When Does High School Stop Being Important?

When Does High School Stop Being Important?

  • Less than six months after Graduation

    Votes: 91 70.0%
  • One Year

    Votes: 10 7.7%
  • Two Years

    Votes: 8 6.2%
  • Three Years

    Votes: 1 0.8%
  • Four Years

    Votes: 4 3.1%
  • Five-Eight Years

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Eight-Ten Years

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • NEVER!! HIGH SCHOOL IS THE DEFINING POINT OF YOUR LIFE!!!

    Votes: 16 12.3%

  • Total voters
    130
The moment you leave. That's not even the worst part. The worst part is when you realize you put up with BS for 4 years just to end up in all the shitty low paying jobs high school dropouts would have gotten years ago. American high school is a waste of time. They don't teach you shit except how to pass tests and BS about going to college. Everything about it is complete utter BS and I was glad to get the hell away from it. It was a complete waste of time.

I am not going to be a boomer tier jackass and say stay in school. But I won't tell you to drop out either. It's not my place. Do what you think is best.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Clown College
More than likely, if the teachers don’t care you shouldn’t care.
 
I've known a person who carried high school drama into his 30s. He's one of those people that can't be told he's wrong about anything without throwing a conniption fit. If he had a public presence, I'd definitely write up a thread here.

It's already sad enough if you're still carrying on about high school shit the second your age ticks over to 20. 30 should double as an autism diagnosis.
 
An interesting question. I think a huge chunk of it is how much you were engaged with high school life. I wasn't very at all, I didn't really hang out with anybody (outside of class) but nobody bullied me either, I was just sort of apart from it and largely by choice. People who really dwell in their high school years are, I'd say, the ones who either were at their social peak - think the stereotypical quarterback Chad/prom queen Stacy - and the rest of life never measured up, or they had a really bad experience (was a freak, bullied, embarassed themself constantly) so they have some "trauma" (not real trauma, I mean, but gay sissy trauma) from it. I rarely think about high school and when I do it's generally with mild fondness for people I remember from it. But I knew it was bullshit at the time and I remember liking some classes a lot but often just feeling tired on getting home. It was bullshit and I thought (still think) it was a waste of my time and I could have done better things on my own, but didn't hate it.

College was when life felt good, I didn't work for money during it so in a way that was just extended adolescence but I did have a circle of friends I hung out with and I loved class and even when I had to do things I didn't like it felt a lot better because I was there by choice. You're not a slave at that point. So college was like the perfect world, because I got to live alone and do adult things while still really just being a kid. I felt like I learned much about myself and living in college, like the world actually opened up to me instead of being some dull mirage. Ayn Rand wrote about disliking childhood and I think my view on it is a bit like hers, I wanted to rush into the adult world. Now I wish I was in extended adolescence again. I have no drama from college but I do have regrets about mistakes I made in how I interacted with certain people, particularly one friendship that I think needed to be ended but which I could have saved if I had known better at the time, one that I should have kept up with but let pass, and one that I think I was not real good to my friend in.

Graduate school (since most people don't do graduate school, this is where it stops being relatable) feels more like the shitty high school experience than high school did, because although I did pick my field and I do want to finish it now, I hate most everybody around me but (unlike college) have to deal with the same people semester after semester, and no friends outside of it, and the work feels shitty and pointless, the only stuff I've really learned is what I've taught myself. And then there's that awful feeling that I've spent a third of my life expectancy on this and now there's no more time to delay Real Adulthood. It's funny, too, I used to feel like an old man in high school, then I felt like an adult (though in hindsight it was more like a teenager) in college, and now I feel like a high school kid! Despite living far away from home and living on my own salary I earn working for the school. It's the social atmosphere, I think. Being a loner actually has some big upsides, because if you don't involve yourself with normalfaggots much then you aren't susceptible to the pressures they put on you.

I think that we all have a desire for freedom. We also all have appetites, and appetites grow when they're filled and shrink when they're denied. To be a loner and to stay a loner, the appetite for socialization stays small, but to be a loner and then branch out into having a fulfilling social life, and then to lose that, the appetite has grown and now it is a stressor that didn't have to be there. But to have never done so denies a lot of the richness of life. And I have a suspicion that the angst of a high school kid comes not so much from their age or their "hormones" or all that shit but from the phase they go through of having to interact with judgmental and cruel people for the first time, little kids having a capacity for cruelty but one that is fleeting, that comes from thoughtlessness more than being calculated. To go from a small circle of people who, despite some flaws, are essentially honest and good to a circle of phoniness and backbiting and social jockying is cruel.

None of this really has anything to do with the question OP asked. I think too much for my own good and these are thoughts I've chewed on for a very long time.
 
High School was never important to me. It was a waste of time and I learned nothing. Real education starts once you get out into the real world.
 
An interesting question. I think a huge chunk of it is how much you were engaged with high school life. I wasn't very at all, I didn't really hang out with anybody (outside of class) but nobody bullied me either, I was just sort of apart from it and largely by choice. People who really dwell in their high school years are, I'd say, the ones who either were at their social peak - think the stereotypical quarterback Chad/prom queen Stacy - and the rest of life never measured up, or they had a really bad experience (was a freak, bullied, embarassed themself constantly) so they have some "trauma" (not real trauma, I mean, but gay sissy trauma) from it. I rarely think about high school and when I do it's generally with mild fondness for people I remember from it. But I knew it was bullshit at the time and I remember liking some classes a lot but often just feeling tired on getting home. It was bullshit and I thought (still think) it was a waste of my time and I could have done better things on my own, but didn't hate it.

College was when life felt good, I didn't work for money during it so in a way that was just extended adolescence but I did have a circle of friends I hung out with and I loved class and even when I had to do things I didn't like it felt a lot better because I was there by choice. You're not a slave at that point. So college was like the perfect world, because I got to live alone and do adult things while still really just being a kid. I felt like I learned much about myself and living in college, like the world actually opened up to me instead of being some dull mirage. Ayn Rand wrote about disliking childhood and I think my view on it is a bit like hers, I wanted to rush into the adult world. Now I wish I was in extended adolescence again. I have no drama from college but I do have regrets about mistakes I made in how I interacted with certain people, particularly one friendship that I think needed to be ended but which I could have saved if I had known better at the time, one that I should have kept up with but let pass, and one that I think I was not real good to my friend in.

Graduate school (since most people don't do graduate school, this is where it stops being relatable) feels more like the shitty high school experience than high school did, because although I did pick my field and I do want to finish it now, I hate most everybody around me but (unlike college) have to deal with the same people semester after semester, and no friends outside of it, and the work feels shitty and pointless, the only stuff I've really learned is what I've taught myself. And then there's that awful feeling that I've spent a third of my life expectancy on this and now there's no more time to delay Real Adulthood. It's funny, too, I used to feel like an old man in high school, then I felt like an adult (though in hindsight it was more like a teenager) in college, and now I feel like a high school kid! Despite living far away from home and living on my own salary I earn working for the school. It's the social atmosphere, I think. Being a loner actually has some big upsides, because if you don't involve yourself with normalfaggots much then you aren't susceptible to the pressures they put on you.

I think that we all have a desire for freedom. We also all have appetites, and appetites grow when they're filled and shrink when they're denied. To be a loner and to stay a loner, the appetite for socialization stays small, but to be a loner and then branch out into having a fulfilling social life, and then to lose that, the appetite has grown and now it is a stressor that didn't have to be there. But to have never done so denies a lot of the richness of life. And I have a suspicion that the angst of a high school kid comes not so much from their age or their "hormones" or all that shit but from the phase they go through of having to interact with judgmental and cruel people for the first time, little kids having a capacity for cruelty but one that is fleeting, that comes from thoughtlessness more than being calculated. To go from a small circle of people who, despite some flaws, are essentially honest and good to a circle of phoniness and backbiting and social jockying is cruel.

None of this really has anything to do with the question OP asked. I think too much for my own good and these are thoughts I've chewed on for a very long time.
There's some very strange psychological complex that exists that seems to cause people to hyperfixate on certain stages of life, but the weird thing is that in a lot of cases the supposed good times they had are imaginary and a lot of the things they claimed happen, or how they happened, don't really line up with what anyone else says.

Nostalgia almost seems more like a fantasy that's imagined based upon later developed associations with the concept of certain stages of life, not a person's actual experiences, and honestly it seems to co-occur a lot with fetish shit. Like the tranny types are obviously enormously fetishistic, love biographical revisionism, and are obsessed with nostalgia and childhood.

And speaking of them, much like how they like to imagine themselves as women because they associate the concept of women with control, much like how pedophiles like to imagine themselves as children because they associate the concept of children with control, or how furries like to imagine themselves as animals because they associate the concept of animals with control, I think the same occurs with nostalgic obsession with certain stages of life.
A person has come to associate the concept of certain stages of life with control, whether or not their lived experiences actually support that idea.


High school will always matter because it happened and led to now. On the other hand how long before it should stop mattering emotionally one way or another? Preferably by the day after you graduate. Unless reminiscence is going to help you somehow there are more interesting and potentially fruitful things to think about. The very idea of nostalgia seems a little odd and immature, and it doesn't seem to be associated with healthy mental states
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Grumpy Pickle Rick
It stops being important the first august after your graduation (2-3 months).

By that I mean by the time you stop seeing your highschool friends on any regular basis and start being entirely focused on college.
Also long enough for your high-school sweetheart were going to long-range date to have gotten tired of you or you gotten tired of them and found something new.

(Not my experience, but seen dumbasses go through that whole routine.)
 
An interesting question. I think a huge chunk of it is how much you were engaged with high school life. I wasn't very at all, I didn't really hang out with anybody (outside of class) but nobody bullied me either, I was just sort of apart from it and largely by choice. People who really dwell in their high school years are, I'd say, the ones who either were at their social peak - think the stereotypical quarterback Chad/prom queen Stacy - and the rest of life never measured up, or they had a really bad experience (was a freak, bullied, embarassed themself constantly) so they have some "trauma" (not real trauma, I mean, but gay sissy trauma) from it. I rarely think about high school and when I do it's generally with mild fondness for people I remember from it. But I knew it was bullshit at the time and I remember liking some classes a lot but often just feeling tired on getting home. It was bullshit and I thought (still think) it was a waste of my time and I could have done better things on my own, but didn't hate it.

College was when life felt good, I didn't work for money during it so in a way that was just extended adolescence but I did have a circle of friends I hung out with and I loved class and even when I had to do things I didn't like it felt a lot better because I was there by choice. You're not a slave at that point. So college was like the perfect world, because I got to live alone and do adult things while still really just being a kid. I felt like I learned much about myself and living in college, like the world actually opened up to me instead of being some dull mirage. Ayn Rand wrote about disliking childhood and I think my view on it is a bit like hers, I wanted to rush into the adult world. Now I wish I was in extended adolescence again. I have no drama from college but I do have regrets about mistakes I made in how I interacted with certain people, particularly one friendship that I think needed to be ended but which I could have saved if I had known better at the time, one that I should have kept up with but let pass, and one that I think I was not real good to my friend in.

Graduate school (since most people don't do graduate school, this is where it stops being relatable) feels more like the shitty high school experience than high school did, because although I did pick my field and I do want to finish it now, I hate most everybody around me but (unlike college) have to deal with the same people semester after semester, and no friends outside of it, and the work feels shitty and pointless, the only stuff I've really learned is what I've taught myself. And then there's that awful feeling that I've spent a third of my life expectancy on this and now there's no more time to delay Real Adulthood. It's funny, too, I used to feel like an old man in high school, then I felt like an adult (though in hindsight it was more like a teenager) in college, and now I feel like a high school kid! Despite living far away from home and living on my own salary I earn working for the school. It's the social atmosphere, I think. Being a loner actually has some big upsides, because if you don't involve yourself with normalfaggots much then you aren't susceptible to the pressures they put on you.

I think that we all have a desire for freedom. We also all have appetites, and appetites grow when they're filled and shrink when they're denied. To be a loner and to stay a loner, the appetite for socialization stays small, but to be a loner and then branch out into having a fulfilling social life, and then to lose that, the appetite has grown and now it is a stressor that didn't have to be there. But to have never done so denies a lot of the richness of life. And I have a suspicion that the angst of a high school kid comes not so much from their age or their "hormones" or all that shit but from the phase they go through of having to interact with judgmental and cruel people for the first time, little kids having a capacity for cruelty but one that is fleeting, that comes from thoughtlessness more than being calculated. To go from a small circle of people who, despite some flaws, are essentially honest and good to a circle of phoniness and backbiting and social jockying is cruel.

None of this really has anything to do with the question OP asked. I think too much for my own good and these are thoughts I've chewed on for a very long time.
I do agree, I miss the element of not being able to be alone even when I sometimes wanted to be, I remember being swarmed when I was trying to study or getting random tackle hugs walking to class.

I feel like university was the remnants of high school, I went to the same one as many of my graduating class but the group shrunk, it was a lot farther and I was more tired. There were a handful I wish I had more time to make up with that didn't go or schedules, but mostly we're on good terms now. Made some great friends in undergrad, but a lot fewer and they're mostly gone now too, one I wish I could redo a day or two to fix.

Everything past that, I've hated most people I've had to interact with and seen my friends less often. Real Adulthood is like a shitty high school experience, social jockying and fake people, the sad part is it's so normalized I think they genuinely like me but are unable to have real friendships. What scares me the most about real adulthood is I know quite a few rich and famous people who are genuinely stoked to see me, they're struggling to find genuine friends with time and money so what chance does anyone with a more normal or even above average life have?
 
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