• AbsolutelyNotAVelociraptor@piefed.social
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    5 days ago

    That’s possible when people in your town see knowledge as something positive. I was (still am) socially awkward so the mascot strategy never worked. I tried the encyclopaedia one but turns out bigotted farmers are not fond of people who know things. The only way to stop being bullied was leaving the town when I was 18 to move to a big city.

    • UniversalBasicJustice@quokk.au
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      5 days ago

      Are you me? Moved from 3500 pop bumfuck Wisconsin to 3.5m pop Los Angeles at 18. Greatest decision I’ve ever made, although staying out ended up a harder challenge than I expected due to the aforementioned lack of and hostility toward knowledge and behavioral health care.

    • teslekova@sh.itjust.works
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      5 days ago

      Yep, I definitely got lucky. And people certainly do not appreciate actual knowledge that defies their pre-existing beliefs.

      It wasn’t all great.

      But my particular type of weirdness, combined with a tendency to ignore or not recognise what would normally be humiliation, got me enough laughs that I could spout all sorts of facts about astronomy or whatever without being threatening to the ones that knew me best.