@aegisheart My brother and I were both gifted, my brother more so than me and I have a few ideas of what
not to do. The major thing being having âI donât have to work hard to achieveâ being something they learn because theyâre not challenged. I straight up didnât have to study until my final year of school and into uni so I had no skills in that area. Because everything was so easy for me I had also learned that when solving a problem âif itâs hard I must be doing something wrongâ because for the most part in school it was true. And now I have to work around that thought because that doesnât apply to life.
My brother is the full blown warning pretty close to the worst case scenario, he has an IQ in the 140s but his final school results were below the 80th percentile, heâs in his mid 20s with no great career prospects, maybe one friend IRL and has never had a relationship, if heâs not working heâs gaming, still lives at home with my parents with no plans to move out, heâs also extremely unhealthy to the point I would be shocked if he made it to 50, itâs really upsetting. My parents didnât act of the warning signs of falling grades and they also didnât ensure that he was challenged in school, instead praising him for things he had achieved
in grade 3. Even when he was little my mother used to joke about how he could âcharmâ people into doing the hard parts of a task (e.g a craft) for him. Instead of taking it as a sign he neeeded more encouragement to do it. I think partly his whole identity was tied up in being âthe smart kidâ and my parents never really encouraged the other aspects of him outside of that (he was also charismatic, loved certain literature etc). They also didnât seek to remedy any obvious issues like his handwriting (which I suspect is dysgraphia) or other social skills, acting like because he was so smart it wouldnât really matter.
I also strongly suspect heâs autistic (would be shocked if he wasnât) and Iâm now diagnosed with ADHD (as of a 1.5 years ago) both of us showed
significant signs as children and the type of health professionals my parents were there was no way they wouldnât have known the signs, particularly with my brother. however the only time my parents ever brought us to a psychologist was to get IQ tested when we were little. I also suspect this is because my mother seem to be a narc so it was more important to take the âlook how much smarter my kids are than yoursâ tests than the tests that would actually help said kids. So youâre probably nothing like that but if you suspect any neurodiversity then definitely get that tested, not for medication (although that can be helpful) but because it allows you to access more specific and more helpful advice. Like now instead of looking for âhow to organise your pantryâ I look for âhow to organise your pantry for ADHDâ and itâs a bunch of things that seem like they would work for me. If I had known when I was studying I could have utilised ADHD study tips etc.
The other thing is, donât get too tied up in âyouâre smart you should be a doctor, or a lawyer etcâ. Those high up jobs have a certain lifestyle tied in which is a huge sacrifice. I ended up being really happy doing nursing (despite not initially choosing it because I thought I was above it) and I
wasnât even the smartest in my friendship group despite being the gifted child growing up. A lot of burned out gifted kids grow up to have ânormalâ jobs and then feel like theyâve failed because everyone expected them to be president. We
need smart teachers, nurses, hairdressers. Where do you think the pioneers in those fields come from? My husband is quite smart too but couldnât get into medicine and he became a maths teacher instead, heâs now working in a business where he can support me staying at home with the kids on his one income in one of the most expensive cities in the world. Plus heâs home a lot. Iâm very very happy being a SAHM and heâs very very happy with the lifestyle we had. Both of us have jobs that are âlowerâ than what we were told we were capable of.
Although I will say my husband and I are pretty close in IQ, maybe Iâm slightly higher but he is way way way better at studying. He grew up around smart people who worked hard (heâs Australian born Chinese) so he actually felt dumb until he became a teacher and really saw what the range of abilities was. It was normal to study, and he wasnât really a stand out. I think that did help him be productive.
ETA: my grammar does NOT portray me as a former gifted kid but I wrote this at 4am when my baby was refusing to sleep and I canât be bothered fixing it