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There’s Something Really Amazing, Raw, Superior, and Unique About Self-Education

 |  ESTIMATED READING TIME:  3 MINUTES

I replied to a comment while watching a video about human behavioral biology.

aletter1718 said:
honestly, Its crazy how much easier information is retained when you voluntarily seek it. When i was in school i would have never listened to this and would have been dying to get out of there. Now that i have the ability to learn on my own time I retain and look for information on a much higher level. Incredible.

My reply:

The truth has been spoken. 🐐 👏🏻

I don’t like being tested in any way, shape, or form, and back in school, whether I was excellent at a subject or not, I would always try to get out of the classroom as soon as possible during exams. It’s weird how I have this kind of seemingly counter-productive stubbornness when I’m being tested by an individual or an institution, whereas on my own free time, I would happily choose to learn about something, and revisit it over and over until it’s stuck. I literally find myself learning about new stuff every day, and the fact that there are no tests involved makes me feel like an old school knowledge seeker from back where institutions weren’t a thing. I have no degrees (I left my original mediocre high school degree at the university when I decided to drop out unannounced after passing all my first-semester exams with flying colors), and yet I helped people from all over the world with all kinds of tech problems. I never thought in a million years that something that I started learning on my own when I was a teenager would one day lead to helping a business owner with a 5-million-dollar income.

My English teacher back in high school once said to a supervisor, and his assistant — out of the blue — while I was there, “The thing about Ahmed is that he’s very opinionated.” Before that, he was like, “I brought the guy who’s gonna fix your computer, guys.” And I was like, “But that wasn’t our agreement, Teach!” Since I asked him to come with me to speed up the bureaucratic process of getting a copy of my school certificate. 😅 I ended up removing malware manually from the supervisor’s computer, optimizing the system, and filling out the whole school certificate myself in like a minute, which made me wonder, “Wow, and they say I have to wait from Monday through Thursday for this? Goddamn bureaucrats!” 😂 It’s one of my earliest memories as an IT guy. I remember while I was working on their potato PC, the supervisor being so condescending like, “Well, what you’re [capable of] doing isn’t really ‘in parallel’ of what we teach at the school.” as if that were a bad thing. Since I never miss a chance to be sassy, I was like, “Well, if I relied on what we’re taught here, I’d still be struggling to differentiate between a mouse, and a keyboard.” And then he said, “Well, but you skip school to learn these things, and that’s not good.” And I was like, “Well, you’re not the one in class every day, having to deal with annoyingly talkative students who don’t even know how to put their pens down without making noise. As far as I’m concerned, skipping school to learn really interesting stuff is always worth it.” And then he just shook his head in disapproval. Thing is, that supervisor knew my dad very well, so I always assumed he just liked to play the devil’s advocate, while also trying to avoid giving those who are around the impression that there’s some kind of favoritism involved; I actually appreciate people like that, because I don’t want people to treat me in a certain way just because they know my dad, and I’m too unapologetic to care, because just like many people survive by being dishonest, and evasive, I survive by being honest, and direct.

Finally, Thank you, aletter1718, for being the reason I wrote all this. 😁🙏🏻