<jfk> Ask not what Star Trek can do for you — ask what you can do for Star Trek. <jfk>
I have experienced a lot of that form of biased and it always surprises me because to me I'm such I die hard fan that sometimes I think I have START TREK FAN tattooed across my head, and when other people comment about something like that I have to look back and say oh that's right not everyone knows me.Brie, thank you for your story, and help me confront something inside I hadn't realized I had....
I am an accepting person. I don't jduge, I don't hate. Sexuality, gender, race, religion.... I accept all, because people are who they are.
However, often I will see a picture of a beautiful woman in a geeky outfit, and think, 'great, another model who was payed to dress up as a sexy version of something or another'. Had I seen the picture you posted, that would have probably been my first instinct. However, with the post you made, it became clear that there is a story behind everyone, and although there certainly are 'sexy cosplayers' out there, who are models doing it for money, it means I need to realize I still have a prejudice to overcome. Thank you for sharing your story, and helping me realize something about myself.![]()
Thank you for the thank youBrie, I just wanted to say: thank you for your service.
I think the idea of a utopia is what REALLY a drew me in, it's always interesting to see how different people who love the same show can have different things that draw them to it.My dad is a Trek fan, and had VHS recorded episodes, which I found and enjoyed. I also still have Bjo Trimble's Star Trek Concordance that I would read again and again, trying to grasp all the concepts, since I could not always watch the episodes.
I cannot say that Star Trek shaped my life but it did influence it and open me up to the world of science fiction, which has certainly led me to explore more and more different aspects of scifi books, TV, games and the like.
I have always enjoyed different parts of the world building and discovering how Star Trek came together as a fictional world, and the changes it went through as GR developed his ideas, and the different series evolved.
I like the utopia idea, but that really is not the draw of the series. It is more the use of technology in a positive way that benefits humanity, and humanity working together regardless of differences.
Of all the characters, I always identified with Spock. I have felt like an outsider for the longest time, even among friends, so the concept and learning and being more logical has a certain appeal to me. I tended to be more emotional when I was younger, so logic definitely appealed to me.
I have done the costuming thing, and hope to continue to do so as time and money allow. I enjoy discussing all the minutia of Trek (and science fiction in general), and appreciate other points of view, even when I don't agree.
Finally, Brie, thank you for sharing your story, as well as your service. I hope you find this place to be a fun one for exploring Trek more![]()
That's another thing I love about TOS trek, it came at a time when we were struggling as a nation and I loved how trek used their episodes to work as an idiom for current issues at the time.Brie,
I think I can speak for all of us here when I say, thank you for your service to our country, and thank you for being here. You definitely bring a ray of sunshine, and a breath of fresh air to this forum.
Let me go out on a limb a little bit here, and say that at my age of 60, I get the feeling I'm probably older than most members here. But that almost seems (as Seven-Of-Nine would say) irrelevant, in that Star Trek is essentially timeless.
Star Trek (TOS of course) stole my heart away from Lost in Space, which in turn had stolen my heart away from Fireball XL5... but I digress. As a teenager in the 60's, it was a very different era than what we enjoy here. I watched every episode as they originally aired back then. While today we have technology which lets us see every episode and every movie ever made, anytime we want, imagine what it was like, really not knowing what next week's episode was gonna be!
How did Star Trek change my life? First, you have to understand (or remember?) the social climate of the 60's. Vietnam was raging... The Soviets were rattling their sabers in the height of the Cold War... And many teenagers of that time woke up each morning not knowing if this was gonna be their last day on Earth.
Enter the Great Bird himself, Gene Roddenberry. His vision was: It's OK, We WILL have a future, and we're gonna get through this.
Look around you. Gene was right. We're still here.
That's another thing I love about TOS trek, it came at a time when we were struggling as a nation and I loved how trek used their episodes to work as an idiom for current issues at the time.Brie,
I think I can speak for all of us here when I say, thank you for your service to our country, and thank you for being here. You definitely bring a ray of sunshine, and a breath of fresh air to this forum.
Let me go out on a limb a little bit here, and say that at my age of 60, I get the feeling I'm probably older than most members here. But that almost seems (as Seven-Of-Nine would say) irrelevant, in that Star Trek is essentially timeless.
Star Trek (TOS of course) stole my heart away from Lost in Space, which in turn had stolen my heart away from Fireball XL5... but I digress. As a teenager in the 60's, it was a very different era than what we enjoy here. I watched every episode as they originally aired back then. While today we have technology which lets us see every episode and every movie ever made, anytime we want, imagine what it was like, really not knowing what next week's episode was gonna be!
How did Star Trek change my life? First, you have to understand (or remember?) the social climate of the 60's. Vietnam was raging... The Soviets were rattling their sabers in the height of the Cold War... And many teenagers of that time woke up each morning not knowing if this was gonna be their last day on Earth.
Enter the Great Bird himself, Gene Roddenberry. His vision was: It's OK, We WILL have a future, and we're gonna get through this.
Look around you. Gene was right. We're still here.
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