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VERY PROTECTIVE...
Tekes dont let their pledges wear the letters of TKE until theyre initiated... and the new guys know that very well...
If there is to be a mark upon them, they add an extra E to TKE... Therefore, pledges refer to TKE as TEKE on their personal clothing or other items... They can remove the extra E at initiation... Only the big sis/little sis, wives, sometimes serious girlfriends wear letters - otherwise, NO OTHER MAN but a Teke... As far as using a pen, I dont see whats wrong with that... A pens a pen... youre not actually wearing anything... I wouldnt want another fraternity man to drive my truck, which has a BIG Tau Kappa Epsilon and TKE decal with flames... but if it were smaller, it wouldnt be a big deal... I better not see someone wearing letters in any way though... not even the coat of arms!!!! |
Don't worry about letters that are not your own. Follow whatever protocol your org. has set out, but forget what other orgs. are doing.
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I would never let a friend or any non-member borrow any of my sorority shirts, unless she was in the sorority too. There have been some people who have left our chapter (not alumni) that STILL where their sorority apparel, which really makes me mad. I don't think you have any right to wear my letters if you're not in my sorority. If you're not in the sorority, why would you want to wear clothes that represent them or if you don't know what the letters mean or such?
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Therefore, focusing solely on Jubilance's frame of mind, I read her post as her bringing up the issue of protocol strictly from a hypothetical standpoint, not an actual standpoint, as you are trying to allude to. In light of that, I felt that whether or not someone explicitly stating their particular org's protocol as extreme as irrelevant. If you have a point you are trying to make, please do so directly, as I am not understanding what you are getting at. If you are trying to allude to individual members taking protocol to extremes, I understand that and I agree with you. But I don't see what this has to do with whether or not anyone stating that their national protocol having such extreme measures. Hope this helps. |
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ETA: I wasn't correcting your post to Jubilance so no need to provide a summary of what she posted and what you posted. I am just stating that it seems as though the people posting in this thread aren't admitted extremists. So, we all agree that extreme is bad but abiding by organization protocol is good. |
My family drives my old truck, DZ decal on the back window and all. I guess if my stepdad doesn't mind tooling around town with a pink and green sticker on the vehicle, I don't either--it's not like he's going to be mistaken for a sister. :p However, I don't know what I'll do when my younger sister inherits the truck next year...I will probably ask her to take it off.
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Commit to something, then you will know why
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I think the reason some people do this, idolatry as you call it, is based on their experiences of how they became 'whatever'. For example, let's say there was a young woman who grew up in Boston going to the Boston Red Sox games with her dad. Sadly, her dad dies and the one true connection she had with him was the Boston Red Sox. She is such a strong fan of the Boston Red Sox because of an emotional connection she made via the team. Its not so much the team that she is connected to, it is the relationship that she made while going to the games with her dad - the team represents a strong relationship she had that meant something to her. Same with greek letters. One is not worshiping the letters / organization per se, it is just that during the intake / pledging period relationships were formed, emotions were expressed, you learned more about yourself and others. The greek letters represent a period in your life when you changed. Some people are protective about their letters because 1) they know and respect what they have learned about them and 2) it is a represenation of bonds that were made and since not everyone experienced that bonding, then that person feels that not everyone can 'use a pen' with his / her letters on it. And...I've seen some greeks who are not very protective of their letters for various reasons. |
Re: Commit to something, then you will know why
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Personally speaking, I was a die-hard Alpha Phi Omega brother. I ate, breathed, and slept Alpha Phi Omega to the point that my relationship with the org bordered on idolatry--I'm talking attending APO functions, representing with nalia, and searching far and wide for tidbits of historic trivia facts and collecting and compiling them in a blue binder. Having said that, I never saw the point of keeping someone from using a pen or a glass just because it had the APO letters on them. Matter of fact, I went out on a date with one woman, and she was a little cold, so I gave her my blue APO cardigan to wear--and I let her keep it for about 2 weeks, no questions or complaints. I later gave it to a Gamma Sig as a souvenir (I was told that the sweater was later jacked from her by some fellow brothers--who, I don't know). Also, my mother "borrowed" my airbrushed APO shirt with the shield and letters on it--and got her drivers license picture taken wearing it. I could've made a big stink about it, but I didn't see the point, and the net result of it was it really wasn't affecting anybody. Again, a love for something or someone is one thing. "Love" to the point of worship is another. |
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