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I found this interesting opinion piece on the New York Times Web site. I'm a subscriber, but if you're not, the site requires registration but otherwise is free: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/01/opinion/politics/life-without-regret.html
Comments
Perhaps you would comment on your own opinion of the article?
I tried to back door into the article but their IT folk outwitted me.
Decisions
Decisions made early in life indeed do affect the direction and fulfillment of one's life.
Unfortunately for me, learning came easy and wisdom too late. My mind absorbs concepts easily, and I'm blessed with being able to learn in all three forms of teaching. I can read material, hear a lecture about that material and observe others applying their knowledge of the material and come away with that knowledge embedded in my memory banks equally well by all three. That plus the ability to learn on the fly by doing and figuring it out as I go along has crippled my socioeconomic development.
In my K-8 school homework didn't carry much weight in grading. So I opted not to bother since everything I needed was covered in class. I could easily prove I knew the subject by passing a test. High school was a different matter. Homework was given fifty percent of the weight of the overall grade in a class. I was concerned with learning the material and not with the grade I got because my career path was in the trades. I wasn't going to college. I gradated high school with a 1.5 GPA. It was then I discovered that apprenticeship programs wanted a 2.5 or better to be accepted. No body told me that.
It wasn't until five years later that I was working one dead end job after another that I finally asked how I could get around the GPA deficiency. I was told that I could get a GED with a good percentile. I'm sure that they thought I'd be a couple of years doing that. But I went in and took the GED exam cold. I had indeed learned all the subject matter. I scored in the 85th percentile (equal to a 3.5 GPA in high school). And that was after letting that all slide for five years. But by then I was too old to jump through all the hoops. I had to wait nearly a year for my first time to apply. You can apply only once a year and they never take a person until he's applied at least three times and they also never take a person after age 25. I would be 26 by the time I could apply three times.
Would I trade the might have been life for the one I have now? No. If I had applied myself in high school and jumped through the hoops, and the applied for my apprenticeship I'd never have gone to the Job Corp and would never have found out about the Upward Bound program that led me to take a summer course at U of O where I met my wife and started on this life. Too many good things have come from this life to trade it for a might have been life.
Hugs
Patricia
Happiness is being all dressed up and HAVING some place to go.
Semper in femineo gerunt
Ich bin eine Mann
Only In The NYT?
Would an article like this be published. In the UK maybe in The Guardian. In Australia forget it, unless the Australian Financial Review picked it up in their weekend extras.
Very thoughtful and insightful.
Guardian
In the UK, the Grauniad is now deeply transphobic. Its sister paper, The Observer, is even worse.
This fits me well
This Irish Times would quite likely either have an opinion piece like this or reprint the NYT article. They have agreements with NYT, The Guardian and FT to share articles of common interest.
I, myself, have never been one of those who 'knew from birth' that I was trans. Up to now I have found myself excluded from the definition for one reason or another. It is only recently that the expansion of the term 'trans' to be a more inclusive umbrella has allowed me to acknowledge that I am trans. I don't fit the binary definition and I have only minor body dysmorphia (mainly about body hair and lack of head hair) so I have always had difficulty believing that I was real.
Now I'm 68 and doing something about it. I doubt I will ever have surgery. I may not even socially transition. What I am doing is dismantling the internal walls that hid the authentic Me from myself. I'm also getting laser hair removal, going to a monthly meeting/outing with trans women in Dublin and indulging in some salon experiences. The change to my mental health has been dramatic.
Archived
https://archive.is/RNfSL
The Link
Won't work for me. It's reported to be down.
It is deeply disappointing that what I thought was a quality newspaper (The Guardian) has succumbed to Murdochian/Fox/SkyNews propaganda and lies. Isn't it amazing that our principal financial paper in Oz is defined as left-wing?
Late to comment . . .
. . . But I agree; this was a well-reasoned and interesting analysis. And, many really penetrating points. One of my favorites: a life without regret is not a human life.
Emma