Totenkindly
@.~*virinaĉo*~.@
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2007
- Messages
- 52,155
- MBTI Type
- BELF
- Enneagram
- 594
- Instinctual Variant
- sx/sp
So I can't retitle this "How the sex bias results in murder?"
Not enough for me to kill you.
I can't say the school is "prestigious." It's not a private institution -- all the teenagers there are forced to be there by law. There's no encouragement for anything outside of school. Whenever I say I write they say I should write for the newspaper (even though that's a completely different writing) and whenever I draw they say I should be in an art class (even though my crammed school schedule left no time for art), anything I do is not allowed to speak for itself but instead must have someone else speak for it, because a piece of writing is not good unless it has a recommendation behind it. Those at school are not allowed to think for themselves but must allow someone in a position of power decide for them. If I'm not rubbing shoulders with someone at the school (even if I do with professionals outside), it's absolutely worthless. I could have several published novels and they wouldn't give a shit, and class me as the same as those who go back home and get high every day, never doing any homework and never doing anything to prepare for the future.
Ahhh, ok, maybe I was reading too much into itIt looks like bureaucracy for its own sake has taken over then. They're not concerned with educating students, just administering their own petty system and fitting you into the correct predefined category. Anyone who doesn't fit conveniently into one of their little boxes is automatically classified as difficult or a troublemaker just for the fact that you don't fit, it doesn't really matter WHY you don't fit. It's education by numbers, seeing you as units of educational production to be shuttled around their system, like components in a factory, nothing more. I can see why you find it demoralising, as you're not exactly going to be appreciated for who you are in such a system. However, once you leave you are freer to choose your own destiny, and if a bureaucratic, heirarchical system isn't for you, you probably don't ultimately have to be subject to one.
You should go busking with that violin. You're good!I've agreed to a mountain of debt that, according to this thread, I will not be able to repay ever, I have no support structure through my family (you see, they're buried themselves, they're trying to unburden themselves from me), I have no romantic potential, I have no ambition, I have no future, no hope for anything more than wasting away dead in a ditch somewhere.
So. I should be dead in a ditch somewhere.
The only decent years of my life are already behind me, and by "decent" I mean they sucked balls. Kill me.
You should go busking with that violin. You're good!
That would work.It would also help circumvent the debt mountain, which I agree there's little point in acquiring unless you're really committed to doing something that requires long-term participation in the charade that is higher education.
I'm shit at the violin. I play the viola, which is an entirely different instrument that, while, is less competitive as a section, also has less opportunity for advancement and also, I'm shit at it.
That's always a mistake.Ah, I was relying on Morgan's judgement there!
Ah, I was relying on Morgan's judgement there! Yes, the viola does tend to be a somewhat maligned instrument, but this is probably because it doesn't have much of a classical solo repertoire or folk/pop tradition and therefore ends up being mostly used as orchestral filler. This makes it an intstrument with the potential to be redefined though! No reason why you couldn't start something new with it.I'm obviously not in a position to comment on the quality of the playing - how shit is shit to you?
That's always a mistake.
I don't have the motivation.
That kind of shit.
I'm suspicious of the article's bias myself. It seems like there could be other factors here that we have no way of confirming.
- Did the transgendered individuals ACT differently, perhaps subconsciously, that brought about these issues?
- Could prejudice against their decision to alter their sex play a part?
There was something about the story of the person transitioning from male to female that made me think there was more to it and almost makes that particular argument worthless to me. Her previous area of study was tide pools. After her transition, she chose a topic related specifically to sexuality and one that takes on "Darwin's theory of sexuality", submitting her theory that it is more 'social' than 'biological'. It sounds like something a person, beset upon by a prejudice society, friends or family might take an interest in because of personal injuries... be it subconscious or conscious. If her peers knew of her sex change and took her theory as a personal rant against the rules of a society that doesn't approve, it could hinder her ability to be taken seriously. She even chose to study animals where same-sex intercourse existed, which may or may not have been seen as an extention of her (presumably) previously homosexual lifestyle. I do not agree with descrimination, but homophobia linked with discomfort at working with a transgendered individual who was studying this topic of all things, could bring about the emotional responses she was referring to. It might depend on how she presented the material as well, which may or may not have had a personal agenda linked to it.
I DO agree that sexual bias still exists. We have an owner in our company who regularly interrupts and talks over the women who may be speaking in meetings, and just yesterday morning say to a young girl in our office who had a question "It means XYZ... is that not clear??". He was completely exasperated by her request for clarification, which no one else thought anything about and thought perfectly legit. I've heard him say that phrase ("Is that not clear?") at least 10 times over the last couple of years, but NEVER have I heard him direct it at a male co-worker.
My boss who works directly over me said in my review last time around 'I'm impressed with how you handle yourself in the situation you find yourself in.' When I looked at him in confusion wondering what situation I was in exactly he continued "... you know, working with all guys and what-not". I had rarely thought about it myself, but apparently he has. He's made remarks before about how I'm 'more outspoken than most women' and he seems not to know what to make of it... and so he will then say 'It must be because you are from Up North...' because here in the Good Ole South women are expected to be more obedient.
Another coworker has told me "We need to find you a man who will set you straight" because apparently I'm not well behaved (AKA taking orders without question and demurely following the male opinions in the office)
A coworker who worked here previously but has since left was class A sexual harassment waiting to happen.
Its a load of crap, but I've found ways to work the system to my benefit in true INTJ fashion.