who lived in Australia and loved my favorite band, Barenaked Ladies. Meanwhile, my best friend in the world got married and she didn't like gaming. So, he stopped having anything to do with me as she didn't like his gaming friends. He was more than happy to stop gaming if it meant being with her. We did the online dating thing for a year and a half, she visited me for 8 months in Canada then I moved to Australia for a year. On the day I was to apply to stay there permanently, she dumped me. Last I heard one of my ex-friends from my role playing meet that she met while here had flown out to Australia to be with her. Came back to Canada, found a job doing tech support and started up my old life here again.

On to more specific points:

Alcohol: It's been my experience that most people I know who drink on a regular basis drink to excess. One of my best friends quit life to drink most of the time. Everyone I knew in high school who made fun of me bragged about drinking constantly. The favorite activity of most people I know who aren't my role playing friends is going to the bar once or twice a week and getting drunk. I also have a rather large fear of not acting like myself. I've seen people act in ways that they have to apologize for afterwards and would NEVER do while sober. I don't want to drink and then find out the next day that it lowered my inhibitions to the point where I actually admited to my GM who is engaged that if she wasn't, I date her in a second. I don't want to accidently tell my best friend that sometimes he irritates the crap out of me and I wish he wasn't around all the time. Those are things I think, but I keep under control and alchohol could bring them out. I like being in control.

Clothes: Really, I just wear what I have in my closet. I've rarely, if ever, actually bought clothes on my own. I just don't care enough to go shopping for them. So, nearly everything I have is a gift. Therefore, almost all of it are shirts with slogans people thought I would like. I'm not opposed to shopping for new clothes and have in fact thought many times that I really should get some. Even bought a bunch while I lived in Australia to look better for the job I had there. However, my mom does the laundry in the house, and all my clothes seem to go missing. So, I do need to buy more, I just have to be awake during the day to do so.

Also, partially the point of wearing those clothes IS to show who I am. I find that if I'm wearing a Star Wars shirt, people who like Star Wars come up to me and talk to me. I like having things in common with people. When I look through a crowd of people, I'm prone to ignoring the well dressed, preppy people and finding those people who look like they are kindred spirits to talk to. If I was looking for a woman in a crowd I'd skip over the one in the dress for the one wearing the T-shirt that says "you know you're a gamer when..." like our female DM wears..*grin*

Books and reading: No, I am not too stressed out from the rest of my life. I just don't have time. I have a stack of books that are fantasy related that I really WANT to read that is about 6 or so long along with a couple D&D books that I've bought and haven't read. So, to add books that I'm not even sure I'll like to the list would mean that they wouldn't get read for months or years. Only so much time and I'd prefer to spend it with things I like.

Kamikaze Midget said:
"Getting a girl" probably requires first and foremost that "getting a girl" isn't first and foremost on your list of things to do. Once it isn't, you'll be more natural, be more confident, and be more concerned with people for who they are, rather than what they can do for you.
I know, I've been given this advice before. I've tried to find a way to follow it for years now. However, it never seems to work out. The only time I've ever felt relaxed enough around a woman to just think of them the same way I do a guy is when I was dating my first gf. There was no expectation from women, so they were the same as anyone else. Other than that, every girl I've ever met has either dated me or it has become awkward and we stopped being friends after they realized I liked them more than they liked me. I'm not sure I'm capable of being friends with women. I don't mean to be deperate, but it always comes through anyways

As for my comments about it likely not going anywhere with the woman I just met. Well, I don't like to get my hopes up, and since I find that when I meet a woman that I have ANY interest in whatsoever my brain works overtime without me being able to stop it. Within a day or two it has planned out everything I could possibly say to her to get her to go out with me, it has considered hundreds of possible outcomes even if she said yes to a date and wondered if all the time and effort spend on the rather frustrating game of dating would be worth the outcome. Sometimes these thoughts happen within second of meeting a woman for the first time. I've taken to telling myself that it'll never work and it isn't worth trying in an effort to make it look like it IS a bit disheartening.


A couple general things. My posts focused heavily on the parts of me I wanted to draw attention to. However, I DO talk to people about non-geeky things. I HAVE sat around in the bar with friends talking about things before and even enjoyed some portions of it. I spent 5 years in Youth Parliament arguing politics and really enjoyed it. I'm not as one sided as my post may have made me sound. I AM very geeky. I'm proud of that, as well. But I don't use it as a shield as some people have suggested. It is just who I am. I would no more try to convince everyone on the list to stop drinking than I would try to deny that I really enjoy gaming and computers. Life is too short trying to spend it trying to be someone you aren't. I'm willing to try anything to see if I like it (ok, most things) but I'm not going to pretend to like something that I already know I don't. I wouldn't want anyone pretending to like what I do. If they don't like what I do, I'd like them to tell me so I know not to bore them talking about it. I like to concentrate on what I have in common with people rather than what I don't.
 

iwatt said:
Maybe you have something here. Is the belief that high school is "the most important time of your life" prevalent in american society? I can tell you straight up that in South America it isn't. Down here the most important part of your life is when you form a family. And people do look askance at those who don't/haven't formed one yet. I'm 27 and not even trying :D , but a lot of the mainstream thinks I should start thinking about it.

You hit the nail on the head here. A major part of american mythology is (or at least was when I was growing up) the idea that High School is 'the Best Years of your Life." I personally think this is one of the cruelest lies in our society. Possibly it's a holdover from the old days when leaving school meant you got to spend the rest of your life on a farm doing backbreaking labor, or working on a basically deadend job?

Majoru Oakheart said:
I didn't expect to go this far into my personality, but since we're here:

Hmm.. You seem to have a lot of things you want to do, or know you need to do, but can't find the time. Please understand that I'm observing from a distance (and through a distorting medium) but have you considered that you might have depression and/or ADD? You might want to find a source of professional help. If you do have emotional problems it is NOT something you can will power through. I recently spent a year unemployed and sitting on my couch trying to work up the willpower to search for work. Eventually I realized it wasn't going to work and sought help. It took a couple of weeks to find the right mix of medication (as it turns out I had ADD as well as depression and they interact oddly) but once we did, I has a job 2 days later.

Oh, and as a side note, running for 30 min three times a week is as effective as medication for social anxiety, it just takes longer to kick in (8 weeks vs 2 weeks.) So if you can will yourself to exercise you might find it help in other areas as well.
 

Everything else you say Midget, is right on the money. But I really don't believe Sin City is a good first date movie. Maybe it's an okay date movie once you've established mutual interests and tastes but some women today, even geeks, might find this movie's violence, sexism and racism a little much. (Not to say that I didn't enjoy the movie myself...) Anyway, I think there are probably better first date movies out there.

It's definately not a safe choice, but I like to let the girls no right away that I'm never entirely safe. :]

As for the rest of this, remember, man, this is Tuff Luv. Don't take it too personally, just try to take away from it what you can in the way of construction.

See, in a way, it is your problem if you didn't want me around....I do care what other people think. A LOT actually.

These are contradictory positions. It's not THEIR problem if they don't want you around. They're not suffering at all for it. They don't give a loaf. It's YOUR problem if they don't want you around. Because you genuinely care about what other people think about you (like most people).

There's millions of people in this world. There aren't many who are willing to jump through the hoops you set up just to get to know what you are at the core. The advice here is to make you set up less hoops. So you can be concerned with them, rather than demanding that they be concerned with you.

I can barely stand being in the same room with them. I have an allergy to smoke as well. However, my best friend smokes. I don't like it, but I put up with it because I like him and I don't think the smell that is around him nearly constantly is enough to lose a friend over or prevent me from gaining a new one.

Go here and read down. There is the presentation of Geek Social Fallacies. You will be enlightened. I wish I had the original link, but this'll have to do.

I'm instead looking to find the group of people who agree with me and spend time around them to make me feel better about myself. That's sort of my opinion on why I dress the way I do. I feel that I'd like to know the people who think that it's great that I wear what I do.

.....you make people jump through hoops to get to know you, but the moment you have a middling difference with someone else, you denounce them as incompatible. This is self-centered, and one of the cruxes of your problem. It doesn't deny your self to be frickin' considerate, man. You're not cheapening your own being by paying attention to the boring garbage that other people talk about. You're inviting them in to knowing you.

I'm not even suggesting that you change your bathing habits or cleaning habits on a regular basis. Some guys are slobs (I live with a man who NEVER does the dishes. EVER. I hate him. :p). But when you refuse to be considerate to other human beings, why should they be interested in who you are? You're an inconsiderate, selfish little twick, why should they get to know you? You criticize them, secretly hate them, predict they are dicks, and then prejudge them in exactly the same way you wish they wouldn't prejudge you.

So I would recommend not being incosiderate and selfish. So you want people who won't judge you for what you smell like? Good on you! But you need to put the ball in YOUR court, not in theirs. Don't let them judge you -- let yourself have the power to judge them. Then, if you don't want to hang out with those people, you can assert yourself, rather than just letting them walk over you. You can tell them: "I don't want to be around you when you smell like Joe Camel's poochute. So I'd like it if you'd frickin' STOP, dude. Just out of common courtesey."

Stop telling us we don't understand who you are. Screw who you are. It's not special, it's not significant, it's not worth knowing any more than anyone else is. I could get to know you, or I could get to know that guy who cares enough about how he looks to wear something that looks good on him. We don't care who you are. All we want to do is try to help a guy who asked for it. Who you really are doesn't matter.

(Again, remember, this is tuff luv. Don't take it personally, but take away from it what you can.)

I LIKE wearing it, so although some people might think it's stupid, or unkept or anti-social, I think of it as a shirt with someone I like written on it. It's much better for my self esteem to be around a person who says "Cool shirt" instead of "Can't you dress in some real clothes?" Plus, doesn't do much for my self esteem to be continually putting on clothes that I don't like just so other people will tolerate me. Feels like I'm pretending. I do enough role playing DURING the game.

You know what I do when I submit an application for employment or school? I pretend. I present them with a face they want to see, rather than every aspect of who I am.

Society is built on a foundation of falsehoods and wrong assumptions. Most human beings just don't give a flying intercourse about their fellow human being beyond a few theoretical generalities. You're no exception: you judge drunks unworthy of your attention. You might not want them to curl up and die (or maybe you do?), but you don't want to have anything to do with them. Most people are going to judge people who feel the need to wear their hobby on their sleeve as unworthy of their attention. You confuse and bewilder people, and people don't like being confused and bewildered. Just like you're uncomfortable around drunks, people are uncomfortable around ill-fitting Star Wars tees. This isn't a test to separate the people worth knowing from the people not -- EVERY human being is worth knowing. Stop lying to yourself. All this is doing is isolating you from some people you may be interested in knowing DESPITE their flaws.

Self-esteem? Sounds a lot like you're pretty frickin' proud of yourself, all high and mighty on your throne of dice, judging everyone who passes beneath your feet, telling them that they have to come to you.

Get down off of your high horse and have some humility. Put on something preppy for someone else's sake.

Why would that feel like you're pretending? You don't need to wear your hobby on your sleeve. You don't need to shove what you like in everyone else's face and declare that if they don't like it then they're unworthy of your time and attention. If you want to know people, you have to accept them for what they are and stop demanding that they treat you special.

Also, partially the point of wearing those clothes IS to show who I am.

BZZZZZZZZZZZZZT! Wrong-o, bucky! The *entire* point of wearing clothes is so we don't have to look at your dangly bits. Your self identity is NOT related to your clothing, it is related to who you are on the inside. It's not like some magical belt of fashion-bending that when you put it on you will instantly turn into a new person. It what you do for the sake of other people.

You show who you are by words, actions, interests, opinions. The only thing your clothes signify is your ability to not make other people look at your dangly bits.

When I look through a crowd of people, I'm prone to ignoring the well dressed, preppy people and finding those people who look like they are kindred spirits to talk to.

Then why oh why oh WHY are you offended when someone else does the same to you and your clothing? Why are you offended by the shallowness of others when you are so very shallow yourself? How is what you do ANY different from some superficial wench only talking to the guys who wear Ambercrombie. You've faught these monsters for so long that you've effing become them. You're the same thing, with different standards.

So you can either be confident in your selfish egotism, or you can open up a little bit and be a human being for Gygax's sake! Do things for other people!

I know, I've been given this advice before. I've tried to find a way to follow it for years now. However, it never seems to work out.

There's a trick to it. It's called not being self-centered.

Well, I don't like to get my hopes up, and since I find that when I meet a woman that I have ANY interest in whatsoever my brain works overtime without me being able to stop it. Within a day or two it has planned out everything I could possibly say to her to get her to go out with me, it has considered hundreds of possible outcomes even if she said yes to a date and wondered if all the time and effort spend on the rather frustrating game of dating would be worth the outcome. Sometimes these thoughts happen within second of meeting a woman for the first time. I've taken to telling myself that it'll never work and it isn't worth trying in an effort to make it look like it IS a bit disheartening.

Congrats, you judgemental bimbo! :p

Stop thinking that much. Head your brain off at the pass.

Do or do not. There is no try. You have time and time again chosen "do not." Simply because, what, you're affraid of rejection? Please. Let her decide if your worth her time, don't put words in her mouth. Don't presume to think that you know who she is because you know some broad stereotype about her. Because she's one way, don't think that defines her.

Life is too short trying to spend it trying to be someone you aren't. I'm willing to try anything to see if I like it (ok, most things) but I'm not going to pretend to like something that I already know I don't. I wouldn't want anyone pretending to like what I do. If they don't like what I do, I'd like them to tell me so I know not to bore them talking about it. I like to concentrate on what I have in common with people rather than what I don't.

Look, I'm gonna throw something at your head, open your mind and try to make it stick:

Whatever you are, you are. You can't be someone you're not. It's a LOGICAL IMPOSSI-FRICKING-BILITY. Even if you were to dress in a clown suit and unicycle down main street, you would still be you and what you are. You can't help it. You are. So do whatever you actually want to do. If that means alienating people by judging them superficially and selfishly refusing to accomodate them and their difference, fine, be proud of it. But if you want to make more friends (and ladyfriends), it means not being a selfish, superficial twick. It means bowing to some of the whims of the masses.

Don't take PRIDE in being a geek. That's a label. That's a stereotype. That's a generalization. You're not a stereptye. You're not a label. You're not a generealization. Don't accuse others of being stereotypes, either.

You have a lot more in common with the concieted cheerleader than you want to admit. You are the polar opposite. Just as bad, to another extreme.
 

Majoru, I can understand where you are coming from. I am 6'2", and from the time I was 12 until I was 26, I was always very heavy- to the point of being 320 lbs at my heaviest. I have pale skin (due to genetics), a beard, and long hair which I usually wore in a ponytail. I took showers every day (thats just a common courtesy to people, whether you like them or not), but I was socially inept, liked geeky things, and spent almost all of my free time on gaming or geeky pursuits. To top it off, I was working on my PhD in Neuroscience, which is basically a field full of geeks (but interesting geeks). Around the time I was 26, my knees and back started bothering me due to the excess weight, and I decided to lose weight for myself so I wouldn't feel like crap when I was older and I'd have a longer, happier, healther life.

So I started walking then jogging 4 miles a day, watching what I ate, and being more active. I had a lot more energy, and within 10 months, I had dropped down to 190 lbs (which for me is skin and bones). I started doing intensive weight training, and within 3 years, I had worked my way back up to 250 lbs of muscle. It takes a lot of effort, and yeah, I didn't spend as much time gaming. But looking back, I think I was crazy for not doing this sooner. I feel SO MUCH better now, physically, emotionally, and socially, and I have much more confidence. I'm just as much "me" now as I was before I changed my life, but life is better now. From personal experience, women don't like fat, geeky, and especially unconfident guys- and that last one will drive them away from you screaming, especially if you act needy. Also, cultivate more varied interests- I took up golf, weightlifting, hiking, concerts, etc- it makes you a more interesting person and gives you more common ground and ability to relate to people.

Now, I'm enjoying life and everything I've accomplished, and I'm really looking forward to the future. I've got my PhD, I am a professor at one of the top 20 private colleges in the country, in the best shape of my life (my students call me "Conan" or say I look like Triple H now), I'm more confident, have a better mental outlook, and still find time to play games several times a month (not every week like before since real life has intruded and friends have moved away for jobs). I'm not married and don't have a girlfriend right now, but thats more because I'm not looking for one right now while I get my career established and life set up. I've noticed a big difference in how women treat me too- random women will stop and start talking to me, and women in my classes or that I know at school hang around my office just to chat. And I'm up front and honest about my geeky habits (gaming, computer games, minis painting, etc), and if doesn't bother you to talk about it, I've found most women will say "hmm, sounds kinda interesting- can you show me sometime?". I can really understand where you are coming from, and why you feel that way, but you're the one with the responsibility and ability to improve your life- its not owed to you, and nobody else has an obligation to make sure you're happy other than YOU.

And listen to Teflon Billy- he has great wisdom, even if he can be "overzealous" at times. He's kinda like Bhudda with a baseball bat. :cool:
 

Majoru Oakheart said:
Well, I don't believe that being overweight is "me" per se. What I was saying is that spending most of my time exercising and trying to remain slim, I wouldn't be me anymore.

Most of your time ? You don't have to go all health-ninja, turn vegan and start biking to work, yo. Every little bit helps.

And personally, I'd say that the point of working out is not to "become slim". Really, "becoming a little less overweight" is already very very good. But the main reason is that being really out of shape sucks, big time. Sure, in your early 20s, you can get by on sheer youth, but at some point, your lack of any physical activity at all is going to catch up to you.

If you're as unwise as me (and it sounds like you are, no offense), then you'll ignore all this. And at some point, maybe at 30 or 35, some part of you will give out and you will rue the lack of exercises. And then, instead of having to go to the gym for a few hours a week, you will need physical therapy to keep you from being in constant pain every instant due to a bad back that doesn't have enough muscle mass to support your weight. At that point, going to the gym 2-3 hours a week will not seem like a big deal compared to 45 minutes of exercises you have to do every day (plus visits to the PT).

Also, being able to climb 2 flights of stairs without getting winded is great !

Anyway, what I'm saying is that I've been there and I think you're making a mistake you'll pay dearly for later. Feel free to ignore it - I would have. :)


Majoru Oakheart said:
But also, that extra hour of Knights of the Old Republic is a lot more fun than the hour of exercise. Also, depending on what type of exercise I'm doing, I have to go somewhere to have that exercise. That meanst 30 minutes there, 30 minutes back. So, I've now wasted one hour of my time travelling in order to spend 1 hour doing something that I don't like doing so OTHER people can like what they see in me. I hate wasting time and try to optimize the use of it.

It doesn't have to be wasted time. If you take the bus there, you can read RPG books as you go. Also, you could read, watch tv, listen to music OR ALL THREE !!!! while you're pedaling on the aerobics bike. :D

Personally, I was surprised as to how quickly an hour of exercise passes.


maddman75 said:
Neither is hocky. How can you have a sport without a ball? All hockey has is a puck. The only other place I've every heard of a puck is the little air freshner they drop in urinals. Something that involves batting around a bathroom freshner is not a sport.

*quacks*

Unlike, say, american Football, the balls are attached to the players. :p

*pheasants*
 

But the main reason is that being really out of shape sucks, big time. Sure, in your early 20s, you can get by on sheer youth, but at some point, your lack of any physical activity at all is going to catch up to you.

Believe it or not, physical activity has a lot more than just physical effects on your body. Your mind works better when your body is healthy. Every part of you loves to be active, you just have to get it over that first hump.
 

Into the Woods

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