And by should have I mean “should have” because this kind of thing can be subjective.

I’ll start. Senior year of high school I would often skip class to go to the park and smoke weed with my partner (at the time). This park had a lot of birds. The sometimes silly, sometimes strategic, sometimes social and cooperative behavior of the birds blew my 17 year old stoned mind. I remember my partner and I would theorize about what they were doing and thinking. I thought it was super cool. I still think birds are super cool.

Now, many years later, I have a PhD in a behavior adjacent field. I don’t study birds specifically or anything like that, but those experiences and curiosities pushed me in this direction.

Maybe it was all inevitable: these are deep interests that would have been pulled out of me in one way or another. The tinder was inside of me and if it wasn’t getting stoned at the park as a teenager and watching birds that sparked the flame, something else would have. Who knows.

  • Ada@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    3 months ago

    I can answer the question the other way around. What should have helped me but ended up hindering me?

    University. I had undiagnosed ADHD, and 2E gifted student syndrome, so I went in to university with the world at my feet, only to fall hard. I never finished university, and ended up with a debt that took me years to pay off, and a complete loss of self confidence