As a woman in STEM, it really bugs me how people (especially guys) will refuse to believe you if you say that you’re not brilliant in your field/subjects. We have this norm fashioned in popular media that says when a woman pops up where she doesn’t traditionally “belong,” it’s because she had to strong-arm her way in by being better than everyone else. But that’s not typically the case. Not in the contexts where it’s being assumed.
I’m an average physics student. That’s reflected in my grades and in the depth of my understanding of the material. I’ve bombed easy tests because I didn’t study enough. I usually score exactly the median average on exams. I’m not brilliant. Really. But everyone I talk to insists that I must be. After all, I’m a woman in a man’s field, right? The only way I could secure a place among the men is by proving myself their superior.
This warped norm is responsible for dissuading a lot of women and girls from pursuing STEM. They think they aren’t smart enough for it, purely because they’re not smarter than their male classmates.
i sincerely enjoy how many tiktok comedians who i already liked are getting into the youtube commentary game. it feels right, career-trajectory wise. and now i can watch long-form work from them on youtube (a website i visit every day) instead of short-form work on tiktok (an app i open maybe once every two months) or reposted to instagram reels (which i find myself mindlessly scrolling through often only to look at the comment sections and be exposed to some of the most awful shit i've ever seen get said)
the running gag from Jake and Amir that Amir's friends all have weird or object-based names doesnt scan to me anymore, in a day and age where i refer to most of my friends by either a variant on their handles or a name they came up with themselves. I regularly refer to 'my friend Casket'- do any of these names sound like theyd be out of place in your average discord call?
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