A few years ago a blogger/journalist decided to make a name for herself by attending a Mensa gathering (called an RG, for Regional Gathering) and blowing the lid off the whole sordid affair. She found the creepiest of the RG creepers and told the world that this was what Mensa gatherings were about. Creepy people who love showing off how smart they are.* Every time her clicks slope off, she goes back in for another shocking exposé.
Fine. Whatever. In a way, she's not entirely wrong. These people she seeks out are the broken stairs of Mensa, and articles like hers, plus the incessant and brave work of many, many others have gotten the leadership to boot some of the worst offenders out of the club, and put others on notice. It's easy, you see, to have a fair number of socially-inappropriate or even criminal jerks in your club when the only criterion is that you be good at standardized tests.
Mensa is the place where all those smart people who never fit in anywhere else can go. People who spent much of their childhood being bullied for being different, or being socially awkward or just introverted can join Mensa. You have a high enough score and money to pay the entry fee, and you're in. No other questions asked.
In many respects, this is a wonderful thing. I work with gifted kids, and there are so many of them who aren't just square pegs in a round world, they're 7-sided, asymmetrical prismatic stars that are never going to fit anywhere, but that doesn't mean they don't need a place to thrive. Mensa can give them a place to belong. Most Mensans I've met are welcoming, kind and fairly tolerant of the strange-but-harmless. Mensans give them a home, and even a family.
On the other hand, this means that there is a higher percentage of utter weirdos in Mensa than would normally be allowed in a not-specific-to-that-weirdness group. But that doesn't mean everybody is a bundle of social inappropriateness waiting to happen. It doesn't even mean a majority are. It just means more than average, and if you go looking for it, you're going to find it. And just like the bullies of our childhood, if you choose to, you'll find it very easy to mock and disparage.
Or, maybe, you could enter looking for kindness, or open-mindedness, humor, or inventiveness and you'll find people like L, who regularly gives of herself till she drops. Or folks like WA who is incredibly good at problem solving, and brings engineering skills to baking gluten free cookies so good people prefer them to regular ones. BW, whose organizational skills are second to none and who runs a hospitality suite like no one else. QML and V who, if they so desired, could probably take over the world but make you happy to be part of their kingdom when they did.** JW who runs tournaments with supreme efficiency and AB who can (and has) filled auditoriums with his talks on the historical relevance of Marvel Comics. Countless others who like playing boardgames, sharing their hobbies, quietly doing jigsaw puzzles together, devotedly recycling and being happily accepting of other's little quirks. There are so many good people, so many helpers, and you just have to look for them.
And, of course, I met my husband there in a game room. We met at an RG, and 16 months later we were married. We're going on 15 years now, and one of the things we look forward to the most during the year is going to MindGames, or other cities' RGs, or best of all, hosting our own. It's a ton of exhausting work and tremendous fun.
So, yes, there are a fair number of really annoying people in Mensa. Just because we have one attribute in common doesn't mean we will have a single other thing in common. And some of the members are downright icky if not criminal, and yes, we are doing better at ousting them. There's a ways to go on this front, but like all things, it's a work in progress. Some people are just awkward and we're trying our best to gently help them be less so, but such lessons are never easy and don't go down well even with the best of intentions, so it's slow going.
Want to know what an RG is like? It's a really big party. There's tons of food and drink, games, conversation, opportunities to help out, interesting talks, and activities with people who are smart, generally kind, quirky and fairly accepting of those who are pointy and asymmetrical and don't fit in anywhere else. That's what it's like. And like most other human endeavors, what you bring to it, and what you seek will largely determine what you find.
Look for the good. You'll be amazed at what you discover.
Peace.
*Most of the Mensans I know don't tell people they're in Mensa. They actively hide it. Bragging isn't a common trait.
**and you'd be really well fed. And for the record, I don't think they desire to take over the world, but they do throw one helluva party.
This definitely matches my experience within Mensa.
ReplyDeleteYes, this is what Mensa events are like, exactly.
ReplyDeleteYES.
ReplyDeleteYou and Hubby also give so much. We appreciate you too.