The first challenge is met with confusion. The second with contention. The third, and all others, with exasperation and desperation: see me, let me be, leave me alone, allow me to exist.
Every cred check, or even shadow of a cred check, is starting to lead to this defensiveness: we're not looking for common ground anymore, we're just looking for the right to keep the ground we already have. And there's the concern that this is going to start driving new female fans away, because all the women who are already there have these laundry lists of "I am a fan because I ________," and some of them are just like "uh, I watch some TV shows?" That's not good. We don't want to lose the next generation of female fans, both because they have a right to this ground, too, and because it would show the cred checkers that they can win: push us hard enough and we go away, or at least stop coming, which can look like the same thing.
I don't think the laundry lists are going to go away. They're bruises, left from being hit too many times, and bruises don't heal instantly. But we should be aware of why the bruises are there, and promise each other not to cred check.
You are safe here. No matter what kind of geek you are, or whether or not I understand your passions.
This ground is yours.
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August 1 2013, 14:44:50 UTC 3 years ago
Yes. Thank you. And you are awesome.
August 1 2013, 14:53:23 UTC 3 years ago
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August 1 2013, 14:55:04 UTC 3 years ago
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3 years ago
Hunger Games
3 years ago
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August 1 2013, 14:57:24 UTC 3 years ago
Now, it has been a looooong time since anyone geek-checked me, but my stock response is now more likely to be a look of exaggerated pity and "Wow, your life must be very small and sad."
August 1 2013, 15:19:00 UTC 3 years ago
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August 1 2013, 15:25:11 UTC 3 years ago
Maybe I'm just (not) meeting the wrong people. Although I give myself points for just plain obliviousness.
August 1 2013, 15:36:49 UTC 3 years ago
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October 11 2013, 15:59:29 UTC 3 years ago
You are a geek. If you say you're a geek, you're a geek.
August 1 2013, 17:11:58 UTC 3 years ago
October 11 2013, 15:59:40 UTC 3 years ago
August 1 2013, 17:43:44 UTC 3 years ago
http://amandapalmer.net/blog/20130713/
October 11 2013, 16:00:55 UTC 3 years ago
August 1 2013, 17:46:49 UTC 3 years ago
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August 1 2013, 18:00:40 UTC 3 years ago
Because I love it so much.
August 2 2013, 05:10:55 UTC 3 years ago
(And then I committed the cardinal sin of reading the comments. Ugh.I never learn.)
3 years ago
August 1 2013, 18:07:16 UTC 3 years ago
Stopped myself from commenting, yesterday, even, because I found myself cred-checking my own right to discuss the cred-checking experience. To myself. As I wrote.
WHAT IS EVEN THE HELL.
August 1 2013, 23:35:30 UTC 3 years ago
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August 1 2013, 18:25:19 UTC 3 years ago
I'm tired of it.
October 11 2013, 16:02:26 UTC 3 years ago
August 1 2013, 19:32:30 UTC 3 years ago
October 11 2013, 16:02:42 UTC 3 years ago
August 1 2013, 19:49:41 UTC 3 years ago
I've only been to one con, The Gathering of the Fellowship in Toronto in '03, and no one ever gave me any crap about geek cred or my costume. I had no idea women were being called on the carpet to prove themselves until I started hearing about the Fake Geek Girl thing recently, and it pisses me off. If anyone attempts to cred check me in the future, they'll get an unequivocal "Piss off!".
October 11 2013, 16:03:01 UTC 3 years ago
Welcome to our community, you showed up.
August 1 2013, 20:06:31 UTC 3 years ago
Thank you. A major reason Sarah and I are as devoted fans of yours as we are is that you have been extremely welcoming to us, and our fellow fans at your events have been similarly welcoming. As we've been slowly getting into attending cons and other large geek gatherings, I'm dismayed to learn that not all of fandom is like this. Thank you very much for the space you provide for us, and I hope we can all make such spaces more common.
October 11 2013, 16:03:19 UTC 3 years ago
August 1 2013, 21:22:16 UTC 3 years ago
October 11 2013, 16:03:34 UTC 3 years ago
August 1 2013, 22:20:05 UTC 3 years ago
I said: "I really feel like these days to be taken at all serious as a geek, I have to be ALL KNOWING! ABOUT ALL THINGS GEEK! EVEN THINGS I LOOK AT SIDEWAYS AND GO WHATEVER FLOATS YOUR BOAT MAN BUT I DON'T GET IT! Whereas a guy can be deep in one thing, or shallow in a bunch of things, and still be taken seriously and not looked at like he's a pretender who's degrading the entire medium by daring to exist."
He said: "That's because cred checking is impossible. The minute someone tries to cred check you they've already decided you don't belong and will adjust the bar however high it takes to keep you out, even and especially if they couldn't clear it themselves.* It's not intended to set a bar. It's intended to bar everyone that doesn't have a penis and doesn't conform and it's stupid ass bullshit, and I think those men should go home and think very hard about who they expect to date if they exclude all the girls, because I'm willing to bet they're not all being happily gay together, particularly since most of them also seem to be homophobic."
Me: "Apparently they don't want to date geek girls. They want to date NON geek girls, which would probably work as well as me trying to date an investment banker." (note: after I said this I thought of several geeky investment bankers I know and felt bad.)
Him: "Apparently they want to date sitcom wives who will spend the rest of their lives rolling their eyes about what a loser their immature lout of a husband with his 'games' and his 'comic books' is. I hope they get it. They deserve that hell."
This is why I married this one. :)
--
*Note: I have been cred checked by people who were wrong. As in, the cred check question answer they had in mind was incorrect. Fortunately or unfortunately, my memory for things I've played or read is frighteningly good (can't remember my own phone number or how to find my way home off the Garden State, but I can quote passages from books I read fifteen years ago verbatim--I would be deadly at Geek Jeopardy). I don't find this as satisfying as other people seem to, particularly since it either gets countered with a "NU UH!!" style refusal to believe me, or a "WELL I BET YOU DON'T KNOW THE ANSWER TO THIS EVEN MORE OBSCURE QUESTION THEN!!!!" bar raising, and that just further reinforces that there's no way I'll ever be accepted by this person, or at least viewed as something other than a hostile interloper who wants to destroy his precious precious with my evil vagina power.
August 5 2013, 01:17:51 UTC 3 years ago
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August 1 2013, 22:30:05 UTC 3 years ago Edited: August 1 2013, 22:36:31 UTC
I have the benefit of being a straight, white, physically-fit dude in a kilt; nobody checks my cred (and if anyone checks my regimentality, they had best be *very* good friends of mine, or they get dressed the fuck down). I wish I could share my privilege as widely as possible, like an AoE buff, but I'll do what I can - IF ANYONE HAS SUGGESTIONS FOR HOW TO DO THIS WELL, PLEASE LET ME KNOW.
I like hanging out with fans, even if I don't know anything about their fandom of choice. I might learn something cool, but, even if it doesn't do anything for me, it makes them happy, and that's what being a fan and passionately enjoying something is all about.
As a con staffer[1], my job is to make sure people have a good time, and I will definitely be on the lookout for the kind of cred-check harassment that happens as I'm able (though, admittedly, my attention to more predatory harassment, a'la the need for Backup Ribbons, takes precedence... hopefully, there will be little enough of the latter that I can curtail the former).
[1] DragonCon's MMORPG track, if anyone wants to check it out; I am also a line wrangler and official minion for the Kilt Blowing this year
[2] After going toe-to-toe with Joe Peacock about manga and Kurosawa's influence on George Lucas last year, she said, "So, am I a fake geek girl?" and he said, "Of course not! You're wearing jeans and a hoodie." (Part of the conversation had spun off from his essay on fake geek girls, and a fetish model who had done a Jessica Rabbit cosplay to win a costume contest at some previous convention, and both CS and I took him to task for that essay, resulting in, I think, a bit of backpedaling on his part.
October 11 2013, 16:04:24 UTC 3 years ago
Are awesome.
Gold star for you.
3 years ago
August 1 2013, 22:46:18 UTC 3 years ago
My oldest daughter and her group of friends are all into the Marvel Cineverse, manga and anime - to the point that they took extra curricular Japanese lessons. She reads prolifically and writes fanfic and will chat half the night to like minded girls across the world (if she can get away with it). Friends have her down as a possible future SMOF.
My youngest daughter is expanding her reading from child and teen fantasy into manga. She also shows a fondness for weaponry and some basic costuming. I hope to be able to take her LARPing some tome soon, in the meanwhile I've got the first season of Xena for her to watch.
My son, youngest of the three, has only recently discovered the joy of reading, but managed to do the summer library challenge in record time. He's also just discovered Star Wars.
I would hope that should any of them wish to enter fandom in their own right (rather than being dragged along by mum and dad), they would find a welcome and not discouragement from a selfish minority.
August 2 2013, 12:52:45 UTC 3 years ago
I think that it is easy for guys to not notice it, because it's not directed at them. And frequently, it doesn't happen to women who are in the companionship of men (or anybody male-appearing, such as my partner). I've run into it more when I'm alone, or with other women, and usually either in very crowded areas, where nobody else is paying attention, or in areas where there are very few other people. I know women who bring their otherwise-not-all-that-interested male friends or partners along because they get less crap (and frequently, less harassment). The guys that do this are, IMO, very aware they are doing something wrong.
I also do want to share an experience since you mention your kids and cons. I don't know how old they are, so this may not be relevant.
My mom is a huge geek, and especially a Trekkie. I started going to cons with her around age 8. I went to a LOT between 8-14. Mom was pretty laid back, and most of the time, would save our seats for the presentations and panels while I went out through the vendor rooms. I was supposed to be back by a certain time, but Mom generally considered that a con with a significant amount of attending women, including most of the vendor room being women, that it was safe enough she wasn't going to worry. So, I actually ended up talking a lot with various people. (Also: holy crap, the amount of free stuff a kid dressed up in a Starfleet uniform gets...)
I noticed a marked difference in how people behaved towards me when I was young, and considered a child. By the time I was 14 or 15, when the cons started to trail off... well, people treated me different. I was starting to notice the "invading on mah space" attitude from the male fans. I had always felt comfortable and safe, and... I no longer felt that way. And it hurt, though it's taken me years to realize exactly what happened. Because being a kid still, I had no idea.
So, I don't know if your kids are young enough to possibly run into that kind of issue, but feeling pushed out of your childhood fandom because you're now grown up and no longer a kid but are instead a WOMAN is... a special kind of heartbreak.
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August 1 2013, 23:22:04 UTC 3 years ago
"The heart of true fandom is not built from belittling for ignorance, or discrimination, or anything that separates us. It is built by sharing things, and standing together and accepting that sharing allows us have in our hearts a voice that looks at things and screams: "THAT IS SO AWESOME!!!!"
October 17 2013, 15:20:17 UTC 3 years ago
August 1 2013, 23:27:12 UTC 3 years ago
It's the part where I'm seeing younger fans who've never been to cons afraid to go to them that has me worried. They're getting a nightmare image from the stories they're reading, but I don't know how to avoid that without not telling the stories. And the stories need to be told. They need to know that these things can and do happen, but I'm trying to figure out how to do a better job of telling them it's not all-run-the-mocking-dudebro-gauntlet-all-t
Is a puzzlement.
October 17 2013, 15:20:30 UTC 3 years ago
August 2 2013, 00:53:48 UTC 3 years ago
This ground is yours.
Thank you for making a safe space for us. :) I dunno if this is in response to my comment or not, but I do understand the tendency to start listing creds as a preemptive strike. I've done it myself, but every time I tend to get this lurking fear that eventually I'll run out of geek things and then they'll have me. Fortunately, in my case, this hasn't happened, because the people I've met at cons locally are all very chill and awesome. But the fear is always there.
I posted a few more thoughts on my journal, if you don't mind me linking here. I got a little bit into the idea of "girly" interests--getting involved in a fandom on account of thinking the actor in the movie adaptation was hot--not being an inherently bad thing. One of my commenters theorized that, since Twilight is such an acceptable target for everyone, in a weird way, that makes Twihards the "real" geeks now, since they fight hard for their right to geek out on something that everyone so clearly and loudly hates. It's acceptable to be into X-Men, Doctor Who, Lord of the Rings, Batman, etc. But admit you're into those sparkly vampires? You're practically guaranteed to be shat on by somebody.
October 17 2013, 15:20:51 UTC 3 years ago
August 2 2013, 01:09:19 UTC 3 years ago
That's not paradox, it's recursive. Suckers will never break out.
August 5 2013, 01:28:10 UTC 3 years ago
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October 17 2013, 15:21:22 UTC 3 years ago
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