Sunday, October 25, 2009

Social Hierarchy

Last night I was thinking, as I was trying to interact with a group that I was with, about the fact that there are certain people that everyone wants to be around. There are two guys are my floor, and everyone loves them. Everyone wants to hang with them and be around them. The guys flirt with them to be friends with them in the same way the girls flirt to hook up with them. My RA is example. My friend Katrina is another. These are people who will always be more popular than I am. These are people who will always have people flocking to them to be their friend, their lover, their girlfriend or boyfriend. These are the top of the hierarchy. I've realized I've become one of the people who grovel and beg to be these person's friends. I found myself, last night, screaming to try and get the attention of these people. I literally had to yell their names to get them to look away from each other and over to me. I'm on a lower level in the social hierarchy and so, must beg to get their attention. This is at the same time that people lower on the food chain than me are begging for my attention. I've become a go-between for those people who are completely socially inept and have no strategies that work for them anymore. And its been like this since the beginning of school, I just hadn't noticed. I thought I was one of the higher-ups back home, but what I've come to realize is that I did all the same things back home that I do here. I brag to get attention. I tell fish stories to try and beef up anything I'm saying. I find little niches of information that I can plug into any conversation to pretend like I'm contributing. I will change my opinion of something to conform with a group. And I argue, which sometimes backfires. All of these are highly primitive social actions. They are the first kinds of social interaction we learn that give us positive responses. When we're eight years old we get attention using these techniques. We use them until we realize they aren't working anymore. And then some of us transcend them and develop the strategies and understanding of these top of the food chain people. These people get it. They understand social interaction on an intuitive level that I have yet to reach. I am constantly vying for their attention while they are constantly given it freely by those around them. Thats why I haven't been successful with finding a strong group of friends here. And thats why I have very few friendships with girls that could at some point develop into real relationships. I'm still stuck in my old socially inept ways.

I got through high school because Kirsten was one of these higher ups. People immediately love her and want to hang with her. Thats why she has done so well in her new environment, and why she will always do well socially for her whole life. We were constantly associated with each other so many of my friends were friends by proxy through her. Here, I come with no context. No associations. And no structure through which to weave my social web. I am weaponless against this enemy of loneliness.

Don't get me wrong. I have friends here. But I don't have one specific group that I can call my own. Or even one or two really strong friends. Which I know is probably too much to expect for being here for such a short time, but I at least want what I see most people around me having. I've realized, through my time here, that social interaction is what we all live for. That nothing is good or bad or really anything without it. Without people in your life, life is meaningless. So I'm done writing this, and I'm going to go out and give some meaning to my life. And maybe learn some things along the way. Wish me luck. Thank you for reading.

Cassidy

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