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Lush
02-01-2006, 08:50 PM
I saw "Fellowship" seven times in the movie theaters. My name is Lush and I have a problem.

What are dorkiest/craziest/weirdest Tolkien-related things you've done?

Farael
02-01-2006, 09:05 PM
I'll probably loose this one... but I've got two, I'm not sure which is worst

I watched back-to-back extended editions of FoTR and TTT.... and I mean really watched, not sat around while the movies were playing.

Also, I got all three movies extended edition and I watched all 12 hours of it in about a week's time... that's not too bad, up until you consider that it was exams week!!!

My name is Farael and I have a problem

piosenniel
02-01-2006, 09:54 PM
I'm in complete denial that my actions are problems :p

Saw FotR at the cinema 32 times

Organized an extended version marathon party for my friends, who are also hopeless Dorks . . . we can recite most of the dialog for all three films . . .

Made costumes for each of the film openings

And lastly . . . co-moderator on two RPG forums

But really, it's no problem . . .

~*~ Cleopatra, Queen of De Nile

:cool:

Lolidir
02-01-2006, 10:03 PM
Ok I'm not sure how to beat that last one. 32 times? how much did that cost? Well I only saw each one about 2 or 3 times in theaters. I did buy the movies the first day they came out on DVD, I waited untill Christmas for the extended versions to give my parents something to get me. I do have quite a collection of Action Figures, not dolls. I turned 18 on my last birthday and got 2 big boxes of figures. I also have the box to a friends Anduril sword. He was going to throw it away so I took it. And according to my friends coming to the Downs when I get the time is dorkish enough for them. I won't tell them about you guys, but then again maybe they will lighten up on me. Hmmmmmmmmm? ;) Well I'm not sure how that compares to the other ones but there's my story. Perhaps someone could set up a voting or rating something or another. It might add a little to the thread. Well have a good one.

Roa_Aoife
02-01-2006, 10:08 PM
Went to all openings in costume. Prior to TTT, I watched the FOTR extended. Prior to ROTK, I watched bot FOTR and TTT. When the final EE came out, I did a 12 hour marathon.

the phantom
02-01-2006, 11:13 PM
For just over three and one half years, I have made multiple visits nearly every single day to a website that revolves around a fictional world (The Barrow-Downs is the site, of course).

I have actually driven over 600 miles to meet with a small group of other members.

I have interacted so much with other members over the years that I have almost as many inside jokes with friends that I've never met in person than I do with my friends in real life.

During games of Werewolf, I spent more time thinking about the game, pming my fellow wolves, and posting on the thread than I did anything else, including sleeping.

I've loved Middle Earth since my dad read me The Hobbit in kindergarten. Because of how prominent Middle Earth has been my entire life, I cannot possibly imagine dating, much less marrying, someone who isn't familiar with Tolkien's literature.

If that isn't dorky I don't know what is.

Thinlómien
02-02-2006, 03:32 AM
Watching all the three extendeds in one day is a fool's job, but it was nice. I admit, in this battle my marathon is a bit loser...

Lalwendë
02-02-2006, 05:27 AM
Hmmm, I only saw FotR once at the flicks, but I saw both the other films twice. I can't count how many times I've seen them at home, as putting the DVDs aside (and I have both versions of all the films, bought on days of release), they've all been on heavy rotation on Sky Movies so they often get chosen during channel hopping.

When I'd just read the books it was the early 80s and I must have been a strange kid. I had this kind of trinity of obsessions: Tolkien, pop music and politics. I had my best black overcoat (with batwing sleeves, retro fashionistas!) onto which I attempted to embroider the White Tree of Gondor, with little beads to represent the stars. My mother went ballistic. I also had one of those canvas army bags which you could draw on (and which mums always used to throw in the washing machine as soon as they could get their hands on them). Mine had all kinds of arcane scribbles on it such as: Frodo Lives!, Frankie Goes To Hollywood Are Cool, and Solidarnosc!. The graffitti also appeared on ring binders and the horrible green paper we had to cover our text books in. The JRRT logo was a strong design feature, as were Runes.

Not long after I read LotR, we were set a task to write a fantasy story for English. The poor teacher expected about 2 or 3 pages per week from each of us in our exercise books. From me she got one and a half exercise books' worth. With maps and family trees and colour illustrations. I've also still got the school exercise book into which I diligently copied all the poems from LotR, with use of all different colours of biro and everything.

My friends at one point acquired new names based on LotR. These were generally on the 'good guys' but if one of my mates had done something deeply stupid they used to get named 'Shelob' for a while. My parents, who had absorbed all the Tolkien babble at home, learned some of the words and if they saw a dark wood they'd say "ooh, look, it's Mirkwood!".

In our front room, there are alcoves on either side of the chimney breast which have floor to ceiling bookshelves built in - one side is entirely occupied with Tolkien material and there still is not the space for all the books to be shelved there. The 78 action figures are only the tip of the iceberg in terms of the amount of 'stuff' that's been collected...

And there are whole new avenues of dorkitude still to be explored... I still want to turn a shed into a Hobbit Hole, for example.

Perhaps the dorkiest thing is that if someone wrote a book about being a Tolkien dork then I'd be first in line to buy it to see how I measured up. :eek:

JennyHallu
02-02-2006, 07:25 AM
This is a very strange and unsettling feeling for me....normalcy! I read my paperback versions of the books so many times they fell apart, I got my brother, my sister, and my debate partner all hooked, and I know my name in both Quenya and Sindarin (but the Quenya sounds like some sort of pasta), and I don't have any notebooks but have sketches of my old RP characters or the movie characters smudging up the endpapers or the margins (and they're quite good, thanks)...but i'm still feeling rather normal.

Meela
02-02-2006, 07:46 AM
I saw Fotr 10 times in the cinema, TTT 11 times, and Rotk 12 times. I obsessed over a fictional character named Denethor for four years... very crazy indeed. I actually acted out the movies using my action figures, and I still have plans to film it.

I was a dork once, in fact I am still probably, although more plain crazy than dork now. I've done a lot more, but there are so many little things that I can't really list them all.

Thinlómien
02-02-2006, 09:48 AM
I tried to make a play script to our spring party at school when I was about eight years old... And yes you know, it was the Lord of the Rings! Now I can just imagine how long the play would have been... I got to Weathertop before I stopped. I still have the script somewhere.

Valier
02-02-2006, 11:03 AM
Well the week the last film came out, my local paper had a huge LOTR spread in there everyday. I actually got all of them.
Also I'm still attempting to make my own 3dish map of M.E. that will hang on the wall.......it's slow going.
I guess this would make me a dork...Or is it just everyone else who doesn't do that type of stuff. :D

Bêthberry
02-02-2006, 11:17 AM
I almost bought a "Lord of the Rinks" tee shirt the other weekend--complete with a fellowship pose (including Arwen) in skates, with the actors played by various Great White North animals, such as moose, beaver, squirrel, elk, etc.

Now, was I a dork for thinking about buying it or a dork for not buying it? ;)

Thinlómien
02-02-2006, 11:23 AM
Now, was I a dork for thinking about buying it or a dork for not buying it? ;)
For both, I think :D

Rune Son of Bjarne
02-02-2006, 11:27 AM
I have wached the Exended editons back to back only with small pauses wich I used to play Werewolf. Now that was fun.

I use many hours each days just reading on the Downs, infact ever since I became a member I have not gone to bed before 2 AM. (I allways have to check one more time or write one more PM or talk to someone over msn)

I wached the TTT 5 times in the movie theaters.

I spend a party at my school on beeing drunk and sing The Fall of Gil-Galad to everybody.

Maeggaladiel
02-02-2006, 11:49 AM
-I own most of the LOTR-related video games, or have owned them at some point.

-I have the poster advertising said game hanging on the back of my door.

-There's a LOTR action figure sitting on my desk at this very moment. He happens to be aiming a bow at a Pirates of the Caribbean action figure right now, since he's jealous that Johnny Depp has the better position on my desk.

-I spent time positioning said action figures in said poses.

-I once tried to learn Elvish. I know about ten random useless phrases as a result of that endeavor.

-When I was younger and had long hair, I wore it back like the elves in the movies did.

-I'm here, aren't I?

Fordim Hedgethistle
02-02-2006, 12:10 PM
Some Pretty Standard Ones

I can say "hello" in Elvish.

I studied Dwarvish runes so I could write secret messages in them.

I have corrected friends, acquaintances and almost total strangers when they make mistakes in Tolkien lore. (Example: "It's pronounced SOUR-on, not SORE-on.")

Somewhat Dorkier Things I Have Done

I have drawn maps of places for which Tolkien does not provide enough detail for my liking (Edoras, the lands south of the Shire, etc)

I wrote a short story in which I appear, as myself, called by the Valar as an emissary from the future so that I can be present at the Coronation of Aragorn to give him greetings on behalf of the later Ages of Men.

And Finally: The Dorkiest Thing I Have Ever Done (Tolkien-Related Or Not)

When I was a teenager I spent one weekend camping in the woods a few miles from my house pretending to be Aragorn the Ranger watching over the Shire. I had a full costume including a fake sword (broken one foot above the hilt), I slept in a bedroll rather than a tent, and I paid a visit to the place where my father Arathorn had been slain to erect a cairn in his memory. I also did some pining for Arwen (not hard, since at the time I was in love with a dark-haired girl who was too good for me....).

Bb: you really shoulda bought the shirt.

the phantom
02-02-2006, 12:54 PM
When I was a teenager I spent one weekend camping in the woods a few miles from my house pretending to be Aragorn the Ranger watching over the Shire...
I read Fordim's story and thought "Cool, I'd like to do that!" rather than "that's dorky".

Lalwendë
02-02-2006, 01:40 PM
I read Fordim's story and thought "Cool, I'd like to do that!" rather than "that's dorky".

That's 'cause it is cool. :cool:

I got one of my postings not so long back not by interview, as is usual, but by having a discussion about how Tolkien was better than Star Wars and drawing parallels between events in the Silmarillion and current government policy.

Kitanna
02-02-2006, 03:07 PM
~I saw FOTR seven times in the theater, I saw TTT three times in the theater, and I saw ROTK four times in the theater.
~When reading the LOTR trilogy the first time around I felt empty and alone once I had finished it.
~I play with LOTR action figures.
~My family and friends have banned me from playing LOTR Trivial Pursuit.
~I drive to the LOTR soundtracks.
~I have watched all three EE movies back to back at least three times in the last year.
~I've gotten into several arguments over various Tolien related things. And I didn't back down until the opposite side submitted. This might explain why no one talks to me anymore.
~I've made a few LOTR t-shirts.
~I went to my senior prom wearing an Arwen dress a friend had made for me.
~I tried to learn Elvish.
~When I played in WW games it pretty much dominated my life and I forgot about a few papers I was supposed to write due to it.
~I hang around this site and post here more than I talk to my family.

Rune Son of Bjarne
02-02-2006, 03:41 PM
~When reading the LOTR trilogy the first time around I felt empty and alone once I had finished it.

Is there anyone who does not have this fealing afterwards ?

Actually I allso have this feeling after reading Harry Potter, (don't tell anyone) the difference is that with lotr I can just start on the sil, the hobbit or someting els. I don't start reading the other potter books, i just wait for the next one to be relised. (and translated)

Glirdan
02-02-2006, 04:24 PM
I know this comes really short compared to all the others out there, but hey.

In music class, using the laptops, we were allowed to do what we wanted. So, what do you think dear old Glirdan does? He comes here to see how the WW games are going!

My name is Glirdan and I have a problem. Which isn't a bad thing!! :D

Durelin
02-02-2006, 04:48 PM
I arrived outside a movie theater at about 9:30 am, meeting a wonderful friend who was so incredibly nice enough and crazy enough to have arrived there about 5:30 or so, and so was about 4th or 5th in line. I stood outside that movie theater until noon. I entered the movie theater. After watching FotR EE, TTT EE, and RotK, as one of the very first public showings, starting at 11:30 pm, half an hour before even midnight movie goers, I did not exit the theater until approximately 2 am, and was not home until about 3:30 am. I missed an english exam for that, and skipped a total of a day and 6.5 periods of school.

Roleplaying is my biggest hobby, and really my only hobby.

I have been on the Downs now for over three years.

I attempted to learn Elvish, and still plan on doing so.

I own tons of LotR action figures and have played with them, and spent probably over an hour positioning them all in my room when I redecorated.

I saw FotR over ten times in theaters, I saw TTT about 8 or 9 times in theaters, and I saw RotK about 6 times.

Every other thing someone says reminds me of a line/even/character from LotR, book or movie...or from another nerdy film like Star Wars.

I cried several times while reading LotR, even the second time.

I got scared reading LotR, even the second time.

When I was a teenager I spent one weekend camping in the woods a few miles from my house pretending to be Aragorn the Ranger watching over the Shire. I had a full costume including a fake sword (broken one foot above the hilt), I slept in a bedroll rather than a tent, and I paid a visit to the place where my father Arathorn had been slain to erect a cairn in his memory. I also did some pining for Arwen (not hard, since at the time I was in love with a dark-haired girl who was too good for me....).

I've been planning on doing something like this for years. I've also considered living like that for at least a few months.

I met my boyfriend of almost a year and seven months through a LotR related game.

And lastly, I will never forget when a 1st grader said I looked like Galadriel when I altar served in my white robe.

Lastly, but there is still et cetera.

And I suppose it's back to denial for me. Or celebration. Whichever you prefer. :p

Nilpaurion Felagund
02-02-2006, 08:49 PM
I've memorised every word and punctuation mark in TH, LR, TS, UT, the HoMEs, and all those other 'canonical' books.

And the extended-edition films's script. And the trailers, too.

Plus, I own a piece of Tolkien. :D

. . .

. . .

. . .

No, not really. Although I wish I did. Would be a great help to all those quiz and quotes threads.

How do you own a piece of Tolkien? Hmmm . . .

Roa_Aoife
02-02-2006, 09:28 PM
I am reigning champion of LOTR Trivial Pursuit. I also scored a 97% on the LOTR quiz at nerdparadise.com, ranking me in the top 7... out of 8,000, last time I checked.

I also own LOTR Risk, and as Mordor, I kick @$$.

JennyHallu
02-03-2006, 07:29 AM
How do you own a piece of Tolkien?

Not sure, but it sounds kind of icky.

Lush
02-03-2006, 02:09 PM
You guys are dorkin' fabulous.

Pio, I don't know how you did it! 32 times!

And my boyfriend still insists on pretending like he doesn't know who I am when I confess to someone I saw the film 7 times. :D

I'm glad I started this thread. It's given me goals. Dreams. Ambitions. :)

Lalaith
02-03-2006, 03:33 PM
*rushes off to nerdparadise*
*rushes back*

Gah! 86.666! And I thought I 'd got them all right...Roa, how do you check the rankings?

Formendacil
02-03-2006, 03:54 PM
Clearly I am a bigger dork (or is that genius) than Lalaith or Roa... since I got 100%.

Of course, having to go there and find out- not to mention being thrilled at the results- is also a clear sign of LotR Dorkiness.

And yes, for the record, I needed no book assistance to take the test. I simply used my uncommonly Tolkien-obsessed brain.

Eonwe
02-03-2006, 07:02 PM
This December, I marked the third annual gathering of The Fellowship, a select group of 15 elite LoTR fans. We attended in costume, watched all three extended editions with a projecter, and played an insane amount of LoTR Risk. For dinner, there was rabit stew, freshly baked bread, and a three pound chicken for each, along with enormous quantities of wine, ale, or beer. (well ok, grape juice, ginnger ale, or root beer.) Afterward, we sat in the Grate Hall before a roaring fire and smoked enourmous quantities of Old Toby.

Last summer, I spent inordinite amounts of time ponderously tracing, sketching and enlarging the picture of the Gate of Moria in a silver pen. It now sits beneath the glass on my night-stand along with the invitation, writ in a gold pen, to the very first Gathering of the Fellowship.

Am enbarking on my third annual read through of LoTR.

Lush
02-03-2006, 07:24 PM
Well, I just took the test on nerdparadise.com, and I have a 93.3333333

AND I'm taking it on a Friday night, while sitting at home with a bottle of Woodchuck, watching "Celebrity Feuds" with my lame friends.

Oh snap!

AbercrombieOfRohan
02-03-2006, 07:55 PM
Let's see. I took the test on nerdparadise.com and scored approx. 97%. But aside from that, I saw Fellowship 6 times and Two Towers and Return of the King 8 times apiece in theatres (including the midnight showings of TT and ROTK.) I've watched the DVD's countless thousands of times at home and Shelob and I watched a marathon of all the EE's on Tolkien's birthday last year. I've bought all 6 of the DVD's on the day they were released.

I once stood in line for 6 hours and 33 minutes to get to meet Sean Astin. And when I got to meet him, I was so excited that I couldn't even say anything and he told me, "Breathe, just breathe."

That took place at the Lord of the Rings Exhibit at the Museum of Science in Boston. I saw the exhibit three times while it was there and bought an exhorbitant amount of LotR paraphenalia.

I've consistently dressed up as Eowyn for the past 3 years (well, except for this year when I dressed up as Virgil from the Aeneid/ The Inferno.)

Every year over Christmas break I read all of Tolkien's works in chronological order according to their publication date. Hobbit, Silmarillion, HoME, Roverandom. All of them, and I finish on Tolkien's birthday with a special celebration and re-read my favourite passages to anyone foolish enough to listen. Generally that means me, as my family has long since given up hope. I've been doing this since I was 11.

I own 8 copies of the Lord of the Rings, including the shiny new 50th anniversary edition and my dad's really old, really beat up copy from the 70's, but excluding the audio version and the Spanish copy that I got in Spain.

My room is plastered in Tolkien pictures, of him and his wife, and also pictures from the movies and of the various actors (and I may or may not have an Orlando Bloom card-board cutout... :o.) I think at last count I was up to around 600 pictures on my walls, which basically guarantees that my room is impervious to the nagging mother, because she's terrified to step foot in it. It's a great defense mechanism I tell you.

I also speak Elvish. I studied it for an entire summer between 9th and 10th grade and was fluent for a time, but my tongue has withered from disuse and I now would probably be able to get around M-E, but it would be trying.

My life = :eek: on general principle. ;)

Gil-Galad
02-03-2006, 10:24 PM
Hi my name is Gil-Galad, and i am a LOTR-DOrkaholic


me, my brother got me a giant Middle Earth Map for m ywall 2 years ago, sometime when i'm bored i plan battle stratergies if i were Saurman, Sauron etc.

Nilpaurion Felagund
02-04-2006, 02:18 AM
. . . that I write in my very own mode of Tengwar? Sure, it's the very Mordor to read, but hey! it's fun to see the look on your classmates's faces when they borrow your notes.

Although . . . I discontinued it when I realised I can't cram very well with Tengwar school notes. A student who can't cram is nothing, I tell you. NOTHING!!!

Holbytlass
02-04-2006, 08:37 AM
Compared to you fine people I'm not dork-material :( (maybe I should logoff forever WAAA) BUT in my real life I am since I'm the only one who's obsessed but I have done some things....

~I've watched the movies several times at the theatres by lying to people so they would watch my kids during the day (I said I was running errands)

~Slack off on my day and night wifely duties so I can hang out here and/or play WW games

~I don't have alot of action figures, but I either buy double-one for me and one for the kids or wait till they get bored with theirs and 'adopt' the toys myself.

~Mr. Holby and I are buying our first house in 2 weeks and although it's 2 stories I'm thrilled that the mainlevel is like BagEnd with the main hall running the whole length of the house and the rooms are on either side. And although Mr. Holby is not interested in LOTR at all, we both have same ideas on decorating (country/rustic) so the manipulation will begin by getting it to look more hobbitish

~If I see a Tolkien/LOTR related vanity tag or bumpersticker, I chase down the people and wave fanatically at them or yell in their window that I love it.

mormegil
02-04-2006, 03:54 PM
Besides having the habbit of yearly reading the books there are others

--going to all three movies at the 12:01 showing and waiting in line all day to do it...I mean 16+ hours.

--At RotK they didn't let us in the building for a while and it was about 14 degrees outside and I didn't even bring a coat. I was there alone without my coat for over 3 hours before my sister came to bring it to me.

--The movies are either around or on my anniversary, so what we did for three strait years was go to the movies...Mrs. Mormegil is a good sport.

--Spend counltless hours on a website dedicated to Tolkien

--Play WW to a point that it's a moderate obsession and I have and do loose sleep over it at times.

--Mrs. Mormegil knows many of your names and personality traits because I talk too much about this stuff.

Lush
02-06-2006, 12:00 AM
You guys are still rocking my world.

Yet in a rush to glorify each other, we have forgotten to honour the great hero of dorkdom, Mr. Christopher Lee.

Among Mr. Lee's many achievements:

Sitting down to read The Lord of the Rings every year, like clockwork.

:)

Thinlómien
02-14-2006, 10:28 AM
Other things I have done because of LotR or affected by LotR
- made Tom Bombadil's boots out of paper colored yellow with crayons when 6 years old
- held a "LotR-school" to one of my friends when 7 years old
- established a LotR-club with a friend and my little sister
- started roleplaying
- joined the 'Downs
- studied writing tengwar
- studied quenya (er, I'm not doing very well with my studies at the moment)
- made numerous LotR- board games with my dad and my sister
- started keeping ME olympics with my dad and my sister
- read LotR more times that most people think is clever
What else? Can't remember just now but I'm sure there's loads of other things.

Fordim Hedgethistle
02-14-2006, 10:39 AM
Among Mr. Lee's many achievements:

Sitting down to read The Lord of the Rings every year, like clockwork.



I do that. Almost time for me to start it again...

the guy who be short
02-14-2006, 11:09 AM
Among Mr. Lee's many achievements:

Sitting down to read The Lord of the Rings every year, like clockwork.You mean most Downers don't do this? :confused:

Thinlómien
02-14-2006, 11:16 AM
You mean most Downers don't do this? :confused: You took my words, o prince who be shadowed! But some 'downers do that more than once a year. And some even more often.

Son of Númenor
02-14-2006, 11:16 AM
I do that. Almost time for me to start it again...Likewise, although last year I only got through The Two Towers, on account of a move from Maryland to Hawai'i and the subsequent packing of many books into large cardboard boxes. Now I'm debating whether to start with the Fellowship, Book IV, or The Silm, which I haven't read in three years. :rolleyes:

Farael
02-14-2006, 11:30 AM
Well, I've read LoTR three times so it's not nearly every year... but I HAVE read it the last two years and I'm looking forward to reading it again in English this year.

Lalwendë
02-14-2006, 03:54 PM
Dork at Work

At work I've got loads of film postcards all around my desk - to cover up the vile pink stuff that forms a baffle. I also have my Hobbits screen saver, a repeated Rivendell painting motif for wallpaper and a little shelf of Tolkien books.

Last year I was quoted in a staff journal as being famous for "knowing lots about Hobbits and liking second breakfast".

At Christmas I sent an e-mail to a senior manager saying "if you want to look up my notes, they are in the big black hardbacked book, under Gollum".

Lush
02-14-2006, 05:21 PM
Oh, I'm sure a lot of us do read the books on a regular basis. I mostly re-read passages, but I think I'll take up LotR again following graduation. No rest for the wicked at university these last few years!

But if we are to honour ourselves, we must honour Christopher Lee. And other famous dorks as well. :)

Elu Ancalime
02-14-2006, 07:06 PM
Im pretty open to my friends about my Rings obsession, and theyve kinda caught on (to an extent... :rolleyes: )

But Tolkienology is on my mind about 75% of the time, allegorically and literally.
________
Lamborghini Islero History (http://www.lamborghini-tech.com/wiki/Lamborghini_Islero)

littlemanpoet
02-14-2006, 09:09 PM
Almost all of you out-dork me. I'd have my library-computer room at home all decked out in Middle Earth map and various calendar folios if my better half let me....

My greatest dork moment was when, as a teacher at a high school, for a talent show, I read "Riddles in the Dark" ... in the dark .... (except for a flash light to read by) to the entire school body, doing Gollum's voice. 'Yessss, my precioussss, that was very very nice, it wassss.' The kids loved it too. At least the ones who were as dorky as me.

The EE are the only DVDs I own.

I did a verbal book report on LotR once; laid the books down dramatically one by one to the groans of the entire class - they were sure I was going to go on and on like I had done over a mere 150 page book the month before - but I took a mere three minutes ... or less. "You remember The Hobbit that 'so and so' reported on? How Bilbo found a ring? Well, in these books that Ring is discovered to the property of the Dark Lord, and he wants it back. The story is about how they try to keep the Dark Lord from getting his Ring back." End of report. I got an "A". A dork victory! :D

I play werewolf and talk about it excitedly with my work buddies who are all younger than I am. They get big smiles. I'm sure they enjoy my stories about it, honest. They're not really thinking "what a dork", uh uh. No way! :p

Encaitare
02-14-2006, 09:55 PM
I was dorky and proud today in my music history class. We were talking about program music vs. absolute music, and I referred to how Tolkien stated that the Lord of the Rings was not allegorical, but rather applicable. And I said that this could work for music as well -- the composer might not necessarily have a certain topic in mind, or he might have a different idea than the impression the listener gets, but the listener's impression is still valid.

My teacher thought I was extremely dorky. :D

Lhunardawen
02-14-2006, 11:08 PM
I play werewolf and talk about it excitedly with my work buddies who are all younger than I am. They get big smiles. I'm sure they enjoy my stories about it, honest. They're not really thinking "what a dork", uh uh. No way! :pSo when are you playing again? You're sorely missed over there, y'know. ;)

Or better yet...when are you modding?

Anyways, I also talk about Werewolf to my non-LotR-reading friends, and occasionally they ask me if I'm still alive or whatever's been happening. Something tells me they're just trying to be polite, or not make me look like a complete Lhunatic.

littlemanpoet
02-15-2006, 05:01 AM
So when are you playing again? You're sorely missed over there, y'know. ... Or better yet...when are you modding?
Since playing werewolf is dorky, I guess we can talk about it here. :p I plan on getting my feet wet as soon as ATM1 is done; after that I want to mod one: dueling wizards, if there's enough interest....

Nilpaurion Felagund
02-15-2006, 05:31 AM
[A]fter that I want to mod one: dueling wizards, if there's enough interest.... (LpM . . . errr . . . lmp)I assure you, there is. ;) :D

Encaitare
02-15-2006, 04:46 PM
Anyways, I also talk about Werewolf to my non-LotR-reading friends, and occasionally they ask me if I'm still alive or whatever's been happening. Something tells me they're just trying to be polite, or not make me look like a complete Lhunatic.

Hah, I've gotten some of my friends to ask me about Barrow-Downs dealings... I told a friend that my character is getting out of Mordor and he said "Yay! Go you!" Because AtM was all I talked about for quite some time. :D

CaptainofDespair
02-15-2006, 05:00 PM
I rock out to the song Minas Morgul, while I run around my room deciding wear I'd mount an entire replica set of the Witch-King of Angmar's battle armor. Well, besides pondering all the times I could wear it in public...

Hello, my name is CaptainofDespair, and I am a Witch-King fanatic.

Oddwen
02-15-2006, 06:27 PM
Hi. My name is Alice and I had a problem.

I read The Hobbit when I was eight or nine, but didn't have a problem 'til 1999, when my Dad read aloud LotR to us every night 'til it was read through.

Then, even as he finished and my brother and I were discussing the end, Dad revealed to us that he had read in the paper that a movie was being made. I shall never forget the Look my brother and I shared, for it was the beginning of the rest of my life.

First of all, after memorizing entire poems and lines of text, I scanned the papers every day for mention of this new movie. Every time we went to town, I went with bated breath and pumping heart, hoping that we would make a stop at a bookstore so that I may ogle the many copies of the LotR. I thought about LotR, I dreamt about LotR, all I talked about was LotR. My mother had many talks with me about my "obsession", but there was no stopping me, for I was fourteen and in love.

Finally at one trip to Borders, on my beeline towards the Fantasy Section, I spotted a small sign advertising the Lord of the Rings movie. My heart stopped, and I spent nearly all my time there staring at the now-famous silhouette of the Fellowship, and I jotted down the two website addresses that were there.

At my next trip to my Grandparent's (for we had not the Internet then), I visited those two sites, and lo! on one page was a rudimentary cast list, so early in the production that Stuart Townsend was still listed as Aragorn!

And thus came a full-force obsession, for I would scan the tv-guide listings in my paper every day and cut out the names of actors and actresses,
and any mention of LotR at all. When we finally got the Internet, I would spend all my precious half-hour allotment searching out LotR.

And then - I read that Burger King would be doing a LotR promotion, and that someone's sister and brother whom I knew years ago were working there and liked it - I *had* to get a job there.

Once secured of a job, I proceeded to collect all the toys, goblets, tray liners, cups, fry cartons, posters, etc. that was humanly possible. On the offchance that one of my co-workers would read LotR, I would pounce on them and Tolkien their ears off. Ironically, the only real big LotR fan there left a few months after I started, and days after I discovered he was a fan.

Then I got the Internet. Whooieeeee! During the previous years, I had written several parodies, so I searched out parodies then. There I found the Barrowdowns, but I did not realize the significance of this discovery yet. I did find a small messageboard dealing with the works of Tolkien, where I first found my little space of the Web.

Things escalated from there, and after several other websites, I found this forum waaaaaay back in the day when it was "Middle-earth Mayhem", but even then I didn't realize the worth of the place until the start of "Make Your Own Crazy Scene With Pics!" started up, and then the rest is history.

I still have every article, comic, or mention of LotR actors/actresses that appeared in my local paper.

I remember begging my restaurant owner if he knew if we would do the TTT promotion after FotR was done. He laughed.

I have seen FotR seven times in the theater. The first time was a week after it opened.
I saw TTT five times. The first time was opening day.
I saw RotK three times. I made a cloak and dressed up for the midnight showing.
I own all three DVDs, as well as the EE DVDs.
I still have all the BK stuff somewhere in my closet.
I have eight posters, ten or so bookmarks, three different copies of LotR, the LotR soundtracks, and still a head full of Tolkien knowledge.

I remember the sad, sinking, futile feeling when the FotR release date was pushed back a week - I remember thinking a year before the original date "Oh, I have to wait a year and a week instead of a year...how will I stand it?!?"

In short, I owe everything I have now - job, friends, life, depression, sense of humor, music - to LotR.

I don't know when I lost the huge obsession, but I'm rather glad it's gone. It was exhausting.

I pick up LotR every once in a while and read a chapter, usually I start again when I finish, so I never really stop reading it.

So yeah, I guess I'm still a dork. :D

Lhunardawen
02-16-2006, 01:00 AM
Since playing werewolf is dorky, I guess we can talk about it here. :p I plan on getting my feet wet as soon as ATM1 is done; after that I want to mod one: dueling wizards, if there's enough interest....Ooh...count me in! :D

What do you mean I'm off-topic?

Hah, I've gotten some of my friends to ask me about Barrow-Downs dealings... I told a friend that my character is getting out of Mordor and he said "Yay! Go you!" Because AtM was all I talked about for quite some time.What a pleasant change! I'm sure a lot of BDers are quite envious...

Laitoste
02-22-2006, 08:38 PM
Apparently I'm relatively normal...won't my roommate be pleased!

Three weeks into my first year of college, my friend (recently met) and I held a birthday party for Frodo and Bilbo, at which we read Bilbo's birthday speech, played LOTR Monopoly (which my brother got me solely so I would play with him), watched the Fellowship, and had cupcakes. We ended up having 23 people join us at various points, mostly because of the food. She has marveled at us revealing our dorkiness so early in the year, and that we actually have friends since then!

With that same friend (and my poor roommate), we had a marathon on October 22, and we toasted Tolkien with one of his own poems at dinner (in front of quite a few people) on January 3.

The posters on our walls include the Fellowship movie poster, a map of the world, a map of Africa with all the Peace Corps locales marked out, a picture of the Hale-Bopp Comet over the Perrine Bridge in Idaho, and a set of four John Howe maps of Middle-Earth, and a picture for the Minnesota State Fair done by the artist who does the covers of Harry Potter (my roommate's, I swear), not to mention the picture of Gollum I put above my roommate's head.

I brought two of my action figures to school with me, along with my One Ring. Of the "fun" reading books I own (18), 10 are Tolkien-related. I still have more at home.

I turned down participating in another marathon because it wasn't on a "significant day", plus I was scared of the boys involved (slightly immature is an understatement).

In my history class (Jihad and the Crusades) last semester, we would end up talking about LOTR or Monty Python every day. Mostly because of me.

I am planning on a history/English major largely because of Tolkien.