• @HaiZhung@feddit.org
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    491 month ago

    You had someone to take care of you 24/7, always there for you. Cleaning, cooking, buying shit, etc. your parents were managing the household so you could learn.

    Look at children that didn’t have such support - they would perform much worse, usually.

    Ever went on a business trip or conference and stayed in a hotel? You will be surprised how much you get done in one day. Except the hotel can’t provide you with love :’)

    • @Flatfire@lemmy.ca
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      171 month ago

      I took this to mean University/College. I ask myself the same thing constantly now that I’m working full time. I don’t know how I dedicated the constant hours to schooling and a part time job for so many years. Maybe it’s just the opportunity for variety.

      • @Rekorse@sh.itjust.works
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        11 month ago

        We have more energy the younger we are, usually. Some people might alleviate severe health issues later in life and seem to gain energy though.

        And likely you could so college again, you just did it already and know what its worth, and more importantly know what it would be worth to do it all again.

        Some people leave college behind, some come back multiple times.

  • @kemsat@lemmy.world
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    91 month ago

    When you were in school you had played the same game fewer times. As you get older, the game is more & more the same, and it gets tedious.

    • GingaNinga
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      131 month ago

      I just went to school at 30 and noticed 2 things:

      1. i’m way more tired and have way less energy
      2. way more discipline and I understand things way faster, probably since my program is related to my undergrad.

      It is possible but it sucks going back to school after working. so stressful.

      • @Grass@sh.itjust.works
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        21 month ago

        I found it easier in general. no bullshit homework from 12 different classes all due at the same time and needing anywhere from 45 minutes to 3 hours of work each, no pretendo social heirarchy bullshit just 15 or so adults paying their own money to learn the same thing, probably other stuff. I have no energy, classes or not so, I didn’t really count that but it is indeed a thing.

    • @Carnelian@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      I don’t buy it, personally. There were plenty of older folks in my college program who thrived in their studies. Plenty of older folks at work who adapt to new training just fine.

      Personally I feel more focussed and capable of picking up new skills now than I ever did in my twenties. I just can’t believe your capacity for learning necessarily decreases with age.

      Yeah I’m aware that we observe a correlation. You know what I think actually happens? You remember back in school, teachers would always complain about the “summer vacation effect”? Kids would come back to school after break and it would be a huge slog getting them habituated back into productive learning. Year after year, affecting children at every age. The effect is noticeable after they disengage for only a couple of months.

      Now what happens if you go years or even decades without really challenging your adaptability? How hard would it be to get back into things, then? And because this effect required the passage of time to take hold, would most people not just assume it’s an inevitable part of getting older? What if it isn’t, and nearly everyone has the capacity to claw their way back?

      That’s my view. Ultimately it’s up to each of us how we want to handle our own journey of aging. I would recommend against believing your “ship has already sailed” at thirty years old, considering the success people find when they refuse to accept that.

      My apologies for making such a rant, and with such emotion haha. Your short comment didn’t really justify it, and this isn’t really directed at you. Just some stuff that’s been on my mind a lot as it is a very common sentiment.

      But to close out my train of thought, I would also add that most people consider sarcopenia to be inevitable as they get older. However, we now know that the effects are completely reversed in virtually everyone who engages with strength training into their old age, enabling them to walk around in their eighties with the same strength as an average 30 year old. But in order to receive these proven benefits, you need to believe that it is possible for you personally, and you need to try.

      • @FlexibleToast@lemmy.world
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        71 month ago

        There is a lot to be said about the maturity of someone taking classes at a later stage in life. I went back to get my CS degree after my time in the military. In high school I was a solid C student, in my associate degree before the military I was a B+ student, after the military I graduated Summa Cum Laude and the only two classes I didn’t get an A in were classes that I missed the first two weeks of school because I was deployed with the National Guard. The self-discipline makes a huge difference.

      • @otacon239@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        I think the STEM fields very well supports this. There are entirely new protocols, software, structures, algorithms, technologies and tons more coming out year over year.

        All those fields aren’t exclusively supported by fresh college students. Those are people who are having to constantly learn to stay in their field. If you don’t keep learning, the entire industry becomes inaccessible.