Post by JOSEPH LEVI ANGOTTI on Aug 4, 2010 15:12:23 GMT -5
I WAS BORN OCTOBER, 11 AND AM NOW 24
JOSEPH LEVI
ANGOTTI
JOSEPH LEVI
ANGOTTI
[/center][/size][/blockquote]NICKNAMES:
Joey, Joe, & Lev
SEX:
Male
ORIENTATION:
2 on the Kinsey Scale (predominantly heterosexual, but more than incidentally homosexual)
JOB/STUDENT:
Intern for a clinical psychology program
FAMILY:
Mother: Sarah Angotti [previously Klein]
Father: Carmine Angotti
Older Sister: Helen Everett [married]
Younger Brother: Jason Angotti
EYES:
Pale green
HAIR:
Dark brown to black depending on the seasons
HEIGHT:
5'10"
WEIGHT:
168 pounds
DISTINGUISHING MARKS:
He has a splotchy birthmark on the back of his right knee & he owns glasses.
TATTOOS:
None
PIERCINGS:
None
BRIEF PAST:
The Angotti's are a classically New York family, being both Jewish on the mother's side and mostly Italian on the father's. Due to Joseph's mother following Judaism, he labels his self as a Jew, though loosely. For the first two years of his life, he lived in Brooklyn. When he turned two, his family moved to Maryland to find work and be closer to his father's relatives. His father's side of the family were loud and robust, differing greatly from his mother's withdrawn personality. Whereas his two siblings grew to be as outgoing as his father and his brothers, he became serious and quiet like his mother.
Very studios, Joseph maintained high grades throughout his school days. However, he was never recognized as a great scholar, mostly thanks to his refusal of participating in most class discussions. Though he gave out an air of being aloof and uncaring, Joseph actually was painfully shy of most of his peers. Having a perceptual error in his eyesight, he was never good at sports, and he was afraid that other kids in Maryland would discriminate against him because of his religion. Soon though, his act of pretending that he wanted no part of his schoolmate's lives became so frequent that it actually became part of him. Even now, it his difficult for him to make emotional connections with others.
In college, Joseph learned to be more sociable. His naturally dry and sarcastic sense of humor that used to confuse boys that were more sophomoric in their jokes finally began to understand him, and he slowly grew out of his gawky teenage phase. Still, he would rather be on his own than partying with others, so he was never an overly popular guy. In addition, he viewed his friends more as assets than anything. Someone to talk to or study with if he needed them. He never really liked one person more than the other, this true almost to the point where everyone was interchangeable. He was good at making friends, but only in the first stages of the relationship when their novelty had not yet run out. Once people caught on that he didn't grasp the idea of friendship with them, they left him. Good thing that Joseph was used to being alone.
His habit to stay away from parties may have helped him in the long run. He is now interning in Port Reeves for Dr. Wilson (a man that deals mostly with psychological addictions), and he has a successful career ahead of him. Though this pleases him, Joseph does grow sad over the thought of never having a family. He likes his privacy, but sometimes he does yearn for a meaningful relationship with others. It's just that when this finally happens, he feels the need to push the person away. Perhaps it may sound like Joseph needs more psycho-analysis than a handful of his future patients, but he obviously doesn't realize this.
MY NAME IS SAMANTHA AND I FOUND HATG AT AN AD ON STUNNINGLIVES