Seth Walsh
Iconoclast
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People still do not get how much high social class matters specifically from about 9 to 22.
That window is where a person gets installed.
Not just educated.
Installed.
1/
By 9, the high-class kid is already learning things the lower-SES kid is not.
Not “maths” or “reading.”
I mean the real stuff.
How adults with money talk.
What confidence sounds like.
What a nice house feels like.
What is normal to ask for.
What kinds of futures are on the table.
By the time you notice it, it is already inside them.
2/
A high-class child does not wake up thinking “I am upper class.”
That is the point.
They just think life is supposed to feel ordered.
Quiet house.
Good schools.
Parents who know how systems work.
No chaos over small expenses.
No weird shame around ambition.
No sense that the floor could fall out.
That becomes their personality.
3/
A lower-SES child often gets something else entirely.
More noise.
More pressure.
More waiting.
More watching adults worry.
More talk about what things cost.
More sense that one mistake can become a problem.
That also becomes personality.
4/
Then people meet both at 19 and act like they are just seeing “individual differences.”
No.
You are seeing two nervous systems built under different conditions.
One was built in insulation.
The other was built in exposure.
5/
High social class in those years does something almost unfair:
it removes friction before the person even knows what friction is.
The kid gets the better school.
The cleaner teeth.
The sports club.
The safe bedroom.
The decent haircut.
The trip abroad.
The laptop that works.
The parent who can write an email properly.
The family friend who knows someone.
None of this looks dramatic on its own.
Together it creates a different human being.
6/
And the brutal part is that between 9 and 22, all of this compounds hard.
Because those are the years where you are forming:
your voice,
your face,
your style,
your friendship standards,
your confidence with the opposite sex,
your sense of whether prestigious places are “for people like you.”
That is the real inheritance.
7/
The high-class teenager usually gets to be a teenager.
The lower-SES teenager is often half an adult already.
More self-conscious.
More aware of money.
More embarrassed.
More likely to feel behind.
More likely to feel there is some code everyone else got handed earlier.
That feeling changes how you move.
8/
People talk a lot about rich kids having money.
The deeper thing is that they often have less psychic wear.
Less chronic embarrassment.
Less social hesitation.
Less feeling of being slightly wrong in every new room.
Less panic about how they come across.
That is why they can look so “natural.”
Natural is often just protected.
9/
From about 14 to 18, class starts showing up everywhere without being named.
Who goes skiing.
Who has a clean, spacious house for predrinks.
Who has parents with calm accents and polished friends.
Who gets subtly better guidance.
Who knows which universities matter.
Who can afford unpaid internships without calling them insane.
The lower-SES kid sees all this and just thinks:
something is off.
Something is different.
Something I cannot fully explain.
10/
Then 18 to 22 is where the gap can go nuclear.
One person goes through those years with fallback.
The other goes through them with consequence.
That changes everything.
The high-class kid can drift and still land well.
The lower-SES kid can make one mediocre choice and lose 3 years.
11/
A rich 20-year-old can be vague, unserious, even unimpressive, and still somehow keep moving upward.
Because the whole environment is carrying them.
Good surname.
Good university.
Good references.
Good pronunciation.
Good posture.
Good forgiveness.
They can be average and still look “promising.”
12/
Meanwhile a lower-SES 20-year-old can be sharper, hungrier, more impressive underneath, and still come off worse.
Because they are carrying extra weight the room cannot see.
Too tense.
Too eager.
Too direct.
Too unsure when they should be relaxed.
Too relaxed when they should know the code.
They are being judged on formatting as much as substance.
13/
That is why high class early on is so lethal as an advantage.
It gets under the skin before life starts being measured.
By the time careers begin, it already lives in:
the way you shake hands,
how comfortable you are around authority,
what you think is a realistic salary,
whether you expect to be heard,
whether you speak like someone asking permission or someone making plans.
14/
And this is why “just work hard” is such a stupid thing to say.
Work hard from where?
From the house with calm, books, space, contacts, and no financial dread?
Or from the house where stress has been in the wallpaper since childhood?
Those are not minor differences.
That is not the same race.
15/
High-class kids also get protected from ugly identity damage.
They are less likely to internalise:
“nice things are not for me”
“people like me do not go there”
“do not embarrass yourself”
“be realistic”
“do not ask for too much”
A lower-SES kid hears some version of this early, directly or indirectly.
That voice can stay for years.
16/
So much of what people call “presence” by 22 is just accumulated social ease from a better class environment.
They think it is charisma.
They think it is leadership.
They think it is breeding in some mystical sense.
A lot of the time it is just:
less shame,
less fear,
better rehearsal,
better surroundings,
more examples of successful adulthood.
17/
And yes, lower-SES kids can become harder, sharper, more dangerous in a good way.
But stop romanticising it.
There is nothing beautiful about learning too early that the world can humiliate you over money.
There is nothing noble about entering adulthood already tired.
18/
The deepest cut is this:
by 22, upper-class people often have not just more options, but a stronger self underneath them.
They have had years of being mirrored back to themselves as people who matter.
That changes posture.
That changes speech.
That changes romantic confidence.
That changes ambition itself.
19/
Lower-SES people often have to build that self from scratch while already competing.
That is why some of them bloom late and look “transformed.”
They were not inferior before.
They were under-formed by stress and underexposed to better worlds.
20/
So when people say class does not matter much anymore, I know they are lying or blind.
If you get high social class between 9 and 22, you do not just get advantages.
You get assembled differently.
And if you do not, you spend a huge part of adult life trying to rebuild in private what others received by osmosis.
