Gaf
New Member
First, I'd like to apologize if there's already a thread about this. I searched, and couldn't find one.
As I'm sure a lot of you celebrated Christmas yesterday, and as I'm sure a lot of you got books as presents I thought this might be an interesting topic of discussion. Yesterday was the first time where I really thought about how my family , as mostly all "non-readers" perceive me reading, or being a "reader."
Now, I got four books as gifts yesterday (which probably seems like nothing to most of you), one of which happened to be a Friedrich Nietzsche compilation from Barnes & Noble. At the top of the cover, it says "Essential Thinkers" then below that there's a little diamond shape, and right below THAT it says "Friedrich Nietzsche." When my step dad and brother both saw this, they looked straight up at the top and read "Essential Thinkers" and laughed, and said, "Oh yeah, because that's what Kevin(my name) is. An essential thinker." I was two feet away from them when they referred to me as if I wasn't there. This was said in a mocking tone with extreme sarcasm, followed by a few more laughs. It's strange, because I read the title differently. I thought the book was stating that it considered Friedrich Nietzsche an essential thinker, being a philosopher and all. I didn't say anything about the remark, other than mentioning it was a philosophy book, and later, when my sister saw the books, she asked "...Books? Is this what you asked for?" and glanced over them. After picking up the Nietzsche one she immediately read "Essential Thinkers," and asked me, "...is this some kind of self-inspiration book?" What, now my family thinks I'm depressed? "No, it's a book about a philosopher's ideas," I respond, but she gives me a "Hmm," seemingly not convinced, and walks away.
Now, the idea that I'm reading philosophy should come as no surprise to my family. I took Philosophy in High School, I considered taking Contemporary Philosophy this semester in college(a course that has a heavy focus on nihilism and even mentions Nietzsche in the class description - and I talked to some of my family about my classes - because they were considering registering, so I know they knew I was considering this), and I already own a few philosophy books to boot.
The idea that I'm reading PERIOD shouldn't come as a surprise either, as I've been consistently getting a few books every year for Christmas for quite some time now (the "why did you get books for Christmas.." look/tone that everyone gave me when seeing my gifts gave me the impression that it was a surprise). It seemed almost like they just remembered that I read upon seeing the books, and were saying "Oh yeah... reading... you still do that?? (why?)" as if it were something to outgrow and leave behind as I aged/matured in life. Every year has been a mild case of this, but this year (with other events going on [college] mentioned later) I felt much more "eyed" by my family for reading.
But more to the subject, I've never had as awkward of a feeling with my family about them looking at one of my books as I did with this one. Maybe it's just the subject, but I doubt they knew what it was before I told them, so maybe it was really the "Essential Thinkers" that caused the remarks. This more or less caused me to consider how my family might perceive me reading. I think half of my family perceives readers as snobby people who think they're better than everyone, so seeing the words "Essential Thinkers" on one of my books caused them to classify me as just that. A snobby reader who thinks he's an "essential thinker" of the world because he reads. That covers half of my family's thoughts, at least I think. Then the other half (including my sister asking if it's a self-inspiration book) seems to think of me reading as a sign of depression somehow. Remarks like, "Kevin reads... in his room... alone... sometimes until really late hours" are not uncommon for them to say to people I don't even know, in such a tone like it's quite possibly the strangest/loneliest act in the world. I read alone because I'm not sure how team reading would go, I read in my room because it's quiet in there, and I read at night for that exact same reason. I never thought of any of this as odd - I thought of it as normal when pertaining to reading.
A lot of this might also relate to the fact that I'm the youngest in the family, and the first one that's going to college. My two brothers work in a casino, one in a restaraunt inside the casino bussing, the other dealing cards. My sister works at a Chili's along with the card-dealer's wife, both as waitresses. Now, we're by no means rich (to give you an idea, those four books I got, plus two dvds and a gas card made up my whole of Christmas gifts). My mom, however, offered me a deal for school. If I went as a full time student, and didn't drop out, she'd pay for it, and I wouldn't need to pay rent, as she wanted me focused on school, not getting a job/working. I had heard her offering the same deal throughout the years to my three siblings who all graduated before me, and only one of them even attempted a semester, before dropping out a few weeks in. I thought of this as strange, because it was obviously a good deal, especially since I wanted to go to college to begin with. I noticed the trap each of them fell into once they got jobs instead of going to school. Once they had an income, they had to pay for their own expenses, which almost negated the whole purpose of their income. Sure, they had a little extra money, but nothing substantial that they wouldn't spend on fast food, clothes, and any other items of interest.So I think this all adds up to an extremely negative view of my reading. Either its a mocking tone when the fact that I read is mentioned, or it's the depressed/weird tone. No wonder not many people read. It seems like I've almost segregated myself from my family because of this bizarre act that I do, which I never considered bizarre. The only one unlike this is my mom, who gets just as excited as I do to roam a bookstore, though she doesn't have much time to read anymore.
I apologize (that's twice now ) for the length of this post, and the drifting points. I had a central idea coming into it, I swear.
So anyways, how do you think your family perceives reading, or you as a reader? Is your whole family full of readers and you get into discussions about plots and possible subtle ideas in books you've all enjoyed, or are you regarded as the "reader" of the family, different from everyone else and strange in your own way?
As I'm sure a lot of you celebrated Christmas yesterday, and as I'm sure a lot of you got books as presents I thought this might be an interesting topic of discussion. Yesterday was the first time where I really thought about how my family , as mostly all "non-readers" perceive me reading, or being a "reader."
Now, I got four books as gifts yesterday (which probably seems like nothing to most of you), one of which happened to be a Friedrich Nietzsche compilation from Barnes & Noble. At the top of the cover, it says "Essential Thinkers" then below that there's a little diamond shape, and right below THAT it says "Friedrich Nietzsche." When my step dad and brother both saw this, they looked straight up at the top and read "Essential Thinkers" and laughed, and said, "Oh yeah, because that's what Kevin(my name) is. An essential thinker." I was two feet away from them when they referred to me as if I wasn't there. This was said in a mocking tone with extreme sarcasm, followed by a few more laughs. It's strange, because I read the title differently. I thought the book was stating that it considered Friedrich Nietzsche an essential thinker, being a philosopher and all. I didn't say anything about the remark, other than mentioning it was a philosophy book, and later, when my sister saw the books, she asked "...Books? Is this what you asked for?" and glanced over them. After picking up the Nietzsche one she immediately read "Essential Thinkers," and asked me, "...is this some kind of self-inspiration book?" What, now my family thinks I'm depressed? "No, it's a book about a philosopher's ideas," I respond, but she gives me a "Hmm," seemingly not convinced, and walks away.
Now, the idea that I'm reading philosophy should come as no surprise to my family. I took Philosophy in High School, I considered taking Contemporary Philosophy this semester in college(a course that has a heavy focus on nihilism and even mentions Nietzsche in the class description - and I talked to some of my family about my classes - because they were considering registering, so I know they knew I was considering this), and I already own a few philosophy books to boot.
The idea that I'm reading PERIOD shouldn't come as a surprise either, as I've been consistently getting a few books every year for Christmas for quite some time now (the "why did you get books for Christmas.." look/tone that everyone gave me when seeing my gifts gave me the impression that it was a surprise). It seemed almost like they just remembered that I read upon seeing the books, and were saying "Oh yeah... reading... you still do that?? (why?)" as if it were something to outgrow and leave behind as I aged/matured in life. Every year has been a mild case of this, but this year (with other events going on [college] mentioned later) I felt much more "eyed" by my family for reading.
But more to the subject, I've never had as awkward of a feeling with my family about them looking at one of my books as I did with this one. Maybe it's just the subject, but I doubt they knew what it was before I told them, so maybe it was really the "Essential Thinkers" that caused the remarks. This more or less caused me to consider how my family might perceive me reading. I think half of my family perceives readers as snobby people who think they're better than everyone, so seeing the words "Essential Thinkers" on one of my books caused them to classify me as just that. A snobby reader who thinks he's an "essential thinker" of the world because he reads. That covers half of my family's thoughts, at least I think. Then the other half (including my sister asking if it's a self-inspiration book) seems to think of me reading as a sign of depression somehow. Remarks like, "Kevin reads... in his room... alone... sometimes until really late hours" are not uncommon for them to say to people I don't even know, in such a tone like it's quite possibly the strangest/loneliest act in the world. I read alone because I'm not sure how team reading would go, I read in my room because it's quiet in there, and I read at night for that exact same reason. I never thought of any of this as odd - I thought of it as normal when pertaining to reading.
A lot of this might also relate to the fact that I'm the youngest in the family, and the first one that's going to college. My two brothers work in a casino, one in a restaraunt inside the casino bussing, the other dealing cards. My sister works at a Chili's along with the card-dealer's wife, both as waitresses. Now, we're by no means rich (to give you an idea, those four books I got, plus two dvds and a gas card made up my whole of Christmas gifts). My mom, however, offered me a deal for school. If I went as a full time student, and didn't drop out, she'd pay for it, and I wouldn't need to pay rent, as she wanted me focused on school, not getting a job/working. I had heard her offering the same deal throughout the years to my three siblings who all graduated before me, and only one of them even attempted a semester, before dropping out a few weeks in. I thought of this as strange, because it was obviously a good deal, especially since I wanted to go to college to begin with. I noticed the trap each of them fell into once they got jobs instead of going to school. Once they had an income, they had to pay for their own expenses, which almost negated the whole purpose of their income. Sure, they had a little extra money, but nothing substantial that they wouldn't spend on fast food, clothes, and any other items of interest.
Even so, I get the "Oh yeah, Kevin doesn't HAVE to worry about anything, mommy pays for everything for him," remarks constantly, though not in those exact words always. Which sounds like someone is spoiled. I don't get anything bought for me, I'm just void of school/rent payments, and I have no income, so I don't own really much at all. I own much less than any of them. My life is "School, hang out(but nothing involving spending a lot of money), read... repeat." I'm very much content with it though. I don't understand, they were offered the same offer I was. All of them. She STILL offers it to them. She tells them, because she wants them to go to school, even though they might be financially bogged down by now, "If you want to go back to school, you won't have to pay rent, I'll pay for your schooling, and help with your car/phone/whatever payments.(mostly because they'd all bought new cars/phones/etc with their incomes)" None of them have taken her up on it. A few times, the brother who initially tried a semester, shows a little interest and asks me when registration dates are, but he never goes through with it. My sister is the same way. My other brother didn't even want to bother, he read a few poker books, figured he could make money that way. Eventually lost enough money to change career routes and start working IN a casino instead, as a table games dealer.
The reason why I'm mentioning this, is I think it's giving my family a bitter impression of me, because I took a different route than all of them, one they're unable to relate to. If I'm not working, I'm worthless and doing nothing but freeloading while reading and trying to be a pseudo-intellectual. This is all just my thoughts on how they're seeing this though, it could be entirely false, but it seems to hold true whenever any of this comes up. I read because I'm interested and I enjoy it, but I don't know if that's how they all see it.
I apologize (that's twice now ) for the length of this post, and the drifting points. I had a central idea coming into it, I swear.
So anyways, how do you think your family perceives reading, or you as a reader? Is your whole family full of readers and you get into discussions about plots and possible subtle ideas in books you've all enjoyed, or are you regarded as the "reader" of the family, different from everyone else and strange in your own way?