Ashyukun wrote:
Adding in another interesting point...[a lot of good anecdotal information]
Granted we're obviously two different people- but have and were raised by the same parents only 15 years apart in culture and approach. Every indication I've seen is that in terms of raw intellect he's not THAT much below me, he just never has any drive to USE it unless it's ranting about some Harry Potter alternate-universe fanfiction he's really into.
You were not raised by the same parents. Same human beings maybe, but they were different people. They had aged 15 years, had raised a son, and they were in a different time with different expectations.
My brothers and I were in the “everyone gets a trophy!” culture. I remember my dad downplaying the trophies, and I can remember thinking they didn’t mean much other than “I played on this team this year”. I do remember that the trophy my freshman year of high school for most improved player actually meant something.
I can definitely relate to your brother. I got a 4.0 my 8th grade year, because I was able to finish the homework on the bus home or in the morning or at lunch. Never had to do actual homework outside of maybe a book report or similar project. Freshman year was similar, but it was getting harder. Still didn’t do homework though, because it wasn’t necessary—I was acing the tests! That is what mattered to me. I found homework pointless. I also loved to curl up and get lost in a book;. It was easier than actually doing something, it allowed me to simply ignore life, because life was hard. Why clean my room when I could read a book (Harry Potter or Lonesome Dove or The Great Gatsby… was all over, although I am still infatuated with HP).
That was, and is a struggle through college and into real life. Scraped through college with decent grades in an extremely tough major. Now though, I’m still fighting it. Why would I try to plan this wedding, something I don’t care about (see note below) when I could look up a car, or read a book, or play with the stock market?
I personally think it is an issue of us being the first generation to grow up with the internet. Our attention spans are short. We get bored easier, or else don’t deal with boredom as well. We don’t experience highs or lows, everything is in the middle. When I start to feel bad, I go over to Wikipedia and distract myself. And because of that, I never experience the highs either. I fought getting a smart phone for a long time because of this; without a smart phone, I have to experience real life whenever I’m away from a computer. I’m getting much better, in my opinion. But I still have a long way to go. Sad to say, but I should probably give up all forums. I’ve been thinking hard about it, and am thinking of implementing a strict 30 minute a day policy for all internet time. Not sure how I’ll keep myself to it though.
EDIT: People probably don't think this or notice it, other than my fiance. I graduated college in 4 years, I have a good job, I get to work every day and am generally happy. But I think I'm depressed or else have some other mental issue going on with this in mind.
note: I do care about getting married to her, and I care about having the people that mean a lot to us there. I don't care about the lighting. I don't care about the flowers, and I don't care about the stupid centerpieces.