Login
Forgot Password?

OR

Login with Google Login with Twitter Login with Facebook
  • Join
  • Profiles
  • Groups
  • SuicideGirls
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Shop
Vital Stats

walkingman

Member Since 2010

Followers 158 Following 211

  • Everything
  • Photos
  • Video
  • Blogs
  • Groups
  • From Others

Friday Jul 09, 2010

Jul 9, 2010
0
  • Facebook
  • Tweet
  • Email
I have always walked to a different drummer. I have always gravitated to the weird, the oddball, the urbane, the introverted, the extroverted, the inverted, the overted, the strange and the socially unacceptable. I have taken the road less travelled, the hard way, and the road with many twists and turns instead of easy street and the easy way. I like a challenge and going against the grain and the majority. I has always questioned authority and asked the hard questions. In school I believed in reading the footnotes and challenging the teachers when things either did not add up or make sense. I learned early on that teachers did not know everything and that they lived in fear of students who discovered that the emperor wore no clothes. But I did learn humility early on which was a great life lesson. It was one thing to be smart but while it was an asset it was also a curse. Having brains placed one in the social misfit group of elementary and junior high school. I fit right into this group though as we all walked to different drummers and in this we found sanctuary and friendship. We were the geeks, the nerds, the freaks, the dweebs, the outcasts. United by our differences and yet set apart from each other by our differences. I learned so much from these great people that I would never have learned had fate not thrown us together. I discovered that I could help people learn. I was a better teacher than many of the teachers in my school. I could sit down with the slow students and explain the material much better and clearer than my teachers. I can remember anything if I reduce it to music or rhythm. I shared this technique and they really did well with it. They each shared with me their favorite music styles and I learned to appreciate the wide variety of music. I learned to judge someone by their heart not by their skin color, their clothing style, or their outward appearance. I have several good friends who are prejudged by their outward appearances all the time. One is a huge bear of a man. He is a bald headed heavy set man with full sleeves on both arms. He rides a Harley and wears his leathers proudly. When he rides up strangers want to lock their children and lady folk up as they are sure he has come to rape and pillage. Yet he is an ordained minister who does not swear, drink, and is totally devoted to his wife. He is more likely to greet you with a big bear hug and tell you that God loves you than anything else. Friend number two is from the country of Bangladesh. He is 5 ft and a maybe that. He is a university professor and speaks with a perfect British accent. He used to wear a full beard but after 9/11 he was attacked on the street to often for being an Arab and shaved it off. He can call a business and make reservations to come in and they are expecting this 6 ft white Brit to come walking in. Instead this little brown man walks in and speaks perfect English and suddenly the welcome mat gets rolled up. He is one of the smartest men I know. I know he is smarter than me, we have raced doing the Times crossword puzzle, and he always finishes ahead of me. The third friend is a doctor from Kenya. He also has a great British accent and has some very jet black skin. Americans cannot or will not take the time to learn how to pronounce his real name so he has shortened it to a name they can say. When he makes dinner reservations for Dr. _ in his British accent the reservation person gets real excited but when this dark skinned black man shows up he is ignored. Then when he speaks or they realize he really is an M.D. he gets served. I still get the stares, hear the whispers, and see the eyes of neighbors or the parents of my sons classmates. I am a round peg in a square world. I will never fit in perfectly but that is okay. I like myself and have the love of those people who really matter to me. Embrace the whatever which makes you you.

More Blogs

  • 07.02.10
    3

    Friday Jul 02, 2010

    Today was one of those cool days spent with the boys that hopefully t…
  • 07.01.10
    2

    Thursday Jul 01, 2010

    I am left handed and proud of it. We are a minority group who will n…
  • 06.29.10
    0

    Tuesday Jun 29, 2010

    You can call me crazy. You can call me weird. But you cannot call …
  • 06.28.10
    2

    Monday Jun 28, 2010

    I have a voice and on occasion I am known to use it. I am not a…
  • 06.25.10
    2

    Friday Jun 25, 2010

    I know this may sound crazy but I love to walk. I would rather walk …
  • 06.24.10
    0

    Thursday Jun 24, 2010

    I am a bibliophile, a book worm, a book lover, and I am happy to conf…
  • 06.23.10
    1

    Wednesday Jun 23, 2010

    Global warming causes people in Chicago to shoot other people. This …
  • 06.22.10
    0

    Tuesday Jun 22, 2010

    What is the truth? Has a politician ever opened his mouth and told t…
  • 06.20.10
    0

    Sunday Jun 20, 2010

    Proud to be a father 3 times over. Two are growing up and turning ou…
  • 06.03.10
    0

    Thursday Jun 03, 2010

    Growing up I always wanted to be an artist. My parents encouraged my…

We at SuicideGirls have been celebrating alternative pin-up girls for:

23
years
11
months
24
days
  • 5,509,826 fans
  • 41,393 fans
  • 10,327,617 followers
  • 4,608 SuicideGirls
  • 0 followers
  • 14,966,454 photos
  • 321,315 followers
  • 61,505,832 comments
  • Join
  • Profiles
  • Groups
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Shop
  • Help
  • About
  • Press
  • LIVE

Legal/Tos | DMCA | Privacy Policy | 18 U.S.C. 2257 Record-Keeping Requirements Compliance Statement | Contact Us | Vendo Payment Support
©SuicideGirls 2001-2025

Press enter to search
Fast Hi-res

Click here to join & see it all...

Crop your photo