Zee made me post this.
3/3/07 00:55Dear fandom, sometimes people are a) immature b) bitchy or c) wanky. Surprisingly enough, there is no direct correlation between this and being under 18. Seriously, you deal with underage people ALL THE FREAKING TIME, and you don't know it, because we don't choose to tell you. Most people CAN'T TELL, and that's FINE. If you do have the emotional maturity to deal with fandom reasonably, and you don't broadcast your age and make it into a issue for list owners and such, nobody SHOULD care.
(Less life experience CAN mean more wankiness, but you know what? That's usually if you are a person prone to it anyway. Other people just keep getting worse and worse about the longer they go on. Seriously, there's a certain type of kerfuffle-raising that's a skill; you get better at it with time.)
I have to admit, too, that when I entered fandom as a teenager (after I started college, but before I was legal for anything), one of the things I absolutely loved about it was its age-blindness. On the internet, what matters is how you present yourself and how you act that matters, not your age. At 17, it is kind of amazing to be able to strike up discussions and friendships with people anywhere from your own age to three decades older than you and have none of them automatically, without even thinking, treating you like a silly kid.
Signed with love and frustration,
Pearl-"I Was a Baby Fangirl and I Lived to Tell About It!"-o
(Less life experience CAN mean more wankiness, but you know what? That's usually if you are a person prone to it anyway. Other people just keep getting worse and worse about the longer they go on. Seriously, there's a certain type of kerfuffle-raising that's a skill; you get better at it with time.)
I have to admit, too, that when I entered fandom as a teenager (after I started college, but before I was legal for anything), one of the things I absolutely loved about it was its age-blindness. On the internet, what matters is how you present yourself and how you act that matters, not your age. At 17, it is kind of amazing to be able to strike up discussions and friendships with people anywhere from your own age to three decades older than you and have none of them automatically, without even thinking, treating you like a silly kid.
Signed with love and frustration,
Pearl-"I Was a Baby Fangirl and I Lived to Tell About It!"-o
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3/3/07 20:14 (UTC)I'll be forty this year (and boy, it freaks me out just to type this :), and while there are certainly many experiences the teen may have had that I do not share, I do have a couple of decades of adult-on-adult interaction on them. In fact, I have about 15 years of adult-on-almost adult uni teaching on them, where I am confronted with exactly this gap every day.
Now, that doesn't mean I'm always right or even that I'm more emotionally mature. Hmmm...it does mean that the number of teens who are aware of their situatedness while simultaneously attempting to understand that of others is smaller than that of adults who have lived both teen and adulthood, who've been dependents and have had dependents, who've been students and teachers,... etc.
So, yes, I do have moral/emotional issues here above and beyond the legal ones. I don't want to be in a sexually charged interaction with a minor, not because of her but because of *me*. [And I should admit that I do have a huge RL age squick which may clearly color my kneejerk reaction here.]
Otoh, that doesn't mean that I look down on younger fans or that I don't engage with them as equals. And since I don't write fic, the issue is less problematic for me. If someone can hold their own in a discussion in my LJ, I could care less what their age is. And in fact, that experience has taught me to respect my students more as equals (not that I was talking down to them before, but when younger I was a bit obsessed with factual knowledge being the be all and end all :).
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3/3/07 20:34 (UTC)