I've had a theory about Tolkien and geeks brewing for some time. I think it all comes down to names. Every proper noun in Tolkien all has at least two different names, sometimes three or four. This is commonly sited as a problem for people new to the universe. My theory is that geeks are naturally more inclined to take this in stride, because most of us have several aliases ourselves. I'm down to only two these days, but in high school I was regularly called by four completely different names. Five if you count the LARP persona. Strider, Aragorn, Elessar and Estel are all the same person? Sure, okay. No problem.
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-George (aka.. aka.. aka...)
(just out of curiosity, what was the other name? curse my horrible memory!)
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hey jude...
'Paul'
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I was much better at that in fourth grade, and had a lot more deadly patience for it, than I do now. I probably couldn't make myself get through Tolkein for the first time at this point in my life. Fourth grade was long before I started my copious online alias collection. There may be a correlation, however. It may just go the other direction. Would geeks be as comfortable with eight nuanced aliases if Tolkein hadn't modeled the behavior for us?
Birth name/Mimble/Gement/Mana/ferretgirl/Pip/Robin/RPG names ad nauseum
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Unfortunately I think I have less patience for that sort of thing, now, too. But I'm probably faster at it -- it just isn't a precisely inverse relationship, so the overall amount of Stuff has gone down.
Maybe I should work on that.
Actually, I think now that I learn much more towards 'real life' complexities. Global politics and crap like that. I should be a spy.
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My response to the "If you call me..." meme notwithstanding, I've always pretty much been just Blake to virtually everyone.
It may have something to do with having had what was always a fairly unusual name to begin with (although that's becoming less true about my name -- a development I don't much like). There's pretty much always just one Blake in any environment I'm in, so the need for alternative monikers hasn't arisen.
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