toji.
Diamond
- Joined
- Oct 8, 2023
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I want to share something important. I have just finished my university degree in Sociology and graduated with a GPA of 3.4—hardly glorious, and one I judge myself rather harshly for. I am a first-generation university graduate in my family; my father is an immigrant shaped by the coups d’état that took place in South America during the 1970s.
I am French and studied at a prestigious university in this region of Europe. It may surprise you to know that many people graduate with extremely high grades and yet make little real use of their intellect. I am referring to individuals who have mastered the educational system—the system of assessments and grading—who know how to please professors, and who attain positions not so much through intelligence as through their understanding of how the system works.
Now, I am not saying that this is inherently negative; I do not wish to be misunderstood. I myself was unaware of many of the strategies and “tricks” of the educational system, partly because my family did not attend university and partly because I was unable to connect with others. During my first two years at university, I struggled intensely with anxiety and depression. Had I known more, I would undoubtedly have achieved better results.
What I am getting at is that many people stop there: they master the system and forget how to think. I met several of the top-ranked students in my cohort who were incapable of reflecting on what they read, because they read only in order to obtain good grades.
This is deeply sad and, in a way, leads me to believe that intelligence often has little to do with grades and much more to do with the ability to truly understand what one learns and to apply it in life—to create, to help others, and to help oneself as well. That, I believe, is what defines a truly intelligent person.
Now that I have completed this process, I feel completely free. I am going to look for a job and start my journey in looksmaxing. I will be able to work and earn money just for myself and to cultivate myself.
I want to read what I like and learn from it, and do it not to satisfy a system that is foreign to me, but to satisfy myself and, from there, try to help others.
I have always loved philosophy, but I was not allowed to study it because of fears about my future. However, I believe that not listening to myself was the worst decision I have ever made.
I am French and studied at a prestigious university in this region of Europe. It may surprise you to know that many people graduate with extremely high grades and yet make little real use of their intellect. I am referring to individuals who have mastered the educational system—the system of assessments and grading—who know how to please professors, and who attain positions not so much through intelligence as through their understanding of how the system works.
Now, I am not saying that this is inherently negative; I do not wish to be misunderstood. I myself was unaware of many of the strategies and “tricks” of the educational system, partly because my family did not attend university and partly because I was unable to connect with others. During my first two years at university, I struggled intensely with anxiety and depression. Had I known more, I would undoubtedly have achieved better results.
What I am getting at is that many people stop there: they master the system and forget how to think. I met several of the top-ranked students in my cohort who were incapable of reflecting on what they read, because they read only in order to obtain good grades.
This is deeply sad and, in a way, leads me to believe that intelligence often has little to do with grades and much more to do with the ability to truly understand what one learns and to apply it in life—to create, to help others, and to help oneself as well. That, I believe, is what defines a truly intelligent person.
Now that I have completed this process, I feel completely free. I am going to look for a job and start my journey in looksmaxing. I will be able to work and earn money just for myself and to cultivate myself.
I want to read what I like and learn from it, and do it not to satisfy a system that is foreign to me, but to satisfy myself and, from there, try to help others.
I have always loved philosophy, but I was not allowed to study it because of fears about my future. However, I believe that not listening to myself was the worst decision I have ever made.
haha, fucking robots say that hope they fuckin die