Posted in Teenage Life

Greasers and Socs: In the real world

EDIT FROM 2021: Hello there! This post is now (gulp) 15 years old, and is still randomly getting views due to being recommended on StumbleUpon way back when. Enjoy but please keep that in mind, and if you want to learn more about what present-day me, an award-winning independent filmmaker, is up to, head to BriCastellini.com.

Now, the words I use to describe my live as I know it, Socs and Greasers, may be a little dramatic. No, the “Greasers” don’t smoke, they don’t live in junky trailer parks together, and the “Socs” don’t throw beer lasts and beat “Greasers”up, -yet. But the main ideas of the two words, popularity and status, tie in with my life. Actually, it really only ties in with how my school is run. Not how the teachers run it, but how the student body runs it. So the blueprints are laid out like this:

Popular (Soc)- Cheerleader, football player, jock, friends fall from the sky.

Semi-Popular- Friends of Socs, cousins, siblings, large cliques of friends.

Wanna-Be-Popular- Distant relatives of Socs, tag-alongs, smaller groups of friends.

Don’t-Care- Unpopular, plain, ordinary people, few friends.

Unpopular (Greaser)- Nerdy, geeky, ignored, shunned one or two friends.

Drifter- Floats from one group to the next, has one to two friends in each group.

I fall in the “Don’t Care” Category. I am almost a Greaser, and sometimes I am. But I don’t think we should separate ourselves and group as these things, it’s almost as if we’re different species. I believe that we should all be equal, and status shouldn’t matter. I mean, honestly people, the only thing that separates us is our looks and athletic abilities. Stop judging our books by their covers, because the pages are pretty interesting.

I am using the terms that come from a book called “The Outsiders” by S.E. Hinton. Check it out and you’ll get my meaning of this piece a lot better.

What's up, my dudes?

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