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re: Tonight, Texas A&M's campus will darken for Silver Taps
Posted on 2/4/14 at 9:42 am to Pettifogger
Posted on 2/4/14 at 9:42 am to Pettifogger
Most of these traditions are many generations old, Pettifogger--borne of "something bigger;" they weren't created just because.
Without a doubt, Texas A&M University isn't for everyone.
Without a doubt, Texas A&M University isn't for everyone.
Posted on 2/4/14 at 9:43 am to Pettifogger
quote:
It just seems at some point, rather than letting traditions come naturally, the focus became developing a lot of traditions for the sake of being very traditional.
Our traditions did develop "naturally," though. Just because we have a lot of them doesn't water down the meaning of each one. You realize this is a nearly 138 year old institution
quote:
I'm curious as to whether I'd get tired of it or feel like it was forced.
None of the traditions are compulsory, and some students choose not to participate in some/all of them.
We call them "2 percenters," though, because those students are usually a minority.
Posted on 2/4/14 at 9:44 am to Pettifogger
quote:
Basically I'm curious as to whether I'd get tired of it or feel like it was forced.
Why do you feel that way? Just because there's so many?
They're not "forced" and I'm not really sure why a lot of things are called a "tradition."
Posted on 2/4/14 at 9:44 am to TbirdSpur2010
Ya'll are weird.....but sometimes its a good weird:)
Posted on 2/4/14 at 9:46 am to EKG
quote:
Be Careful and I love you both, D.C.
(Three weeks later, the next Silver Taps honored three A&M students killed in a car-truck accident near Roanoke in Denton County on November 9.
One of them was Don Coward.)
O.M.G.
That's as eerie a story as I've heard in a long while.
Posted on 2/4/14 at 9:57 am to CharlesLSU
quote:
Ya'll are weird.....but sometimes its a good weird:)
Damn straight
Posted on 2/4/14 at 10:00 am to TbirdSpur2010
quote:
We call them "2 percenters," though, because those students are usually a minority.
Posted on 2/4/14 at 10:02 am to Projectpat
For example, most SEC school major traditions happened sporadically, and people decided to keep doing them. For TAMU, I think either they didn't really happen sporadically, or you decided to keep doing EVERYTHING for the purpose of creating new traditions. Either of those things is what I'm talking about. Your traditions outnumber the SEC combined. I respect TAMU a lot, but I don't think you just have that much more going on, something happened to create that.
My point really isn't to disparage and I don't want to derail the discussion of this one any further. In sum, my observation is that TAMU is tradition rich, but very much on purpose. For the record, I think I'd tire of TAMU attitude, but not really the traditions. I'm pretty fond of most I've witnessed (exceptions being those that would require me to alter my sexual preference).
My point really isn't to disparage and I don't want to derail the discussion of this one any further. In sum, my observation is that TAMU is tradition rich, but very much on purpose. For the record, I think I'd tire of TAMU attitude, but not really the traditions. I'm pretty fond of most I've witnessed (exceptions being those that would require me to alter my sexual preference).
Posted on 2/4/14 at 10:05 am to Pettifogger
quote:
For example, most SEC school major traditions happened sporadically, and people decided to keep doing them. For TAMU, I think either they didn't really happen sporadically, or you decided to keep doing EVERYTHING for the purpose of creating new traditions
I've read this multiple times, and I'm still struggling with what you're saying. My apologies … but could you help me out?
If we're only continuing to do everything we've always done, as you say, how is that creating new traditions, "just because?"
This post was edited on 2/4/14 at 10:06 am
Posted on 2/4/14 at 10:07 am to Pettifogger
quote:
most SEC school major traditions happened sporadically, and people decided to keep doing them. For TAMU, I think either they didn't really happen sporadically, or you decided to keep doing EVERYTHING for the purpose of creating new traditions.
You would be incorrect.
And I think you mean "spontaneously"
Posted on 2/4/14 at 10:08 am to Pettifogger
quote:
For TAMU, I think either they didn't really happen sporadically, or you decided to keep doing EVERYTHING for the purpose of creating new traditions
you posted a bunch again without mentioning a single specific thing. Are you completely unable to give an example of something you think is forced?
Posted on 2/4/14 at 10:10 am to EKG
quote:
ve read this multiple times, and I'm still struggling with what you're saying. My apologies … but could you help me out?
If we're only continuing to do everything we've always done, as you say, how is that creating new traditions, "just because?"
Seems self-explanatory to me. You can disagree, but I don't know why it is confusing. For example, at Auburn, we may have picked 10 things over the course of 150 years to do regularly, and hence they've become traditions. At TAMU, it seems you've selected 150 things to do over the past 125 years to become traditions. My belief is that TAMU has done this with posterity in mind.
Posted on 2/4/14 at 10:12 am to Pettifogger
But you've already stated you base that belief on nothing. If you "don't know enough about TAMU" to pick something in particular, then you clearly are just talking out of your arse. You may be best just letting it go, especially in a thread about Taps.
Posted on 2/4/14 at 10:14 am to tmc94
quote:
But you've already stated you base that belief on nothing. If you "don't know enough about TAMU" to pick something in particular, then you clearly are just talking out of your arse. You may be best just letting it go, especially in a thread about Taps.
Look several posts up, genius.
Posted on 2/4/14 at 10:15 am to Pettifogger
quote:
At TAMU, it seems you've selected 150 things to do over the past 125 years to become traditions. My belief is that TAMU has done this with posterity in mind.
All you're really saying is you think many of our traditions are vapid because there's a lot of them.
If you want to be taken seriously on this topic, it would help if you gave us some examples of traditions you think are empty.
Posted on 2/4/14 at 10:16 am to Pettifogger
So you're suggesting that A&M entirely, as an institution, decided to honor it's fallen students in order to add another tradition to the list?
Posted on 2/4/14 at 10:17 am to TbirdSpur2010
quote:
All you're really saying is you think many of our traditions are vapid because there's a lot of them.
I've never said your traditions are empty. Creating traditions on purpose doesn't mean they're not substantive. I was serious when I said I like and appreciate TAMU traditions, don't be defensive.
Posted on 2/4/14 at 10:17 am to Pettifogger
I'm not disagreeing with you; I just didn't understand what you were saying. What was "self-explanatory" to you wasn't clear to me. Anyway, I wasn't criticizing you; I was just asking for clarification (which you provided--thank you).
With the exception of a few meaningless, modern shenanigans (e.g., christening/dunking the Aggie Ring, Maroon Out, Big Event, etc.), we didn't select our traditions; they emerged over time. And they were never abandoned.
Never was there an intentional, group vote of hundreds of thousands of Ags to continue a tradition, simply to continue it.
It's different. I get it. To each his own.
With the exception of a few meaningless, modern shenanigans (e.g., christening/dunking the Aggie Ring, Maroon Out, Big Event, etc.), we didn't select our traditions; they emerged over time. And they were never abandoned.
Never was there an intentional, group vote of hundreds of thousands of Ags to continue a tradition, simply to continue it.
It's different. I get it. To each his own.
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