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Re: wife
Tesla List wrote:
>
> >> > Subject: wife
> >Subject: Re: wife
> >> > Subject: wife
>
> Subscriber: rhull-at-richmond.infi-dot-net Fri Jan 31 22:54:38 1997
> Date: Fri, 31 Jan 1997 08:04:46 -0500 (EST)
> From: richard hull <rhull-at-richmond.infi-dot-net>
> To: tesla-at-pupman-dot-com
> Subject: Re: wife
>
> At 11:05 PM 1/30/97 -0700, you wrote:
> >> > Subject: wife
> >
> >Subscriber: dburman-at-ix-dot-netcom-dot-com Thu Jan 30 22:56:22 1997
> >Date: Thu, 30 Jan 1997 11:57:29 -0700
> >From: Dave Burman <dburman-at-ix-dot-netcom-dot-com>
> >To: tesla-at-pupman-dot-com
> >Subject: Re: wife
> >
> >Tesla List wrote:
> >>
> >> > Subject: wife
> >> >
> >> >
> >> > Are there any women that have a tesla coil or build tesla coils
or are men
> >> > the only ones that like tesla coils?
> >> >
> >> > Gary Weaver
> >>
> >> Gary,
> >>
> >> It seems to be "guy" thing! Maybe one of the women will write a
book,
> >> "Tesla Coil Builders, and the Women Who Love Them"..?
> >>
> >> -- Bert --
> >
> >Maybe women are too smart for a hobby like this.
> >
> >Dave
> >
> >Dave,
>
> This begs the questions does "smart" mean intelligent, wise, practical
or
> discerning. The difference might lie more in the manner in which
women are
> "brought up" and the way the world views them as they mature. Also
they are
> a completely different animal due to internal chemistry.
> At times, all of the above.
> Men tend to be a bit more curious about more ecclectic things which
will
> have no immediate benefit and might actually put them at financial or
> physical risk. Men are more mechanical. Women are probably actually
more
> intellectual in the theoretical and conceptual end of things. Women
are a
> bit "smarter" in that they tend to look at the "moment to moment"
> practicality of their acts and works. Men seem to be amused and
incredibly
> fascinated by the most outlandish and abstract of things. This is why
> marriages either work very well (symbiotic relationship with dual
party
> adaptability) or fail miserably (diametrically different thought
patterns
> with inflexible personalities).
>
> I don't desire or miss women in this area of science. But, in
general, if
> they are involved and are super dedicated as are many of we men, They
> certainly appear to others to be an "odd fish" in a societal sort of
way.
> This is not good but just the way it is.
>
> Richard Hull, TCBOR
I can see this could turn into quite a discussion with no end in site.
I would like to compliment you on the excellent observation.
Since this doesn't have much to do with coiling, I think we should drop
th esubject at this point.
Dave
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