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Okay my nerd, dork, geek, spaz friends, let's talk about the ever-present issue of proper socializing. This is just the first step before we talk about how to make connections.
First, I'd like to show you some of the social mistakes us nerds can make.
Here's how this anti-social behavior plays out.
Someone mentions: “I just love to eat sushi.”
Intellectual snob: “Are you talking about real sushi or sashimi? There's a difference, ya know. Sashimi is what most people mistakenly call sushi.”
Conversation falls flat.
The cues you are being an intellectual snob: You feel the need to correct people, often times on the very first communication with that person. Even if you think you are educating a person, you are really putting them down and embarrassing them with unsolicited knowledge.
Correction: Key to making these interactions better – ask yourself why you feel the need to correct or educate someone, especially someone you don't know. If it's ego, put that aside. Instead, agree that sushi is or isn't tasty and keep your knowledge to yourself.
The exception – if the person says “I love sushi, but not the stuff with the raw fish.”
Your reply might be, “yeah, I learned to not ask for sashimi or I would get raw fish.” Your knowledge now enlightened them and they feel less stupid because you too learned the knowledge. You also offered a kinship.
Here's the key – people are not really looking for someone to enlighten them when they voice an opinion. “I love sushi” is a social way of saying “join in the conversation, I'm trying to bring up a subject.” This is your cue to reply with a “do you have a favorite sushi place?” That is engaging the person into the conversation they began.
My last advice on the matter of socializing and communication among para geeks is this – we all have different goals. Some people are in the field because it seems sexy and interesting and makes them unique, they are rebels or thrillseekers, whereas others seek answers to strange things they have encountered, and more still are hoping for an industry or TV show. The reasons are vast and vary from ego to personal understanding. So, when dealing with others in the fields of research, remember that your priorities are not theirs and their priorities are not yours. When you understand this, you can save yourself a lot of distress in your expectations.
There are plenty of opportunities (listed at the bottom of this post) for finding groups, but sometimes your best connections come from social networking including boards and forums in areas of interest, but they are often fraught with trolls and lack of monitoring. Some of the more satisfying sites might include LinkedIn, Facebook, Tumblr, Twitter, and others.
You will want to establish yourself in groups and page affiliations on Facebook, but you also want to spend some time watching the postings and interactions on the sites before joining. Issues will show up early on, either in the form of only one person posting, or members being allowed to attack people for simple questions or observations without the admin handling the reins.
There are behaviors you will begin to notice in the field that will help you to determine if someone is a good connection or a bad one. The truth is, your reputation depends on the folks you hang with. If you hang with the popular but controversial folks, you will lose respect by the real minds in the field, easily considered one of the lemmings. Find out who the real minds in the field are and see how they deal with others. Some folks are obviously making maneuvers to get attention, adoration, a TV show, or believe in some weird way they can make an industry in their avocation.
Are discussions on the page intelligent? Allow for outside the box views? Given credit and appreciation by members? Don't just jump on Facebook and join every ghost page or group without the research. You are wasting a good deal of your time and affiliating with some folks that you do not want your name associated with.
Be sure you understand your own motives for entering your field of study. If it makes you cool by association or you are hoping to make money off of it or get a show, I won't try to discourage that dream, but I will not support it either. You have ahead of you a world of hurt, backstabbing, financial burden, and great distress. Making associations for these motivations will be superficial and no one will ever truly support you except few hangers-on who would likely dump you in a second if things turn against you. Social media is your best ally for your 15 minutes of fame and a YouTube channel is essential for audience. Your evidence will be criticized greatly and jealousy will cause lots of angry comments. You must toughen up a good deal if this is your goal.
If you are in the field of study for curiosity, experiences that left you with questions, or a desire to seek knowledge in a field not fully understood, then you are looking for minds in the field, not publicity. You will know the minds when you find them, as they post poignant information, have respected books and sites start stimulating conversations, and eagerly ask questions and wish to learn alongside of you.
UFO Cons
Horror Cons
Bigfoot Cons
Haunted Cons
Cemetery Association meetings/committees (look for your state online)
Scarefest
Meetup Groups locally for any subject of interest
MUFON meetings
Geek2Geek dating site
Info about working in haunted attractions
Here's some good para pages on Facebook to check out and blogs with great info -
Phantoms and Monsters - perhaps the single best archived para stories of every variety on one site. Just amazing!
Facebook's Anomalous Universe is my favorite info source for unexplained. It is a closed group, so you ask for admittance and when they accept you, you get amazing up to the minute sources of info being published everywhere online. The feed is always inspiring on my news feed.
Frontiers of Anthropology is a closed group on Facebook that is great if you are into all things ancient and man's place in evolution and civilization.
North American Fortean Society is a great closed group on Facebook that talks about all things unexplained, strange, and quietly spoken about in science and anthropology.
Ghost File Investigations is an open Facebook group that posts lots of info.
Aliens and UFOs in the Bible is an open group on Facebook that ponders the correlations.
UFOs on Earth is a great open group on Facebook that stays atop of all things UFO. In fact, they are right now looking for some volunteer editors for their growing site.
And, I'm proud to announce that Julie Ferguson and I will be re-releasing our Paranormal Geeks book with new info and interviews and tons of info for all para geeks to feel they found their tribe. Our goal is release on Memorial Day weekend. More on the blog when that occurs. Enjoy also Paranormal Geeks Radio with the amazing host, Jim Heater, on Para-X Radio on Saturdays 6 pm EST/5 pm Central/3 pm Pacific.
If you want to show your love for being a paranormal geek, enjoy Julie Ferguson's shop online for hundreds of items that show it off.