- Member since
September 2006
- From: Bethlehem PA
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Posted by the Baron
on Thursday, May 19, 2016 12:04 PM
lazyfortress
I am not good at sports and all, and today during gym, I was partnered up with a group of muscle-heads, and they started to make fun of me for not catching the ball. I started to talk crap, and they made fun of me for that. Words hurt.
When we had to switch sides with another team, my original team told me to go away, so I went to another open team, which was another group of muscle-heads. They didn't want me either, so in my frustration, I went off and stood by the fence. My teacher said the negativity would end in 10th grade. 2 more grades to go (I hope). Not being accepted by a group hurts even worse.
It's always the nummies who make fun of smart people.
Now I wonder what's gonna happen tomorrow.
It stinks having friends who you only see a few times during the day. I have 3 good friends, along with a few non-nerds that I can count on. Life is unfair.
A couple of things...
- Hold on as best you can. One thing you will learn, when you graduate from high school, is that much of what seems important, to you, and to everyone else, is absolutely meaningless. The Popular Kids, the Jocks, the Brainy Kids, every clique, all of that goes out the window, generally speaking, when you graduate, get a job, and start building a life for yourself. Because it's all essentially childishness. You will make new associations, the associations of adults. And while being an adult brings with it a new set of worries, the latst thing you have to worry about is people giving you the same kind of nonsense that they gave each other on the playground or elsewhere, while they were in school.
- Don't let this specific experience sour you on sports and physical exercise. It's important to your health, to get out and move. Again, when you're an adult, you'll find it easier to pursue physical activities that you enjoy, and to find others who share that enjoyment, and they won't give you a hard time because you're not as fast/strong/agile as they are. OK, you might meet some Scheissköpfe in softball leagues, who behave like big children, but generally, most other adults are too busy to be that childish to one another. I wasn't an athlete when I was a kid, either--that was my brother. But I took up running when I was in college, and played intramural softball and football, and took up riding bike. I also got Red Cross certification to be a life guard (it was a PE credit in college), so that took care of my summer job after my freshman year. And after I graduated, I started playing slow-pitch softball, on teams where I worked. It was fun to be part of a team, and I played with a good bunch of people. And after I got too slow to play ball, I took up cycling as my main exercise. At 40, I rode my first century ride, and I'll keep doing it till I'm too old to get up. And I have friends who share this same interest, and we enjoy riding togther. I think you'll find the same thing, if you don't let your high school experiences scare you off.
- Stick with modeling, but if you do give it up, probably when you graduate, you'll be like 95% of the rest of us modelers, who did the same thing. Because something else that may very well change for you, in the next couple of years, is that other things will start to demand the time you've spent so far on your hobby. That's OK. Most of us discovered the opposite sex, beer, etc, when we hit our late teens, and left our modeling benches behind. When that happens, the chances are that you come back to it a couple of years later, after you've established your life, and have time for the hobby. You may stick with it the whole time, too, some folks do.
- As long as you're still building, join a modeling club, if there is one near you and it's practical for you to do. Going back to my first point, this is precisely the kind of activity that you will see, is carried out differently from the way gym class works. Well, OK, again, there may be those who act like babies, but again, some adults do. Generally, though, most of the people you meet will be receptive. And there are few things that we old-timers like to do better than to give you young kids advice
Hope that all helps!
Best regards,
Brad
The bigger the government, the smaller the citizen.
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