T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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109.1 | | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Fri May 29 1987 16:17 | 4 |
| As I've mentioned in HUMAN_RELATIONS, I'm actually attracted
by intelligence in a woman, and turned off by an obvious lack
of it. I don't find it intimidating at all.
Steve
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109.2 | It must be hell to be smart and attractive :-) | HPSCAD::WALL | I see the middle kingdom... | Fri May 29 1987 16:23 | 28 |
|
I can't let myself be intimidated by intelligence. Everyone is
smarter than I am. :-}
In all seriousness, I don't know why she experiences this for sure.
It may not be that she's brainy, but that she's a brainy engineer.
We people steeped in the nitty-gritty of reality are not as common
as we like to think. (Yeah, yeah, what do engineers know about
reality, but I'm trying to be serious for a moment.)
My point being, if she were a brainy lawyer or a brainy manager,
the problem might be reduced. I think it's an occupational hazard
of engineering, not just because she's bright.
The people who date her thinking she's a waitress and finding out
she's an engineer might just not like surprises. P.G. Wodehouse's
characters were perpetually getting plunged in the soup because
people were saying they were one thing when they were actually another.
The people who get the quivers because they know she's an engineer
right off the bat might just be having a lapse in confidence. We've
all heard about some good-looking man or woman that's always alone
because everyone assumes someone so good-looking would never be
without a slew of dates. It's probably an analagous situation.
Of course, I may be talking out of the back of my neck.
DFW
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109.3 | | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Dennis (the Menace) Ahern 223-5882 | Fri May 29 1987 16:56 | 14 |
|
...only if it's Artificial.
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109.4 | intelligent - yes, genius - no | TRACER::FRASHER | Undercover mountain man | Fri May 29 1987 17:37 | 37 |
| I'm intimidated by very intelligent *people* because I can't keep
up with them in an argument. When they say something that I don't
understand, I get frustrated. I'm also forgetful and I have a very
short attention span. Other people remember things that I should
and I feel inadequate. Then I clam up. With NOTES, I have time
to think slowly and let things absorb. In real life, the thoughts
don't have time to absorb into my thick skull.
My wife is intelligent, but not a genius. We complement each other.
(or is that 'compliment'? Both, actually. ;-) I.E. she's good
with numbers and I'm not, so she does the number things. On the
other hand, I'm good at figuring out how things work and I can fix
just about anything, she can't. She is good with abstract things
while I'm good at logical things. Together, we can do just about
anything.
This paragraph originally was a 1 - 10 scale. Then I realized that
the scale is different according to the situation. When it comes
to figuring out numbers, I rate about 3. When it comes to fixing
a toaster, I rate about 9. In this medium, I can take my foot out
of my mouth before anyone else notices. ;-)
If a person is too intelligent, I feel like they are talking over
my head and I get either frustrated or bored. I feel inferior.
If a person is too unintelligent, I feel like I have to tone down
for them to understand me. They probably get frustrated and bored
with me.
The term 'engineer' carries an air of elegance. Hence, sanitary
engineer sounds much better than garbage collector. Or coordination
engineer sounds much better than secretary. I'm a design engineering
specialist, not a technician. I used to be a 'computer repairman'
in the AF. People would really 'oo' and 'ah' just because of the
word 'computer'.
Spence
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109.5 | We don't have the same baud rate. | SNEAKY::SULLIVAN | Beware the night writer! | Fri May 29 1987 18:21 | 9 |
|
I couldn't deal with anyone who wasn't intelligent. But, as
Spence said, a genius is another matter. Male or female, geniuses
(genii?) are usually considered rather strange in our society.
I know several, and I just don't know if I could date the female
ones.
Bubba
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109.8 | If You Wanna Be Happy for the Rest of Your Life | TOPDOC::STANTON | I got a gal in Kalamazoo | Sun May 31 1987 18:07 | 10 |
|
I always found intelligent women quite sexy & was lucky enough to
marry one ;^} . She does intimidate me at times but I like
that feeling (reminds me of our courtship rituals...well, this
is getting too personal...). Besides the obvious fun of wrangling
over various ideas & issues, intelligence can get better with age
and can be more lasting than one's looks (& thus _more_ sexy as
you get older).
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109.9 | | GOJIRA::PHILPOTT | Ian F. ('The Colonel') Philpott | Mon Jun 01 1987 12:08 | 21 |
|
The base note seems to me (perhaps I'm just over sensitive) to carry
a little cultural bias.
Why should an "engineer" be more or less intelligent than a "waitress".
I know of a PhD who drives 18-wheelers full time for a living (he likes
the life style). I know of a garbage collector with an IQ or 180+
It has been remarked that Mensa (a club for the self confessed intelligent)
has members from almost any profession you care to name.
And on a more fundamental level how do you define intelligence?
====
To answer the question in .0 however: no I'm neither intimidated
nor attracted by intelligence per se. I do however prefer the company
of somebody with whom I can carry on a non-inane conversation.
/. Ian .\
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109.11 | maybe the 'brain' wasn't the problem | ROCKET::DUNTON | Was today REALLY necessary | Mon Jun 01 1987 13:45 | 9 |
|
I'm not fearing of the intelligence of some of the women
I've dated.... some have been smart.. some not. In cases
both have been enjoyable people and vice versa.
Maybe this womens problem is not her "intelligence", maybe
it was the (a) conversation topic, personality differences...
and numerous other possibilities.
Just my views....
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109.12 | More fodder. | TRACER::FRASHER | Undercover mountain man | Mon Jun 01 1987 16:02 | 11 |
| WARNING: these are not my beliefs, just throwing out possibilities.
To use an old stereotype, a waitress would seem, to a lot of men,
to be an easy mark. Once this 'mark' reveals any intelligence,
then the 'mark' is not so easy and, therefore, probably not worth
spending an evening with and ending up going home alone. An engineer
would be viewed as more likely wanting a lasting relationship, whereas
a waitress would be deemed as being more likely to enjoy a one night
stand.
Spence
|
109.13 | hello mudder, hello fodder????? | CREDIT::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Mon Jun 01 1987 16:37 | 39 |
| I can't speak for anyone else, but I used to be a snob about my
education level and literary/lingiustic ability. There was a time when
I thought people would think less of me if they saw me with someone
whose grammar wasn't as good as mine. I used to think that men were
rejecting me because they were afraid to deal honestly with an
intelligent woman until a good friend took me aside and very gently
told me that I was acting as though "book learning" was the only human
trait that held any value.
Honesty forced me to admit he was right -- I had been expecting the men
(and women) I know to prove they were smart like me, rather than
looking at each one's individuality and uniqueness.
Once I admitted that having read all the great works of literature did
not qualify one for admission to the human race, I learned that I was
deficient in many areas of my development, especially emotionally. My
self-esteem was a shambles underneath a good front; by pretending I was
smarter, I cut other people down and made myself feel more important.
I started trying to listen to what the other person had to say instead
of putting down the way they said it. I learned that some wonderful
insights into life in contemporary society are phrased in some pretty
crummy grammar, and that I could choose to listen to the thought, not
its form. I learned that many times the person with less so-called
intelligence is more perceptive, more creative, more humorous, more
adventurous -- any of a hundred traits that have nothing to do with the
kind of book-learning I enjoy so much.
Interestingly enough, once some other aspects of my personality had a
chance to develop and I became more self-confident, improved my
self-esteem, and quit worrying so much about making sure everyone knew
how intellectual I was, I started to enjoy intellectual encounters even
more because I could enjoy a literary or technical discussion for its
own intrinsic worth, not as something that proved I was a good person.
Probably the people who know me would tell you I still have a ways
to go . . . but I'm working on it. . .
--bonnie
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109.15 | Gag me with a Kenworth. | AXEL::FOLEY | is back! in Littleton Hills Mangler | Sun Jun 07 1987 23:17 | 9 |
|
Bottom line. When all the kissing, and etc. is over, there is
someone next to you to talk to.. Personally, I'd rather talk
about something other than "The really neato new Mall" or
"I like, broke my fingernail when I, like, pulled out my charge card".
mike
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109.17 | well, gee, um... | HOMBRE::HOWER | Life is like an onion | Wed Jun 10 1987 18:17 | 19 |
| back to .0
(tongue firmly in cheek, here, btw)
Some people are intimidated by intelligence - especially in females.
Engineers gotta be smart, you know.
Some people regard waitresses as friendly, people-oriented persons;
engineers, of course, are cold-fish who only love their computers.
It may be a combination of these that contributes to the reaction
you're finding when people discover you're not "just" a waitress
but also an engineer....
And perhaps they also fear that you'll have no use for them if they
aren't as "brainy" as you. Heck, look at all those cases of wives
who get discarded as "not good enough" once the guy they put through
med/law school graduates.
-hh
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109.18 | Combination of several reasons most likly... | LILAC::MKPROJ | REAGAN::ZORE | Thu Jun 11 1987 10:04 | 30 |
| Well here's mine...
I think the waitress gets the more dates due to a couple of
reasons (one of which has already been mentioned). The first is
that most guys would think that a waitress would be a much easier
mark than an engineer. Now obviously "most guys" does not refer
to the cross section of men reading this notesfile.
A second reason could also be that many single men are looking
for an SO and believe that a waitress would make a better SO than
an engineer since the waitress isn't "tied up in her career". I
know that that would be a sexist outlook on life but as I said I
don't think that the average man reading this file represents the
average American man. (What I'm saying is that the average American
male is sexist.)
Another reason could be that understanding what a waitress
does and how they "fit" into the scheme of things is alot easier
for the average man than understanding how an engineer fits into
the scheme of things. (For example almost everyone who's not a waitress
can describe a waitress' job duties, how many people (who aren't
engineers) can describe an engineers' job duties. Indeed I think
that there are so many types of engineers that it would be difficult.)
Faced with this simple vs. complex choice many men may choose the
simple.
The actual reason is probably a combination of the many reasons
given in all the responses to the base note.
Rich
P.S. How men react to finding you are an engineer would probably
vary depending on where you were waitressing too.
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109.19 | having known many waitresses (and engineers)... | KALKIN::BUTENHOF | Approachable Systems | Thu Jun 11 1987 12:35 | 18 |
| > For example almost everyone who's not a waitress can describe a
> waitress' job duties
I think it's more accurate to say that most people *think*
they can describe the job duties of a "waitress". It's not
usually quite as simple as people like to think. Waitresses
"wait on people", just as engineers "engineer". In either
case, the description is all most people can manage... and
hopelessly inadequate.
Still, you're correct in that most people perceive "waitressing"
as extremely simple (waitresses/waiters I know tend to call
themselves "waitrons", by the way), whereas most people perceive
engineering as being hopelessly complicated. That they perceive
from the position of utter ignorance of the true facts in both
cases is probably irrelevant to the discussion.
/dave
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109.20 | | MUNICH::CLINCH | Don't just do something, be there. | Thu Jun 11 1987 13:41 | 13 |
| re .0
The woman with whom I had the most important relationship of my life
was an engineer. For me I find it difficult to form a relationship
with a woman who is *not* intelligent. I don't judge people for not
having intelligence, it's just that it does help a lot.
Given that the aim of a relationship is to share life,
I suppose that intelligence is not essential, but a lack
of intelligence cannot exactly be an advantage, unless one
is looking for (to quote Monty Python) "a dumb rich nymphomaniac
who owns a pub!"
Simon.
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