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Subcultural Labels and the Silly Things They Make People Do

I have broached this topic before, but because of its scope it does bear revisiting.

It’s prevalent in an awful lot of cultures and across many languages, probably because it’s how we as humans make society at large easier to understand. We assign labels to groups of people. They could be political (liberal, conservative, etc) or they could be cultural (hipster, yuppie, jock, nerd, hippie, emo, etc), but they are there to group people of similar interests or pursuits.

That in and of itself isn’t a bad thing. What is a bad thing is when you identify yourself based on those labels, rather than letting those labels idenfity something about you.

For instance, let’s say you are an athlete. You play a sport. This gets you labeled as a jock. Now let’s say that included in that jock stereotype is the fact that jocks are meatheads. Are you then going to act like a meathead because it’s expected of that label? You’d be surprised at how many people do this without thinking.

The mentality goes from “I play sports, therefore I’m a labeled as a jock” to “I am labeled as a jock, therefore I play sports.” The latter is just unhealthy and, well, stupid.

You could argue that maybe it’s peer pressure: jocks hang out with other jocks and maybe they goad each other into behaving like jerks. My response would then be: why do they feel the pressure to act as jerks as a group? Don’t all groups have their good guys and their bad guys?

Now, the cynic or bitter high schooler in you might argue that jocks really were that bad and were the worst, but now consider any other subcultural label. Do you suppose all those people really act that way because they want to, or do they act that way because the label makes others expect them to?

Let’s expand on this some more: how do you define a label? There are an awful lot of people out there who define certain (or all) labels in an incredibly unhealthy way.

I witnessed a survey being taken on an online forum. That survey asked people what the definition of the word “nerd” was. (My answer was that a nerd was someone who was deeply devoted to or extremely interested in a specific subject, to the point where they will go out of their way to understand it in excruciating detail.)

A significant majority answered that nerds were brainy, smart, into geeky subjects or hobbies like maths or science or computers, and, most prevalent, “uncool.” Let me reiterate: this was a survey taken on an online forum that is about comic books and videogames. They said this about what they view to be themselves.

Even more fascinating was that, when asked what the “opposite” of nerd was, they answered “jock.”

See, here’s the thing. I play sports, but I’m also pretty nerdy. Why can’t a person be both things? More importantly, why do you only have to have one label, or a group of labels that are predestined to be grouped together?

Why can’t you be a nerdy hipster or an emo jock? Why are we even using these words at all? Sure, human habit means grouping people makes them easier to understand, but I think a lot of people tend to forget that it’s really just a giant Venn Diagram with overlaps everywhere.

There are no “opposites” or “mutually exclusives.” And perhaps delving deeper into the subject, people shouldn’t be doing something to make them less of another, less desirable label (such as playing sports to make you less of a nerd). And you’d be naive if you truly believed people didn’t do this.

My point is this: if you want to label yourself as something, that’s fine. But that cannot and should not be all that you are. By that same token, other people are not just one label.

I do understand that this sort of subcultural labeling is most common in adolescents, but consider this: are you a Republican/Democrat/Liberal/Conservative because you feel a certain way on a certain issue… or do you feel a certain way on a certain issue BECAUSE you are a Republican/Democrat/Liberal/Conservative?

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  • 2 years ago
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Bumbershoots

Here’s an interesting tidbit for you.

Chinese people use umbrellas when it’s sunny out. This is to give them some shade when they’re walking outside and also prevents them from getting a tan, which most Chinese dislike because they prefer fair skin. It’s almost purely a vanity thing.

It is not sunny very often in many parts of China. Whether it’s climate or pollution (or population), many cities in China just don’t get a lot of sun. Plus in coastal cities like Shanghai, the umbrella doesn’t actually help much against the heat because of the stupidly high humidity you get there.

In Australia, people here appear to have been raised to be sun smart. This is a country with one of the highest UV exposure rates in the world and where skin cancer is a huge concern. They go on and on about anti-sun measures that involve slipping and slopping and slapping.

Here’s the thing: you never see Australians toting umbrellas in the sunshine.

They’ll bang on about being sun smart and sun safe (and also how ridiculously hot it can get in the sun), yet they never use umbrellas to give themselves a repreive from either heat or UV exposure. In addition, in cities like Perth, where it’s relatively dry, the shade can make a huge difference between hot and not-so-hot.

So, a country that uses umbrellas more for aesthetic vanity doesn’t have much sun to begin with…and a country that has genuine health reasons to play it safe in the sun doesn’t use umbrellas.

Weird.

Trigger: UMBRELLA

This trigger was brought to you by my friend Karl.

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  • 2 years ago
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Flags

Furthering my familiarity with a new culture, Australia Day, 26 January, was an interesting experience. It is standard to kick back, host a barbecue (pool optional), and listen to Triple J’s Hottest 100 (of the previous year). You spend the day with the radio on while hanging out, all to varying degrees of intoxification, volume, and shenanigans. Discussion of sports optional. It’s all wrapped up by watching fireworks in the evening, and you then try your best to sober up before work the next day.

It speaks volumes of Australian culture, really, as compared to other countries’ national days. Many countries feature parades, fancy speeches, ceremonies, standing up and pretending to sing along to the national anthem when you don’t actually know the words, reciting your country’s pledge (again, more lip-syncing than actual recitation), bluster, and the like. Independence Day in the US is largely similar to your typical Australia Day but let’s just go ahead and admit that there’s just a heap more fireworks and flag-waving in the American side of things.

And there we find the crux of the matter: flags. This past Australia Day (and perhaps more before it, I don’t know, I just got here last February), there has been some heated discussion over changing the Australian Flag.

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  • 2 years ago
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