[ Referring to men playing poker, and being competitive at that]
I had to start a new thread on this, because I felt it would hijack the one it was in.Like I had no drive to be part of it (or any such thing). But that drive seemed to be very much there with my brother and his friends. It was like an imperative, something like the basis of the formation of new adult male identity which they would then carry outwards and upwards into the world.
I found much the same thing with watching men tell jokes to each other. This is very much a male activity. Deborah Tannen, in her books on how men and women differ in their conversational styles, tries to give explanations for why women do not tend to tell jokes. I also have a very good book on how to tell jokes, by Jim Pietsch, and he devotes a whole chapter to looking at why women don't generally tell jokes in their daily lives.
Mind you, I'm not saying that no woman ever does. It's just that it's not a skill that they tend to be rewarded for, for one thing. It doesn't get them what they want.
I'm going to say that I've always been more of a woman when it comes to this activity. It's just not something that had much appeal to me; it didn't seem to get me anything that I wanted, either.
Not doing the jokes/pranks created a wall when it came to male bonding. I know how to be friends with other men. I can also be there for them when major trouble hits, or there's a crisis of any kind. But I can't be 'familiar' with them; I just can't get that kind of easy camaraderie that comes from "joking around,' and it has hurt me over the years. There are rewards for being able to do this, and every man is expected to be able to participate, to some degree. It's part of 'being a guy.'
So the forum can see why in some ways it was a relief for me to become a woman--I was 'opting out' of this whole system in a very up-front way. I was saying that I was no longer competing in this game, which I wasn't very good at doing in day-to-day life.
What's puzzling is that I actually have some ability at stand-up comedy. I did an act for a local cable TV show, and it went over well. Some of it was original material, too. I know the mechanics of how it 'works.'
In some way, joke-telling and pranks are "playing with truth." They deceive people or confuse them, just for a moment, and then the truth comes out again. And that's 'funny.' But to me, it just seems hurtful. I find it hard to 'deceive' anyone, even for the time it takes to pull a prank. And jokes are usually at someone's expense; whether it's Polish people, women drivers, or lawyers, the funniest jokes seem to be about putting someone else down temporarily.
I know I can be seen as stuck-up and prissy for having this attitude, and I don't blame people for seeing it that way. I know that feminists often get hit with this club--that they have no sense of humor. This is a huge generalization, but there is some truth to it. I have friends who consider themselves feminists, including one sister. So I've observed their 'seriousness' first-hand, and yes, it does tend to be there in my circle.
Oddly enough, I can admire men who are good at the game. I like stand-up comics, and I have always been in awe of my bandmates who were good at stage banter. I've even had a few girlfriends who were good at it. They had that truck-stop waitress style; the gal who works around men, and can banter with the best of them. Obviously, they weren't with me because of my ability to do this! Still, while these gals were good with their wits, they didn't tend to tell jokes.
I discovered one way to get around my disinterest in jokes. It was to be super-good at some sport or activity. Men would reward me for this, if I could pull it off. They'd 'forgive' my lack of humor if I was superior as a teammate. This can work, but it's exhausting; a hard way to live.
In racket sports, a person needs to have a 'backhand' stroke, right? You're suppose to be able to hit a ball on either side of you. The backhand tends to be harder to do, so some people run very fast so they can hit the ball with their forehand. It's called "running around your backhand," and it's not a very efficient way to play.
My refusal to tell jokes has been the equivalent of this, and I've paid the price for it. But I'm saying that as a guy. I don't think my TS friends would say that. Just like genetic women, the 'rewards' of telling jokes were just not important to them; they were never part of that whole scenario.