Monday, September 12, 2011

I'm A Geek

It's true. I am a geek. I used to be in geek denial but that changed when my husband outed me from the geek closet--he's the king of geeks, he took a quiz to prove it-- and since then I've been letting my geek-flag fly. I love all things Star Wars, except for the ill fated prequels (I'll save my opinions on that one for another blog). I do like Star Trek, but will never admit it in certain company. The animosity between Star Trek and Star Wars is greater than the beef between Biggie Smalls and Tupac.

There is something about geeks you should know. We tend to categorize and judge other geeks harshly. Not all geeks are this severe, but know that there are some tough geeks floating around, and you better have your facts straight about the best gaming systems, tech-speak, and comic book story lines or its a hard fall down the geek ladder. Right now I hang around the lower rungs, mostly because I'm a drama, movie, sort-of comic geek. The upper echelon of geekdom is the tech-geeks.  These are the nameless IT guys that hang around your office or work for corporate retail chain stores (you all know whom I'm talking about). They often play devils advocate and generally try to make you look like an donkey's behind. They throw the word "logic" or "logical" around a lot. They're a bit spockish as a people. A drama geek like me, well, we're more of a Captain Kirk; brave, good-looking and emotional. I know, if I'm a Kirk don't I outrank Spock thus putting me higher on the ladder? Yet again the ability to problem solve a blue screen of death escapes me. I'm too busy working on a skit to put up on YouTube. 

So it was a room full of Spocks that brings to the nightmare I experienced last night. I had a dream I was in a giant comic book shop. Yes, I know, it's not bad right now,just stay with me because the nightmare part is coming up. I'm looking at all the fun things geeks like to collect when someone comes up to me and tells me the costume contest is starting. Next thing I know I'm dressed like Thor--the comic book hero, not the Norse God of Thunder, although it's the same thing really only one looks more Norsey--not only am I dressed like Thor, but it's a Halloween costume (a big no-no in dress alike contests among the geek elite. It's a carefully, 1800-hour hand stitched replica, or you had enough cash to purchase the actual costume on eBay). Even worse, there is a Q & A portion to determine whom possess the most Thor knowledge.  A cold sweat envelopes me, since I only have movie version knowledge of Thor. I still refer to the hammer in my dream as "meow-meow." Movie knowledge is a big faux-paux amongst comic fans, since the movies "loosely" interpret key story lines condensing ten years of drama into two hours. Most movie directors (I'm looking at you Bryan Singer) tend to mutilate the comic beyond fan recognition and we use that as a test to determine the true fans from the fake ones. I walk onto the stage and before me is a sea of judges dressed like Spock. I shoot out of bed in a terrifying scream. I relayed this dream to husband, who sympathetically patted my head and told me it would be okay. I'm still a bit shaken. It was worse than a naked-in-school-on-test-day-and-I-forgot-the-answers dream I usually have.

So, this is basically the type of stuff I'll be blogging about. My geekishness and my internal strife with humanity.

1 comment:

  1. You would have fit in perfectly where Ron and I worked, Geekdom personified. Love your post, keep up the good work. Maybe you will inspire me to re-start my blog. Procrastination is my specialty.

    Keep at it! Nancy Boat

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