Saturday, May 03, 2008

On the geek side of life

And now for authentic (non) gibberish.

I made a resolution. From now on, I shall embrace my geek side, never to withhold my insightful commentaries or acidic responses from whomever I aim them to.

I came to this conclusion from a revelation I had while I was with at my girlfriend's place. She lifted a pan that was half filled with gelatine, holding it by one side. While carrying it to the fridge, which she asked me to open, she complained about it being too heavy.

Then I thought, "of course it's heavy. You're holding it by the empty side of the pan. The center of mass is far from your hand, so it becomes a very unefficient lever. The input effort has to be far higher. Thus the heavy pan. If you just held it from the full side..."

That's quite obvious, right? For a moment, I considered staying quiet and not making a fool of myself for saying such a pointless unremarkable observation. And then I remembered the Big Bang Theory marathon we had earlier that day. Several things appealed to me from those highly caricatural and archetypical characters, but nothing like their comments on each other's mishaps, which is what makes me curl up on the couch and laugh like i'm spitting out parts of my lung (which is exactly what has been happening lately because of this sore throat i've been caughing through for the last days).

It was an epiphany.

I figured, "what the hell?", and just said it. I explained to her why she should have picked it up from the heavy side. She answered, "yeah, I didn't realize it until I picked it up". It was beautiful.

Maybe years of second-guessing myself for acceptance among high school mediocre peers have actually jeopardized the development of my sense of humor all the way to grad school. But not anymore. Now I will embrace my geeky remarks and add another component to my (not so) social skills, now that I'm fortunate enough to have friends (and a girlfriend) who actually may develop them into a very rich and funny series of coffee house jokes.

Thank you, Sheldon.

2 comments:

iPivo said...

Oh dear God! I can only be thankful that your new lifestyle inspiration did not come from House M.D., we have enough misanthropic behaviour the way things are.

I agree with you. We the geeks should be proud of being smart, we act as if knowledge is something shameful. I'll join you in this geeky crusade.

Paulo Simões said...

Yay! Another proud geek in the world! Geeks rule!