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Old Jul 04, 2014, 01:57 AM
Teacake Teacake is offline
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Member Since: Dec 2013
Location: American Southwest
Posts: 1,277
Quote:
Originally Posted by 1914sierra View Post
I mostly agree with you. GT kids tend to be very empathic and concerned with world issues, equality, etc. They have very high standards of idealism and fairness generally which is highly admirable. But at the same time, it is interesting to sit down with a roomful of GT kids and hear them very openly profess their impatience and lack of understanding for fellow students who don't easily understand things at the same depth they do. They are remarkably open about this but realize, to their credit, that they are probably being quite unfair. I do see them as highly critical of themselves at the same time. The tendency for perfectionism in themselves just sometimes spills over in their frustration with the rest of the world. It's not a bad thing, just fairly typical.
It's true. We want everything to be fair and just. We have such high standards for humanity. And when we are frustrated by the different standards of the majority we get called superior, which kills us because 1. It's true 2. It contradicts our ideals of egalitarianism. It's a double bind.

Annemarie Roeper wrote maybe we develop a superego while we still age appropriate do magical thinking..

Think about that.