As someone who formerly indulged in a Goth group myself, and was surrounded by many "Goth girls", I can safely assure any and all outsiders to the very obscure, and in retrospect, pretty funny and hilariously-dated subculture vary just like any other member of any other demographic: it's down to how he/she is as a person first, that determines how people will perceive them.
The majority of the Goth girls I knew and talked to never satisfied one, generalist umbrella:
all of them were unique and characteristically-individual people. Some were quiet and anti-social, very much satisfying the brooding stereotype of Gothic enthusiasts in pop culture at large, where others showed tendencies of self-conscious insecurity which stemmed from lack of attention from family or friends and drove them to take up leather and buckle with the rest of us social outcasts. Some of them were even bubbly and upbeat, mostly because they liked going to Goth clubs and dance raves, which to some extend is why most of them still make up a good chunk of the rave community today (albeit for more underground musical tastes than anything as densely populated as Eurodance, Techno, or Nightcore. These gals were very much in the Aggrotech and Cyberpunk crowd).
Being "Goth" doesn't automatically equate to that trashy kid in makeup who drinks or smokes to be cool, dresses scantily for attention, forces people out of their comfort zone, or participates in grimy or distasteful activities just to "rebel." It's down to how the person under all the make-up and
Final Fantasy necklaces operates as an individual person.
On a side-note, I will also offer an embarassing secret that a portion of my fascination with occult novelties like Vampires has very much to do with my love of Goth girls. I think they're adorable, and
always make for great characters in fiction. :tongue: