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All you clean-shaven guys, baldies, and girls can stay out! (j/k. Your insights are relevant to this as well.)
So this weekend I was at a convention with my lady-friend. We were hanging out by the stage area after one of the shows and noticed a small group of people who had just been in the show chatting nearby. One of them, a guy with a goatee and longish dreadlocks came over and started talking to me. Pleasant greeting, smalltalk, I told him I enjoyed the show, etc.
After he left my friend said "Where do you know him from?" I said "I don't." She was confused. "But he just came up to you out of nowhere. You sounded like you were old friends or something." "Yeah, I get that a lot. It's a hairy-guy thing." "What like some kind of brotherhood?" "Yep."
So I was wondering if anybody else has noticed this? I imagine similar things happen with other groups with a distinctive visual, like people with piercings, tattoos, or particular styles of clothes. Do strangers approach you just because you have some part of your appearance in common?
But I bought a hat recently that has a similar effect on people who recognize its brand or just like the look. It's a Tilly, and I get people coming up and starting conversations either about the hat or, as I later discern, because of it.
I'm a long-haired, bearded dude, but I think that particular brotherhood might be for younger/thinner types. I don't seem to get that kind of thing.
Although I do think that people find me more approachable because of my resemblance to a young-ish Santa Claus.
Posts: 22497 | Registered: Sep 2000
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My dad has short (semi bald) grey hair, but I think he belongs to the hippie brotherhood. Whenever he drives his precious baby (1969 VW convertible) people come up, and have really meaningful conversations, if I ask who they were "I don't know, never seen him before, but he had a vw at some point).
Posts: 5362 | Registered: Apr 2004
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i get that with people who work in the same feild as me... we just kinda have a radar for other theatre techs...
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That happened to me once while I was skimboarding with my friend. A bunch of surfers just came up to us and starting talking to us about the beach and stuff.
Posts: 853 | Registered: Feb 2004
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quote:I'm a long-haired, bearded dude, but I think that particular brotherhood might be for younger/thinner types. I don't seem to get that kind of thing.
Yeah, this doesn't really happen much to me.
But, in any case, Hi!
Posts: 13680 | Registered: Mar 2002
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My dad bought an old Jeep for the cottage in MI where they retired to this year. However, they lived in RI, near the beach, and dad really liked tinkering with it, so it took 3 years to make it's way to MI.
Everywhere he wnet people he had never seen before kept waving at him...but only when he was driving the Jeep.
Once we were checking out some new houses built near the beach, on a busy beach day, and he waved to some people stuck in traffic...and they acted all weird about it.
I leaned over to dad and said " You forgot you weren't driving the Jeep toady, didn't you.".
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It used to happen to me, but I now wear my hair in a ponytail, so I guess that means I've left the brotherhood or something.
Posts: 109 | Registered: Oct 2004
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I used to have long hair and a beard. I didn't notice anything. This might just be me being reserved, but when I drive my Jeep, I do get waved at by other Jeep drivers. I try to remember not to wave at Jeeps when I'm in my Hyundai. I'm afraid they'll give me the finger.
Posts: 1877 | Registered: Apr 2005
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Um, this also happens, to a greater or lesser extent, to any woman who is visibly pregnant. The people who greet you are either pregnant, have been pregnant at some point, are trying to GET pregnant or just like to babysit.
You also get talked to by older men who have been around enough pregnant women that they think they can tell you what you're having by the way you're carrying. (Incidentally, the guy I remember most vividly just came up to me and asked, "So when are you having that boy?"
Posts: 9293 | Registered: Aug 2000
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quote:The people who greet you are either pregnant, have been pregnant at some point, are trying to GET pregnant or just like to babysit.
Part of that may also be that when you're pregnant, your "pregnant radar" gets way more sensitive. At least, most people I've talked to about it say it does. In fact, it was one of my first symptoms each of my pregnancies so far.
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I'm worried about this thread turning into a conversation about the Brotherhood of Long-Haired, Bearded Pregnant Women.
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When I was driving back from college, I towed my '66 mustang. Even though it was covered, I got cornered at about every other gas station by someone who wanted to talk about it.
It was kinda fun, even though I wasn't very far into the restoration and didn't know anything about most of what they were saying.
"You know, in '68 they added the flapper-valve. That really made 'er ride a lot smoother. Then you just adjust the lower control arms for the same...."
Me:
"Uh huh, no kidding. I'll definitely look into that."
While nodding up and down like a bobblehead doll.
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One day on the highway, I noticed another Jeep broke down.
Even though I was late to work, I stopped, talked to the driver (turned out to be a mother & daughter) put them in my Jeep and drove to the opposite side of town to get the daughter to school on time, and then dropped the mom off where she could get some help.
She asked me why I stopped (when many didn't).
I said, "Well - how could I not? You have exactly the same model and year Jeep I do! only a different color!"
(oh - and she sent flowers to me at work later that day!) Jeep people are the coolest!
Posts: 9538 | Registered: Aug 2003
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Hmm. Enigmatic, do you think Bob married Dana so he could have a real long-haired bearded brother? I wonder how many women with long-haired bearde brothers marry long-haired, bearded men.
On second thought, maybe I don't really want to know the answer to that.
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I'm an Orthodox Jew. We recognise each other all the time, and exchange Jew-greetings. If an Orthodox Jew is looking for help from a stranger -- borrow the cellphone, catch a lift, etc. -- I find that they are much more likely to approach another one. And they'll sit next to each other on the train, too.
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Despite dkw's & ElJay's brother and mate choices, their father is a very respectable, clean-cut all American kind of guy...... So it can't be some kind of "father complex".
Posts: 9538 | Registered: Aug 2003
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Living in Utah, where long-haired bearded guys are pretty rare, you *definitely* notice other long-haired bearded dudes, and yeah, they'll stop just to talk with you. I think people who look, think, or act alike are simply drawn together. It's a human phenomenon.
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Farmgirl, this might not completely corrupt the image for you. . . he only gave me the relatively clean-cut one.Posts: 7954 | Registered: Mar 2004
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quote:Originally posted by Farmgirl: Despite dkw's & ElJay's brother and mate choices, their father is a very respectable, clean-cut all American kind of guy...... So it can't be some kind of "father complex".
Golly. I DO hope that is not a "mother complex"!
Posts: 10397 | Registered: Jun 2005
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Careful kidlets, I have more photos of you that you don't want posted than you have of me.
On the relatively OK to post front, does anyone want a photo of Enigmatic at age 6 with a painted on full beard.
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Long Haired Beared Guy started young. That is Enigmatic on the right. His mother just said, "ain't he cute?"
Posts: 21 | Registered: Dec 2004
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I've got long hair now and I use a bandanna to keep it back when I'm not in Fro mode. When I'm driving on the highway I get a lot of high school kids giving me the devil horns salute. They seem to think I'm listening to death metal when its more likely that I'm rocking out to Paul Simon.
Posts: 218 | Registered: Nov 2001
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Well, my husband is very into Mopar muscle cars and I got him a shirt that says, "Hamtramck Assembly Plant" on it, which is where one of his cars was built. Everytime he wears that shirt we get stopped by people saying, "HEY! You're from Michigan, too! Are you from Hamtramck? I'm from... etc." Then my husband has to explain all about how we are not from Michigan, never even been there, but that his car was built there and that we're sure that Michigan really is a lovely place..." At this point these people all seem to stop being so excited and friendly and just walk away muttering. *sigh* Also, any time he's wearing any of his other Mopar shirts he has guys come up who want to talk to him about Cameros, Mustangs, which are not Mopars and he really couldn't care less about, or even worse the only Mopar they know anything about, The General Lee. *shudders*
Posts: 37 | Registered: Oct 2005
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I get the same thing from goth guys and theater geeks--the latter is a lot of fun, while the former is just annoying.
I get approached by a lot of the guys and girls with heavy black make up and so forth. I have no idea why. I don't know where my goth vibe comes from. I am not nor ever will I be of that sort. And yet, they walk up to me and try to discuss bands which I could frankly care less about.
The theater folks are great, though. I guess I do project drama geek, and I can be out walking in Atlanta and just get approached by people who, coincidentally, act too. It's lovely.
Posts: 1735 | Registered: Oct 2004
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quote:Originally posted by breyerchic04: Mopar means Chrystler/Dodge right? One of my dad's friends owns this car Landy's Dodge
Hehe, that's a cool car. "Mopar is the manufacturer of the parts that go into the making of Chrysler, Plymouth, Dodge, and DeSoto's. It stands for Motor Parts." Hmmm... I just thought it was Plymouth and Dodge but maybe because those are the two my husband loves... interesting.
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I knew Chrysler, Plymouth, and Dodge were owned by the same company now, I have a relative who owns a dealership. It is a cool car isn't it, it's valued at like 150k or something. My dad is currently restoring a 1925 Model T, but he's worked on almost every make and model of car made in the US and Germany. He really dislikes corvettes.
Posts: 5362 | Registered: Apr 2004
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