Yes, folks from M.I.T. could take classes at Wellesley. There's a shuttle bus, even. But not only would a Massachusetts Tool & Die grad remember that small detail, he'd never let you forget it.
Yes. Wellesley is also part of the 12 College Exchange, and while I was there we had a man from another college going to Wellesley, living on campus and everything, as part of that program. But still.
I know around a dozen people who are no longer the gender they were when we met. It's facebook, and from all I've heard, creep is a reasonable default assumption there. But don't dismiss the other possibilities out of hand.
So, if I knew someone back in the day, and changed gender in the meantime, and then tried to get in touch with old pals out of the blue, I'd probably mention something like "Oh, and you knew me as Jane Doe, back in the day. A lot's happened since then..."
There's the episode of WKRP where Herb (the self-proclaimed make-out man) meets a woman who remembers him from college and he doesn't remember her. When he finally gets her into bed, she casually mentions that she used to be a he and Herb freaks. The episode is hysterical if you know the characters. -- Dagonell
I was mostly commenting, in an oblique sort of way, on the warnings to Jane that the guy might of been legit. I think it's 100%-epsilon that he's not, in that Jane would have had a clue and looked more carefully if he might have been.
One gets this sort of thing a lot. These days, it takes the form "you can't believe what you read on the internet." The point is that people are really good at telling what's real and what's not, and generally don't need the cautionary tales. For every person taken in by a Nigerian bank president, there are a gazillion who laugh and point.
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Pretty icky.
Although, weren't there some guys who were allowed to take classes there?
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Just plucking at rare and random straws... :)
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-- Dagonell
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I was mostly commenting, in an oblique sort of way, on the warnings to Jane that the guy might of been legit. I think it's 100%-epsilon that he's not, in that Jane would have had a clue and looked more carefully if he might have been.
One gets this sort of thing a lot. These days, it takes the form "you can't believe what you read on the internet." The point is that people are really good at telling what's real and what's not, and generally don't need the cautionary tales. For every person taken in by a Nigerian bank president, there are a gazillion who laugh and point.
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