PowerC said:
So, being the young man that I am, I'm beginning to realize that I am generally not taken seriously because of my age. Fellow Escapists do you believe that those younger than 18 can contribute to intelligent conversation, and have truly good, solid opinions?
I doubt many people (especially here) would suggest that age is necessarily a great predictor of intelligent conversation. That said, it
is at least a decent one, though that's more a distributional claim than an individual one. There's definitely a personal effect too though - as a similarly intelligent and well-spoken young man I remember being disappointed that people wouldn't take me seriously or didn't think that I could keep up with them in conversation.
In hindsight, they were at least a little bit right. I was a genuinely intelligent and well-spoken for my age; I don't think I was mistaken in thinking that when I was younger. But I do realise that those things can only get you so far. Age really, truly does make a difference in a lot of things. Also, intelligence and conversational ability generally doesn't just peak. The fact that you are intelligent and well-spoken now means that you will likely be even moreso in the future. Thus present-you will always be a bad conversationalist compared to future-you.
PowerC said:
On a related note, how was or is High School for you?, awful waste of time or did you have the good fortune to be one the the fabled, yet overrated "popular" and are you as disappointed as I am that the first several pages of Images are of High School Musical when you search "High School" in google?
High school was relatively boring, but mostly fine. I wasn't one of the "popular" people, but I always feel like people make way too big a deal out of that designation (as students, but even more, especially among nerds, in hindsight). I imagine (well...know) people probably thought of me as unpopular, but that didn't prevent me from having friends in every social circle of high school from the popular kids to the nerds to the music geeks to the jocks to the goths. Most of the time, the main enforcer of segregation by popularity is oneself. I never really paid any attention to it and if anyone ever did tried to bar me from socializing, I just ignored them. If you pointedly ignore or bypass such people in public, they'll usually be too embarassed by their lack of real authority to continue. To back this up a little, most of the people I know who went to my high school thought that the social structure was extremely rigid and tend to think really negatively about their time high school, so I really do think that my attitude made a significant difference.
Typically, the people who complain about being tormented in high school are the people whose intelligence far outpaced their maturity. In many cases, the maturity still hasn't really caught up.
So, yes, you can still enjoy high school and enjoy relative social mobility despite being a long-haired, slightly-overweight nerd who wears t-shirts with jokes about binary (also, life goes on: none of these things are true of me anymore (except the nerd bit)(and the hair is pretty long, though I can actually take care of it now and tend to get complements rather than mocking snickers)). The key is not to care what people think. Except not that fake kind of not caring where you care about making sure that everyone knows you don't care (the stupid "outcast" social identity).
You have plenty of time to care what people think of you after you leave high school, when you can choose what people you want in your life and aren't expecting to never talk to the majority of them again after a couple of years.
Edit: I realize that a lot of this sounds like I'm saying that people who were tormented in high school were "asking for it". And that's pretty much exactly what I'm saying. Obviously there are exceptions, but the overwhelming majority of people I know who complain are complaining about problems that they themselves created, gave credence to, or at least exacerbated (and I don't mean created as in "you should have pretended not to be a nerd").