Thing is I would be willing to bet that a yonger person, supporting a band, being their own selves, maybe looking a little different doesn't get the "benifit of the doubt" respect that us cookie cutter people enjoy.
I know this first hand, again my brother is an incredibly well spoken inteligent person who would get stopped by cops, held for hours at a park, looked down on at church, all becuase he chose to look different. He didn't even act all that different but years of the lack of respect for him as a human being or just another person jaded his view of things where he didn't care what people thought. He'd start the issues by being different, and I'd finish them for him in court, or a nice big old guilt trip.
I think the reaction is funny when tattoo'd people or people who have their best punk/goth/emo pick your look rocking get normal responses from me. I'm mid 30's kids, regular joe guy, who does lend them the initial respect. They are usually suprised when I can talk to them about old school bands, or my tattoos or the way my hair used to be. I know they laugh when I talk about how blink 182 was actually cool, or NOFX befor they got all plitical, or even having toured the country in an F150 with my bro's 3 piece.
People automatically think she is doing something wrong, why don't they lend her the respect and benifit of the doubt that she is obeying the law and is smart enough to know what she can do where.
Cookiecutter folks will ask eachother where did you get that sponge bob book, or I love those shoes where did you get them, or what is that thing you have there, but they won't approach a younger individualized person, and just assume they must be breaking the law.
I love my dad's generic term for individualized persons "Hoods"
Keep rocking your own individual self, I like putting the end of it in your eye routine and maybe tell em "It's not smoke it's vapor, I'm smart enought to know the law and to know the difference."
I know this first hand, again my brother is an incredibly well spoken inteligent person who would get stopped by cops, held for hours at a park, looked down on at church, all becuase he chose to look different. He didn't even act all that different but years of the lack of respect for him as a human being or just another person jaded his view of things where he didn't care what people thought. He'd start the issues by being different, and I'd finish them for him in court, or a nice big old guilt trip.
I think the reaction is funny when tattoo'd people or people who have their best punk/goth/emo pick your look rocking get normal responses from me. I'm mid 30's kids, regular joe guy, who does lend them the initial respect. They are usually suprised when I can talk to them about old school bands, or my tattoos or the way my hair used to be. I know they laugh when I talk about how blink 182 was actually cool, or NOFX befor they got all plitical, or even having toured the country in an F150 with my bro's 3 piece.
People automatically think she is doing something wrong, why don't they lend her the respect and benifit of the doubt that she is obeying the law and is smart enough to know what she can do where.
Cookiecutter folks will ask eachother where did you get that sponge bob book, or I love those shoes where did you get them, or what is that thing you have there, but they won't approach a younger individualized person, and just assume they must be breaking the law.
I love my dad's generic term for individualized persons "Hoods"
Keep rocking your own individual self, I like putting the end of it in your eye routine and maybe tell em "It's not smoke it's vapor, I'm smart enought to know the law and to know the difference."
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