The Unique Challenges of Studying as a Gifted Kid

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  • čas přidán 22. 05. 2024
  • In this video, we'll explore effective study strategies designed specifically for gifted kids who might not have developed traditional study habits due to their innate abilities.
    Our Healthy Gamer Coaches have transformed over 10,000 lives. Be the next success story: bit.ly/3llp744
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    Gifted individuals often excel naturally in various academic domains, but they may encounter challenges when it comes to studying and coping with classroom difficulties. We'll delve into this unique situation, addressing the struggles gifted kids might face and offering specialized study methods to help bridge this gap.
    Dr. K’s Guide to Mental Health explores Anxiety, Depression, ADHD, and Meditation
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    Comprehensive mental health resources here: explore.healthygamer.gg/menta...
    ▼ Timestamps ▼
    ────────────
    1:00 - Life as a gifted kid
    4:30 - Training your mind for study
    6:20 - Start studying to teach
    8:40 - Dealing with boredom
    10:40 - The Pomodoro Technique
    13:20 - What’s your system of studying?
    16:00 - How to take breaks
    17:10 - We never learned how to learn
    ────────────
    DISCLAIMER
    Healthy Gamer is an online community and resource platform for gamers and their families. It does not provide medical services or professional counseling, and it is not a substitute for professional medical care. Our coaches are peer supporters, not professionally trained experts, and they cannot provide medical service. If you or a loved one are experiencing an emergency, please call your nation's emergency telephone number.
    All guests of Healthy Gamer are informed of the public, non-medical nature of the content and have expressly agreed to share their story.
    #healthygamergg #giftedkid #studying

Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @buybuydandavis
    @buybuydandavis Před rokem +3998

    "Why would I need to help you if you were already getting straight As?"
    Parents need to understand that gifted children are special needs children.
    If they're getting straight As *without effort* they are not only not developing the work habits that other kids learn who *need* to put in effort, but they're being *rewarded* for not putting in effort.
    They're learning *exactly the wrong thing*, that success can come without effort.
    It's a developmental disaster.
    The problem is that most people, your parents included, don't understand that the most important thing kids need to learn in school isn't the information pumped into them, it's *how to operate themselves*.
    School is less of a supply store of data and more of a gym to work out in.
    Picking up the weights isn't about taking the weights home, it's about taking home the *effect* picking up the weights has on you. To get a positive effect, you have to lift enough weight to tax your strength. If you don't, you're just wasting your time.

    • @manavnayyar
      @manavnayyar Před rokem +149

      Such a well articulated paragraph. I am going to save it.

    • @yeyenico1151
      @yeyenico1151 Před rokem +14

      Thank you for articulating a an extremely vital piece of information ^^

    • @TheBanjoShowOfficial
      @TheBanjoShowOfficial Před rokem +86

      As a kid who was considered gifted after testing in K-12 this is ultimately the most true thing I’ve ever read in regards to my schooling. I rarely, _rarely_ studied for any exams and I passed most things with little effort. As a result, I now struggle in the real world because I was raised with this concept that I can achieve things with little effort. It also didn’t help that I picked up on their teaching methods that often contrasted quite heavily with the tests and exams themselves. Often the curriculum in a classroom would “overteach” let’s call it, and the exams would often be a lot easier, which I picked up on. I realized that what they would teach would not be proportional to the content on the exams, which led me to find even less reason to study since I knew it would be overcompensating for the test itself. Secondly, the part about school being, effectively, a gym rather than a place for data storage is ultimately very true as well. School is, or at least, should be, a place to teach critical thinking skills. The information rots, but the processes by which you obtained that information should be retained during a decade of schooling. Give a man a fish and he eats for a day, teach a man to fish and he will feed a village.

    • @ChaoticNeutralMatt
      @ChaoticNeutralMatt Před rokem +7

      With AI development being such a similar topic, I wonder how you make sure the second is learned and not just the first.

    • @rayanmozamel1458
      @rayanmozamel1458 Před rokem +20

      The Best solution is making curriculams that chalanges them the same way normal curriculams challenges the average kids
      So thing that respect their brain u know
      And then they learn to work Hard cuz they're facing same amount of
      challenges as an average kid
      And also making them use the most of thire potentials
      Every special needs kid need curriculams & study enviroment that is most suitable for them

  • @martinlutherkingjr.5582
    @martinlutherkingjr.5582 Před rokem +2405

    Can you make a video about the unique challenges of studying as a cursed kid?

    • @letsreadtextbook1687
      @letsreadtextbook1687 Před rokem +492

      ...cursed kid? Did your parents sacrifice you to demon or something?

    • @martinlutherkingjr.5582
      @martinlutherkingjr.5582 Před rokem +200

      @@letsreadtextbook1687 Inverse of gifted

    • @raifikarj6698
      @raifikarj6698 Před rokem +47

      ​@@letsreadtextbook1687 like the video of parents teaching their kid even where they laid out answer and even whispering answer to the kid ear. The kid still give wrong answer because the kid "Feel" That was the right thing maybe?

    • @letsreadtextbook1687
      @letsreadtextbook1687 Před rokem +45

      @@martinlutherkingjr.5582 Oh you mean stupid. They need private mentor in addition to normal studying. Tho normals can benefit from those as well

    • @shar3859
      @shar3859 Před rokem +79

      underrated comment and the joke flew over everyone's heads lol

  • @TreNollFem
    @TreNollFem Před 4 měsíci +557

    One thing I have thought about is that many "gifted kids" gets into a spiral of "I could have done it if I tried", when seeing others succeed using their hard work. If you try to escape the "I could have done it if I tried", and attempt to see yourself as something else than a gifted child, it helps you understand what you need to do in order to accomplish what the hard working people are accomplishing.

    • @mixishere
      @mixishere Před 3 měsíci +2

      me

    • @ladanabdi9954
      @ladanabdi9954 Před 3 měsíci

      Too real

    • @InternetCrusader-rb7ls
      @InternetCrusader-rb7ls Před 3 měsíci +3

      What does this even mean?

    • @sabitamarndi9827
      @sabitamarndi9827 Před 3 měsíci +15

      @@InternetCrusader-rb7ls It means that the 'gifted kids' still think highly of themselves even after failing, they think that they could have aced the tests if they had tried, but since they were not interested in studying they didn't put in much effort so they failed. This mind set is very unhealthy. It could make one feel really under confident and regretful in the long run. So what they need is a reality check and humble themselves.

    • @EdytheAkemi
      @EdytheAkemi Před 3 měsíci

      Omg thats me lol

  • @DL-hg7eb
    @DL-hg7eb Před rokem +57

    The irony of finding this when distracted from a study session

  • @nathalietremblay686
    @nathalietremblay686 Před rokem +2182

    I guess I've been a lucky gifted kid. I was in boarding school and we had 3h every evening in a big study room. We had to remain silent and study. I was done after less than 30 minutes and was watching the others wondering what they were doing. It was becoming really boring and I fell a bit like tortured. When the nuns saw that I didn't need those 3h, they pulled me out of that study room and asked me to give tutoring to my classmates! What a great idea! They were fabulous. Older, I was given «enrichement challenges» that were not in the curriculum but so much fun because I was allowed to leave the classroom and work in the library or the craft room depending on the challenge. Now, as a teacher, I'm also working on a PhD, and for the first time, I really struggle. But... I found the pomodoro technique and it works like magic. I even do pomorodo sessions online with my students. During the breaks, I clean the house. 5 minutes for the toilet, five minutes of filling the dishwasher, five minutes to start a laundry load. My house is cleaner when I have to work!

    • @cavemann_
      @cavemann_ Před rokem +73

      You're so incredibly lucky and I am happy for you!

    • @TheKingBeyondEverything
      @TheKingBeyondEverything Před rokem +34

      I actually use a long term pomodoro.
      I do my work for 1 hr.
      20 min rest(either thinking of my novel or watching an anime).

    • @msislam6751
      @msislam6751 Před rokem

      Hey, if you don't mind then could you tell that what is your subject of Phd? And were you class topper?

    • @nathalietremblay686
      @nathalietremblay686 Před rokem +30

      @@msislam6751 I was a class topper. My subject is roughly how to teach learning skills to college students in regular classes so that they can reduce their feeling of being overloaded. Lots of fun 🙂 That why I'm really interested in this YT channel. Lots of good hints.

    • @msislam6751
      @msislam6751 Před rokem

      @@nathalietremblay686 Thank you. By the way, I'm also a topper. Soon,I will join college.

  • @westcoastkidd17
    @westcoastkidd17 Před rokem +768

    I wasn't a gifted kid, but the "studying to teach someone else" method works. I used to re-read my notes out loud as if I was lecturing a crowd and it used to help with memorization of facts and concepts.

    • @vaisakhkm783
      @vaisakhkm783 Před rokem +3

      you might be gifted.... otherwise there is a less chance others ask for you for help, and you actually help....

    • @reelgesh51
      @reelgesh51 Před rokem +19

      He didn't say he actually taught anyone
      Just that he pretended he did when learning

    • @SealedKiller
      @SealedKiller Před rokem +19

      Yeah, same here. Whenever I'm studying I read out loud and move around and throw gestures like I'm trying to explain it to someone.
      Plus try to imagine the thing in your head as you're 'explaining'.

    • @Kartik-dp4jf
      @Kartik-dp4jf Před rokem +12

      @@vaisakhkm783 not necessarily, I wasnt a gifted kid but I just studied my ass off to get grades as good as the gifted kids, thus, people came to me for help.

  • @krissklein
    @krissklein Před rokem +955

    This video blew my mind. I'm 40 now. As a kid I cruised through pre-school and then through school with incredible ease. I instantly understood all subjects at school, could do my homework 10 minutes before class and didn't need to study. The knowledge just... poured in. I was most teachers' favourite. Straight A's in all subjects. Getting diplomas for my school in regional competitions in maths, languages and even third place in carpentry competition (90s education for boys, haha). Then without even preparing I got into one of the best high-schools in my city, went through all three exams to get in with ease. And then I hit that wall you described in the video. I hit it so hard... I was suddenly in an environment with many talented students, all having worked hard to get there. And they kept working hard. And suddenly I couldn't just cruise and started falling behind. Fast forward to today, I've been in therapy for many years, dealing with depression and struggling with life. And the moment you said that it's not the therapy I need but instead I have to LEARN HOW TO FOCUS AND DO THINGS. It genuinely blew my mind. I hope this is the key I've been looking for.

    • @ilikepingpong
      @ilikepingpong Před rokem +25

      Completely understand. I was nowhere close to the ease you had, but I performed well enough, was sharp and creative, and mostly was just left alone. By high school I hit a wall, but the structure and support forced me to eventually put in the extra effort push over it. But then out the other side of that it became much harder in university and in work, trying to reconcile my inherent abilities & my natural ambition with my clear limitations in discipline. This along with the recent revelation of having moderate ADHD my entire life without knowing. But there is certainly some blurry overlap there.
      I'm also hoping this works. Sometimes a simple framework + motivation + placebo effect is all you need to move forward. But with some of these lifelong issues, it's hard to predict. So, also going to bring some radical acceptance into the picture.

    • @m.l.7558
      @m.l.7558 Před rokem +5

      I hope that u are feeling better, anon, you are never alone

    • @Anewevisual
      @Anewevisual Před rokem

      😂😂😂😂😂

    • @BigBootyBatman
      @BigBootyBatman Před rokem

      @@ilikepingpong what did the realization of having moderate ADHD bring for positive effects? Are you treating it and does it get better or do you just feel like you understand yourself better. I see that so often these days that people figure out they are either autistic or have ADHD but I never know what that late knowledge does for you.

    • @ilikepingpong
      @ilikepingpong Před rokem +1

      ​@@BigBootyBatman
      That's a good question.
      But first off, I will quote Dr. Russell Barkley in saying "a trait is a disorder when it becomes an impairment". So not everyone will be impaired by traits of ADHD or autism.
      It's going to vary A LOT person to person. ADHD is a spectral & multi-dimensional disorder, like autism. But also the issue of lifestyle, career type, health, etc., all make it extremely variable. For example, I did not feel noticeably impaired until I started working from home + long covid brain fog. My evaluation was just in February so I'm still sorting through it all.
      But the overwhelming message I hear is that learning you have ADHD as an adult is a "good news" diagnosis because "things can only get better" as you do something about it. So that's the hope in knowing. It may not be true 100% of the time, but there is potential there to learn more about your limitations, then take steps to account for them in your life & alleviate them as much as possible. For a lot of people, simply taking ADHD medication can help a lot, even from day one.
      I'm still on that path of trying medication.
      But I think it is motivating for me to know, because I had been feeling impaired, and that was getting confusing and starting to weigh heavily on me.
      Why? Are you thinking you might have some of this?

  • @olivesarecute
    @olivesarecute Před 9 měsíci +198

    The "study to teach" method really is a game changer. It puts me into a new mindset and turns the whole thing into a challenge. Some things that I do that helped keep this idea engaging is to imagine my audience, try to put everything on 1 page (per topic), put all concepts into drawings, and basically outline it so that if I need to refer back to my notes, I will find the information I need in no more than a few seconds. It turns the whole note-taking process into its own game and when I did this, I always had the best notes. Oh and also, try studying and note-taking on NOT lined paper - like just computer paper. For me, it helps my ideas flow easier like you're just writing on a small white board
    copy n pasted

  • @buybuydandavis
    @buybuydandavis Před rokem +1397

    Nice to hear that he's a psychiatrist that helps to *solve problems*.
    Much of depression is the feeling of being incapable of solving our problems. Making us *capable* is a better solution than making us not feel so bad about being *incapable*.

    • @newuser689
      @newuser689 Před rokem +84

      I’ve found that letting go of becoming capable has made me become way more capable ironically.

    • @tracyzimmerman7912
      @tracyzimmerman7912 Před rokem +41

      I agree. However if you have grown up in a household where you were punished for not being able to do things this could be a problem. This is my problem. It's hard growing up thinking there's something wrong with you.

    • @buybuydandavis
      @buybuydandavis Před rokem +18

      @@tracyzimmerman7912
      Negative judgment from parents can be a demoralizing and terrifying thing.
      I think the letting go is of guilt and shame for having some incapacities. I've got issues. Feeling bad about them only piles on more issues.
      Jordan B. Peterson - 12 Rules for Life
      Rule 2
      Treat yourself like someone you are responsible for helping.
      Would you judge a friend with your incapacities as harshly as you judge yourself?
      Compassion isn't just for other people.

    • @0000song0000
      @0000song0000 Před rokem +5

      Exactly my issue as an adult (besides never learning to study because i never had to) is that i am incredibly forgetful.
      They game me antidepressants and anxiolytics for 10 years, til i decided to stop it because they weren't helping.
      I do not know why we live in a culture were even (most) doctors only treat/hide the symptoms, NOT the cause. If someone says they have knee pain, they give them pain killers instead of checking the knee 😳

    • @buybuydandavis
      @buybuydandavis Před rokem +4

      @@0000song0000
      Finding a cause requires thought and judgment.
      Going directly from symptoms to treatments only requires a lookup table.

  • @elizabethhenning778
    @elizabethhenning778 Před rokem +566

    It's even worse than the parent abrogating responsibility because you're getting good grades in primary school. Many parents (like mine) blame and punish the kid for doing poorly when the lack of skills finally catches up with them. This is even more damaging than just believing you're lazy.

    • @alicedodobirb2808
      @alicedodobirb2808 Před rokem +18

      This reminds me of the time I got an 88 in a class(semester grade thing).
      It was a parent teacher thing and my mom started talking loudly (almost yelling) about it. I don't remember what she said exactly, because this was in like 6th grade.
      She was mad that I might not get into college for free.
      I don't even want to go to college, and it's mainly because she was so obsessed that I may get into it for free. Lmao the irony.

  • @edcrfv098765
    @edcrfv098765 Před rokem +274

    17:16 jesus christ this hit me hard. I've been diagnosed with anxiety as a kid and depression as a teen and was medicated both times but I was never able to fix anything. This whole video describes my situation perfectly and I'm in my last year of university still suffering with each assignment and feeling like the scum of the earth. I guess I can at least apply this now, better late and never.

    • @kennethng9653
      @kennethng9653 Před rokem +2

      Same

    • @christina_cl
      @christina_cl Před rokem +4

      You might want to look into ADHD - maybe get evaluated for it if it resonates with you. I've been struggling since end of high-school and have also been diagnosed with anxiety and depression, but medication did not help that much. Many years later, I got diagnosed with ADHD and it turns out that the depression was caused by it. If that's what you have, you're not lazy - your mind just works differently and it takes a lot more effort to focus on tasks. There are ways to treat it.

    • @wakkjobbwizard
      @wakkjobbwizard Před rokem +2

      @@christina_cl i’m really annoyed because i’ve been diagnosed with adhd but taking meds isn’t helping much. even got a higher dosage recently. so annoying cuz i feel like i take foreeeever doing assignments.

    • @eumesmo8478
      @eumesmo8478 Před 7 měsíci

      Same, but with TOC, and The medication Was strong enough to work. But now that im decreasing The medication, it is all coming back again

    • @Enilorak27
      @Enilorak27 Před 6 měsíci

      same here. I am mindblown rn

  • @nevenkas4866
    @nevenkas4866 Před rokem +64

    I got the feeling "he is just like me!!" meme, the parents never worring if I got an A+, then hitting a wall, being diagnosed with depresion, the thing that I I hate to review my notes. It's always a bliss feeling that it's not just me

  • @tayzonday
    @tayzonday Před rokem +2776

    “100 wells dug one-foot-deep” - That should be my epitaph 😂. I was both a gifted child and eventually a therapeutic-day-school / special education / self-mutilating / nonverbal child who took five years to finish high school. I remember that when I TA’d sections in graduate school, I’d skim the 90 pages the undergrads were supposed to read on the 15-minute bus ride to my section and teach it for 50 minutes . . . so I guess I learned conceptual learning thru procrastination 😅

    • @kishorraika6411
      @kishorraika6411 Před rokem +74

      Wtf tay is here

    • @RobinsMusic
      @RobinsMusic Před rokem +18

      In my country 6 years is the minimum for high school at the highest level and I took 7 years as a gifted child.

    • @RobinsMusic
      @RobinsMusic Před rokem +11

      I still procrastinate literally everything I my life 😔

    • @marshmallowsandtrash
      @marshmallowsandtrash Před rokem +19

      Tay you're a legend ❤️

    • @ChaoticNeutralMatt
      @ChaoticNeutralMatt Před rokem +4

      To a lesser extent, that's what I figured out as well. I still tend to go wherever my current interests lead. *shrug*

  • @carliep.5964
    @carliep.5964 Před rokem +633

    Honestly…as soon as he said try thinking of studying to teach rather than to learn I instantly got more interested and it was like I just had gained some more clarity. I suppose giving the task a bigger purpose rather than just to serve myself made me more motivated, especially since I love being able to help others understand concepts too.

    • @shadowfox933
      @shadowfox933 Před rokem +32

      When he said that, I instantly thought about the differences between my autistic "rabbit hole" research marathons and the course work that I have to do for my college classes. I always enjoy sharing the knowledge I acquire when I spend time researching my various interests, but I only read enough for my classes to do the homework and pass the tests

    • @m.damarsr9863
      @m.damarsr9863 Před rokem +6

      @@shadowfox933 i had a bachelor degree that is in line with my "rabbit hole" research marathon but at my current job im unable to apply that knowledge, currently applying for a master's degree scholarships that would help me specialize and find better work where i can apply those research marathons and share it to other people/contribute to my workplace

    • @DiogoChris
      @DiogoChris Před rokem +6

      That's a fantastic way to put it. I find that the "gifted person" always seeks to fulfill something greater than themselves. And tend to work harder so as not to disappoint or let others down.
      So if that's the motivation, it might be a smarter idea to keep that in mind while trying to complete tasks.
      And I find it interesting that it is one of the defining traits of the historical Melancholy temperament, which is believed to be the temperament of most gifted people.

    • @joostfloot5279
      @joostfloot5279 Před rokem +5

      I felt something happen in my brain too, and new excitement to study arose.

    • @trytoo5167
      @trytoo5167 Před rokem

      Yea same, but at the same time I know theres no one I can actually teach this to or that is willing to listen and even if you find some group on discord they wont care or they;; have too much knowledge on the subject and correct me every other second.

  • @missfeliss3628
    @missfeliss3628 Před rokem +70

    omg.... this guy is a genius.. i think the reason i was so motivated as a kid was because i subconsciously and semi consciously always took on the role of teacher towards my peers.... but when they stopped needing me as a mentor as they grew older, i completely lost all motivation, hated school, didnt care about anything or anyone.... fell into deep deppression... grades plummeted

  • @marieils
    @marieils Před rokem +218

    This really shows how great my teachers were in school. They had us sit in teams of 4 and when we were doing any work you would have to ask the other kids in your group for help before you could ask the teacher. This meant the smart kids could be more engaged teaching the material to someone else, and the kids who needed more help had someone right there to help them. And on top of that taught great teamwork.

    • @ainternet_userisnteveryone524
      @ainternet_userisnteveryone524 Před rokem +4

      Brilliant! That's a brilliant idea! (⚡👓)

    • @Ninsidhe
      @Ninsidhe Před 11 měsíci +13

      No, it’s a totally CRAP idea if YOU are the smartest one in every group, every time, because THAT kid *never, ever experiences work at the level THEY are capable of doing* . NEVER. What we *become* is UNPAID TUTORING SUPPORT and it utterly, absolutely sucks more and more over time- the rocket fuelled mind forced to work at the clown car pace benefits everyone BUT the rocket fuelled mind. I ended up refusing to become the resource after *teaching my year 10 HISTORY CLASS for the year* because I knew more about the subject than the teacher did- we had so much engagement as a class because I was totally into the subject and made it come alive, we acted things out because I was also the main writer for the entire high school’s drama production that year, but I realised I was being used and ended up refusing to do it anymore.

    • @helenwhs
      @helenwhs Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@Ninsidheook

    • @user-ti7me6yv7w
      @user-ti7me6yv7w Před 10 měsíci +1

      This kind of group need some social skill baseline though, I remember also doing the same, but no one dare to ask me anything

    • @timothyc.8666
      @timothyc.8666 Před 10 měsíci +4

      Now that you mention it..... I did enjoy those kinds of settings because I usually was the person in the group others would ask for help with. I was happy to do so for their benefit. It also helped me to develop the skill of seeking help from the other students who got the few things I'd get hung up on and frustrated with because this setting was normalized.

  • @vambylamby83
    @vambylamby83 Před rokem +805

    The intro absolutely described my early childhood till Standard 6 life. And after that all the way especially in my bachelor degree life, I really felt overwhelmed and boring, everything just started to fell apart in my academic performance. It is just not only me alone who think I was lazy, even my parents and teachers condemned me being lazy.

    • @DemonFranki
      @DemonFranki Před rokem +59

      have the same expirience now, just walked through school never learning, doing homework etc. and now I'm studying computer science and it''s so hard being focused and not just go thinking 'ah yeah that's easy i gonna look at it at home' and then being f*cked when the exams come around or you need to do some assignments instead of exams.

    • @theechromedome
      @theechromedome Před rokem +8

      ​@DemonFranki I'm so glad I'm not alone.
      I'm lucky enough that I've been able to learn what I need to in IT fast enough to get tasks done but as far as studying for higher lever certs I can't seem to sit down or stay focused enough.

    • @themagnificentorange672
      @themagnificentorange672 Před rokem +5

      Going thru it rn, got 3 months till A Levels 😭

    • @vambylamby83
      @vambylamby83 Před rokem +7

      Yeah i feel you guys, my time in engineering course was a big pain. If the subject was something I liked in the course it won't be too annoying for me to put through with it but when I was facing some really boring subjects that and I just can't sit down and study it.

    • @BruteZ7957
      @BruteZ7957 Před rokem +7

      Same, but till I got admitted to a good college for my graduation. Everything was easy. Then suddenly everything was hard. I just felt so stupid, and developed this huge impostor syndrome. Eventually I found these videos and they kinda helped me out.

  • @yuppers1
    @yuppers1 Před rokem +389

    This is why we need honors programs for gifted kids (and start earlier and make them harder).They need to be challenged at their level. Some school districts are trying to take them away. We probably need gifted kid special ed too.

    • @ABC-jq7ve
      @ABC-jq7ve Před rokem +10

      In the meantime there are plenty of ways to challenge yourself like learning advanced math and physics, reading classical literature, etc … I think being self directed is a better strategy than hoping the establishment will solve your problem for your.

    • @cosmikswordfish
      @cosmikswordfish Před rokem +68

      @@ABC-jq7ve I feel like this is the issue. These are really tricky things to do by yourself so generally gifted kids will just brush it off as something they can't do because it takes so much discipline and effort

    • @thebininabin4410
      @thebininabin4410 Před rokem +8

      Agreed. I believe that we gifted kids will benefit more if we had a whole different program of our own.
      Perhaps this is just the case for my MS, but honor classes there are very easy. The only difference between honors and acedemic was just the tests, which are slightly harder.

    • @KOKOBC
      @KOKOBC Před rokem +1

      My district actually has a program for gifted kids which runs from 3rd to 6th grade. Apparently they’re thinking about removing it from what I’ve heard from my friends in that class. Honestly I feel like they still could’ve done it better as I do feel like I still breezed through those years for the most part.

    • @charleahar
      @charleahar Před rokem +14

      Also I think that grading is failing us, because it doesn't separate "success" from "effort".
      I had high success, but low effort. I would get near-perfect grades on all of my tests- I was successful. However, I would do homework last minute or skip it altogether, I didn't take notes in class, and I never studied. My effort was low.
      But why was my effort low? Because the classes were too easy. I was bored out of my mind every time I would do math problem sets, because it was just doing the same thing over and over again. I understood the process after the one or two practices we did in class, so I didn't get anything out of doing the problem sets.
      But of course, the fact that I didn't do my homework meant that I never got good grades. Teachers and administrators then look at my list of B+es and B-es, and they go "oh, this girl definitely DOES NOT belong in advanced math/science/english/history/whatever"
      Of course, that's wrong. I was getting bad grades because the classes weren't challenging enough to engage me. Had I actually ever gotten put into those advanced classes, I would have needed to start putting in that effort to start succeeding as much as I was before.
      Naturally, that didn't happen until college. I went into more difficult classes and I suddenly would have benefitted from taking notes. But how do I take notes. And I would have benefitted from studying, but how do I study? I would have benefitted from asking for help, but how do I ask for help?
      I eventually figured it out, but that transition was tough. The one thing that kept me going is that for the first time ever, I was genuinely interested in every single one of my classes.

  • @ishakawade9100
    @ishakawade9100 Před rokem +9

    1) Eu-stress, there should be some stress to make it feel like you are constantly challenging yourself
    2)Teaching peers
    3)You are gonna get bored and need dopamine:
    Use Pomodoro technique with breaks, walking breaks no mental stimulation
    4)Keep distractions away physically and lay out study material resources.
    5)Physically writing stuff.
    6)Revise stuff. 1 Pomo at least.

  • @willrusin9200
    @willrusin9200 Před rokem +113

    Just been diagnosed with inattentive type ADHD 3 months shy of turning 40 and this resonates in a painful way. Thank you Dr. K for putting all this out there

    • @ilikepingpong
      @ilikepingpong Před rokem +2

      What's up, me too. But 9 months shy of 40.
      Happy 40th next month!

  • @poba.g
    @poba.g Před rokem +305

    As a gifted kid, something that really helped me last semester in my second year of college was switching from a "school" mindset to a "work" mindset. I found that in my professional career life I can be really dedicated and just work, whereas I'll see my coworkers on their phones, etc. And what I found is that when I treat school like I'm trying to impress a boss, it's like I totally forget about all of the GT barriers, and I learn like I'm trying to earn.

    • @yurishaa.9337
      @yurishaa.9337 Před rokem +3

      I'd say that the essence of it is to fake-till-you-make into something intentional or meaningful that you want or consider to be.
      Even as simple as teaching a kid but _done professionally._

    • @cookies23z
      @cookies23z Před 11 měsíci +2

      that... is actually quite smart... working rn for money to go finish school, and I feel that at work I often direct myself differently. Ive realized it is MUCH easier for me to do something FOR OTHERS compared to myself, a mix of me feeling like I dont deserve anything, being ok with stagnation/rot for myself, maybe some other stuff but for myself I dont do sht, for others I feel like I need to...
      Anyways, ill try when I go back to finish my postsecondary with the view of it being a job

  • @kerka4472
    @kerka4472 Před rokem +140

    I've never considered myself gifted, but everyone around me was saying that I'm super smart and "have a bright mind" or something like that and to be a straight As (or in my country "5"s) I needed to be more hardworking so each year I would study harder and harder without getting any better results. By the last couple years of middle school my week almost entirely consisted of going to school and doing homework/preparing for tests. Now that I finished school I have no friends, no social skills to make new ones in uni and I have a lot of trouble studying in a university. I wish I had this video a bit earlier in my life, but I hope that it'll help me with my current studies

    • @vaisakhkm783
      @vaisakhkm783 Před rokem +5

      absolutely, this is exactly what needed for uni than for just school
      studying is uni is astronomically bigger than that in schools..... and in school, we can just get pass though, but in uni, failing is failing

    • @thebininabin4410
      @thebininabin4410 Před rokem

      Maybe you can use videogames to help you? Gimkit works fine for me, but idk if its free or not.

    • @dynpallomah5918
      @dynpallomah5918 Před rokem +1

      Are you from HK?

    • @decoy1312
      @decoy1312 Před rokem

      That definetly feels depressing, at the end of the day you are the one who knows your situation best, but since you pulled that performance in middle school, I'm sure you can pull it again right now in uni and in your life all togheter

  • @welsan2074
    @welsan2074 Před rokem +71

    " studying to teach " really hit me
    I don't know if i am a gifted kind of kid, but one of my bad trait is that i put all of my value into being useful towards another people. i have an above average academic stuff, so by that i learned stuff for the purpose of teaching the rest of my classmate, and seeing their reaction with being helped really made me happy sometimes

  • @MAJ0ROCEL0T
    @MAJ0ROCEL0T Před rokem +38

    This video found me at a perfect time. I just turned 28 and have for a decade now struggled with the concept of higher learning. I was a good student who never needed to study but I always failed to do homework and long form projects without just procrastinating until the night before. I recently determined I wanted to go back to school to be a structural engineer and I think spending this summer relearning how to learn will give me the confidence to actually succeed

  • @dawnkeyy
    @dawnkeyy Před rokem +265

    The conversation you described with your mom is almost word-for-word the conversation I had with my dad. Incredible how validating this is

    • @_98310
      @_98310 Před rokem +4

      i can relate as well. one time i had trouble with my homework and my dad scolded me and called me dumb and said "you got a 99 on the last test, so how come you can't even do this?" and i just never asked again. my mom actually can't speak english so i could never ask her anything about school. this video helped me a lot.

  • @HocksEvan
    @HocksEvan Před rokem +157

    I've always found for me personally one of the best ways to spend my break is doing a very simple task that allows me to process what ive done whilst still maintaining the feeling of productivity. The biggest one for me is going to do the dishes or doing a quick clean of the kitchen.

  • @MinisDunyasi5
    @MinisDunyasi5 Před rokem +53

    I was in the honors program for gifted students all throughout my life. In there I was the top student. I almost always got the highest score in every test. My grades were perfect.
    But with being so called “gifted” also came with a lot of stress. It also caused me to become a perfectionist. If I don’t get a perfect score, even if I got the highest score, I feel like I failed. I study a lot. I study when I come home from school, I wake up extra early to study. I study hard to get the perfect grade and when I do, I’m satisfied for a couple minutes and then I go back to studying and stressing about my next exam. This causes me a lot of stress but I try not to show it.
    Being a perfect student also came with very high expectations from those around me.
    Everyone would know me for being academically brilliant, especially in science and math. Many people thought I would become a scientist, a doctor or a professor or something. But I don’t want to be any of those things. I don’t even like math or science much, I’m just very good at them because of how much I study. Instead I’d like to be a playwright and a performer because I’m very into theatre. But unfortunately in my country theatre isn’t cared about, at all. Whenever I tell people about my dream they’re like “It would be better if you do something with science and math.” “Science can take you to better places in life.”
    I honestly have no intention on studying anything related to math or science past high school. I intend on studying so much that I get accepted to a great university for drama in the UK or in US.
    But I feel this immense pressure on me. I feel like if I follow my dream I would be seen as a “failed genius”. My family wants me to be a scientist as well. Because both my parents are scientists and their parents were also scientists, my parents friends are also scientists. They’ve also spent a lot of money for my tutoring classes, my textbooks and I don’t want to disappoint them. I’m also an only child so I feel like I have to make them proud.
    There is also the loneliness that comes with it. I have no friends. That might not sound like a problem but it is. All I want is a single friend who understands me. I often fantasize about having friends, I write about it as well, it’s kinda like an escape for me.
    Despite being in the same high school for one and a half years (I’m currently in the 10th grade), all people talk to me is about how my grades are. I also get some very jealous treatment from others, sometimes verbal bullying, because I didn’t share my answers with them and quote “think I’m so much better than them.”, when I really don’t. There’s a bit of popularity that comes with it as well but I have no actual friends. I tried to make friends before but everyone’s in their individual friend groups and it’s very hard to just “blend in”.
    I sometimes wish I never tried so hard in school, and was only seen for my creativity for writing and acting. Maybe then people wouldn’t see me just as the “smartest girl in school”.
    But on the bright side my journey isn’t over yet. If I get into my dream university when I graduate I feel like I can finally be seen as me instead of “the smartest girl in school”. I haven’t told my parents about my dreams yet but they’re great parents. They probably won’t agree with my future decisions but they will try to be supportive.

    • @sergeantmoo7832
      @sergeantmoo7832 Před rokem +1

      Good luck

    • @MinisDunyasi5
      @MinisDunyasi5 Před rokem +1

      @@sergeantmoo7832 Thank you.

    • @monikap8777
      @monikap8777 Před rokem +5

      I can not emphasis this enough: Do what *you* want to. Do not chiose the path your parents want for you.they actually want the best for you and the best thing for you to do is to listen to your career wishes. After high school, people are supposed to start their adult life. And it consists of making your own decisions, even if you will fail. Because to be appropriate 30 year old, you have to do a lot of trial and error earlier in your life. And if you choose to "not make mistakes"=listen to your parents, you won't learn anything and will have to do your iwn learning later on, when it will be inappropriate and maybe even embarrassing. I've seen some thirty years old who still haven't grown uo and I actually feel sorry for them. Would not recommend.

    • @MinisDunyasi5
      @MinisDunyasi5 Před rokem +3

      @@monikap8777 Thank you. I hope to pursue *my* dreams instead of my parents dreams. But the thing is, my dreams aren’t as secure as my parents expectations.
      Scientists make good money as long as they work hard. But playwrights make money _if_ people like their plays. A playwright’s reputation is also a lot easier to ruin than a scientist’s reputation, one controversial play or thing said/done in public and bam! the media hates you.
      Also, being a playwright isn’t even a job in my country, so I’d have to leave my home country to study university and that would most likely cause me to graduate with debt which would be hard to pay off.
      But despite all that, I’d rather be a playwright to follow my passion instead of becoming a scientist to achieve my parents expectations.

    • @monikap8777
      @monikap8777 Před rokem +2

      @@MinisDunyasi5 @@MinisDunyasi5 from my own experience, I can assure you that choosing what you actually do not feel is for you will be the mest expensive. If you choose to pursue being a scientist and that's not what you actually want, two things will happen :either you won't even be able to finish the college because it will make you sick to study it, or you will finish it and become sick later on when you realise you hate it. Dunno what your beliefs are, but I believe there is a right path that God wants as on, and if we choose it he will provide all that is necessary, we shall not worry about big loans for our education. But if we choose the wrong path, as a gentle parent, you will hear His whisper that you should have pursued the theater, and you will know it's true and it will be killing you softly. I think there's a quote saying something along the lines "good enough reason why will make things easier".

  • @porcupethcrumpets
    @porcupethcrumpets Před rokem +26

    Uni is when it actually hits you.
    One either gets bored or overwhelmed too easily and gives up too fast
    Find your level of eustress (when it's just difficult to excite you but not enough to overwhelm)
    Study to not learn but teach (conceptual learning and makes it more challenging cause you have to master the material)
    Dealing with boredom: Boredom is an impulse that makes you want stimulus. Don't study because you FEEL like. So use pomodoro to make you study and stop studying despite how you feel. Collect your resources beforehand so you don't get distracted while you try to find em while studying
    How to study: Write. Review regularly. Environment matters (study in the same place and and only study there). Create physical boundaries. Phone on dnd. During breaks, walk. Don't use tech
    Studying is a skill you prolly weren't taught. You have the chance to learn it. You're not lazy

    • @LiliaGrundt
      @LiliaGrundt Před 11 měsíci

      Thank you for the summary! I was a bit triggered by something that he said later in the video and almost forgot many of the good points at the start. It's great to be reminded.

  • @DOMESTICDOMICILE
    @DOMESTICDOMICILE Před rokem +155

    This video could not have come at a better time. I'm literally 5 days in to studying for my CompTIA A+ Cert (IT Stuff).
    Everything you said applied to me growing up; honor roll throughout elementary and no real parental intervention throughout all my years of school.
    Cut to me in college and I struggled to retain anything I learned. I have a bachelor's degree but I suffer from imposter syndrome because I was either too lazy or too incompetent when it came to studying and so I didn't hold on to the information even if I did well on assignments and tests.
    This not only helped me realize my errors in learning to study, it also taught me that I'm not alone, and that many others have suffered a similar fate. Even if this came after I finished school, it is still a godsend.
    Thank you, there's still hope.

    • @mirjam3553
      @mirjam3553 Před rokem +8

      Same. My parents were studying with my little sister who actually had to put in some effort and has a doctorate now, but I got good marks. Hit the wall when I went to college. Depression, stuff, failed out of that twice, went and learned a trade - picked it up like breathing. But now I'm thinking of a total career change, figured I'd look into IT - and am currently at the point on my edX course where while the material is interesting, I'm no longer exitedly opening the next unit, I'm already behind, failed to completely internalize some super elementary bits and am, sort of, fading out.
      It could not have been better timed.

    • @0num4
      @0num4 Před rokem +2

      You got this! Check out Professor Messer for great breakdowns of the CompTIA subject material. He helped me through Sec+ years ago.

    • @DOMESTICDOMICILE
      @DOMESTICDOMICILE Před rokem +1

      @@0num4 thanks, I'm actually already following his video series!

    • @nigelcardoso7653
      @nigelcardoso7653 Před rokem

      How are you studying /learning now?
      I can't seem to learn everything longterm only for exams, them I forget.

    • @tiago_tojeira
      @tiago_tojeira Před rokem +1

      Thanks for this comment, I'm going through college right now and those same feelings resonated deeply with me.

  • @Salem-ys6kw
    @Salem-ys6kw Před rokem +9

    This applied very well to me as ADHD and autistic. We also often learn unconventional strategies to get around the hurdles including our own disabilities/neuroatypicalities and their lack of accommodation in society.

  • @mathemann9467
    @mathemann9467 Před rokem +29

    I didn't exactly get straight A's, rather B's to C's without learning at all. I literally came back from school started playing video games and went to bed. Never really learned. Now I'm in my final years of school and I really struggle to learn at home. I rather pick up everything at school and don't dig deeper at home. I also often get bored when learning and get distracted rather easy. The problem is that I get solid A's like this. There are kids way smarter than me, still I don't have to put in much work to get close to their level. This lets me end up thinking where I could be if I was dedicated enough to put in the extra work. Still it doesn't change my behaviour and that is actually kind of depressing.

    • @eriqmav
      @eriqmav Před 11 měsíci +4

      Sounds just like me. Did all your teachers also tell you that you could achieve so much if you did more at home? lol

    • @theHarbingerOfDoom
      @theHarbingerOfDoom Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@eriqmav The teachers and everyone else, people in general just don't understand

    • @user-ok4hh3hw6f
      @user-ok4hh3hw6f Před 7 měsíci

      I can totally relate to this, I'm currently trying to figure out how much I'll be trying to change, and how much I'll just be accepting

  • @TheKittyWiskers
    @TheKittyWiskers Před rokem +54

    I actually dropped off from school during the pandemic because of this. In-person lectures were never a problem because I would just absorb all the info, but I started struggling so much with online classes. I got frustrated that I wasn't understanding anything, started losing motivation, failed some classes, lost my parent's support, and had to drop out and get a job 🙃 But now I least I know there's some science behind it, so I'll definitely use these tips to learn how to study by myself

  • @tylerlangston7538
    @tylerlangston7538 Před rokem +36

    Wish I had this information available to me growing up. I was told I was gifted and never felt that way. Now I know why.

  • @Seiyusia
    @Seiyusia Před rokem +30

    As a considered "gifted kid" I haven't had any problems with getting straight As. I thought life was so easy I could only hear something once and rule the world. But then I started to burn out, I didn't know what some information will be usefull for. I started to be quickly bored, I couldn't pay attention in class anymore. Studying in home felt so off to me because I wasn't used to it. Later it has started to track me, I felt like I was left behind. I always thought my lazyness was the cause. Thanks for this video, I feel better knowing that I wasn't the only one

  • @Telu_mendil
    @Telu_mendil Před rokem +14

    Thank you, I personally immensely appreciate your explanation of what I consider my fall, when I reached 17 and the " I just have to pay attention in class stopped to work".
    I didn't knew how to study, started to skip classes, and fell in a very dark place.
    As a curious kid that always liked to learn, part of my pride was in it and falling behind was devastating for me. I had to rebuild a good part of my expectations, the bases that sustained me. Got a lot of wisdom through it, but it was really painful.
    Nowadays, I got to live the live as I want to, according to the values and expectations that I build by myself, which is nice. But that fall... Still stings. I really hope that this video helps kids that are falling in the pit at this moment.
    Again, thank you for share you wisdom, it's safe to say that is helping a lot of us in many ways.
    P.D. I'm Spanish, not used to write in English, so sorry if I hurt your eyes.

    • @miguelgonzalezestarque7025
      @miguelgonzalezestarque7025 Před 3 měsíci +1

      En cuanto empecé a leer tu comentario pensé q lo estaba escribiendo yo mismo, porque es por lo que estoy pasando justo ahora mismo. Gracias por compartir tu experiencia y darme un poco de ánimo, creo que necesitaba escuchar que esto le pasaba a más gente y que se puede salir de aquí.

  • @drewskt1
    @drewskt1 Před rokem +119

    Gifted (former) Kid here and I love the video. If it helps anyone here, one thing I've learned to do that wasn't touched on in the video is the context in which I begin my studying journey. I usually set my 'goal' a little further out than I'm capable and then take steps to approach. I find that if I set out to learn something abstract like, for example, How to Play the Piano - I find the information hard to grasp because it lacks application. So instead I'll set out to learn a particular piece of music on the piano and each "roadblock" along the way will give me an opportunity to solve a little problem that then gets me closer to my goal. It turns out the real learning is the problems I solved along the way! Everything said in this video is then applicable to the little problems I'm solving.

    • @lucyandecember2843
      @lucyandecember2843 Před rokem

      I love this!!

    • @pdp6839
      @pdp6839 Před rokem +12

      Maybe the real learning, was the friends we made along the way

    • @throwaway9347
      @throwaway9347 Před rokem +7

      right, its the idea of putting context around abstract ideas. it's an excellent way to learn. another example is in programming. a great way to learn is to actually make projects with the concepts you want to learn. or you can try to program solutions to actual problems that would make you more efficient. hard to learn things in a vacuum!

    • @sleepysartorialist
      @sleepysartorialist Před rokem +4

      Yeah former gifted kid. I ABSOLUTELY need my Why before I do anything or it just is a waste of time (my biggest pet peeve). Why is important.

    • @cluelets
      @cluelets Před rokem

      Sounds like a good tip. Commenting to find it again :)

  • @Mark-xw5yt
    @Mark-xw5yt Před rokem +28

    Study to teach…
    Last semester I had a calc-physics class that was fairly difficult but I actually came out proud of my performance. The thing is, the class had homework but it wouldn’t be graded. You’d just get extra credit from volunteering to explain the HW problem to the class. Even as someone who generally procrastinates and underperforms, I pretty much did every homework in that class and volunteered whenever I had the chance. It was definitely the thing I liked most about that class

  • @Indexityy
    @Indexityy Před rokem +6

    Now I understand why I’d always get confused in 5th grade when someone would ask me : For how long do you study a day?
    Me: you mean homework?

    • @danielyuan9862
      @danielyuan9862 Před 3 měsíci +1

      "Studying? What's that?" That's so relatable. I didn't realize the distinction until my senior year of high school.

  • @totally_not_dari
    @totally_not_dari Před 6 měsíci +7

    Thank you. A lot.
    As the gifted kid, like other people watching, this video has taught me more about how to study than absolutely any other video or guides that I tried to follow.
    That felt like a cursed loophole of trying to find something new, trying, failing and back at it.
    I'm not gonna say that they are bad, but they definitely lack the "human nature" variable in the equation, which makes some or even many people feel left behind.
    This is the video that I could find myself in and undestand everything behind the "why's" in my behavior.
    It has been great implimenting everything together with other videos, but this is where I started 😁

  • @0num4
    @0num4 Před rokem +11

    "Learning to teach" explains why I was able to excel in the military, where traditional academics caused me significant trouble. The impetus in the Army was that I'd be teaching my subordinates and peers the material I'd be covering, so the motivation to learn it was different.

  • @FxckingZeRO
    @FxckingZeRO Před rokem +19

    I just watch your video titled “being a gifted kid is actually special needs” I think the big thing that made studying hard for me is being A.D.D. Young and not finding out till adulthood. It was very hard for me at a young age to do things I didn’t like. Like it physically hurt me. But I was a natural at anything I put my mind to.

  • @captainkal2582
    @captainkal2582 Před 7 měsíci

    Thank you Dr K and the rest of the team at HealthyGamer. Discovering your channel has been massively helpful personally. I have only scratched the surface over these first couple of months, but I know your content will be a foundational resource to support my return to education as a mature student (I'm 30 yo). I am incredibly grateful and hope to tell you of my achievements in the coming short and long terms. Much love ✌

  • @jules-sf5us
    @jules-sf5us Před rokem

    this described my experiences perfectly. thank you so much for this amazing video. i’ve been struggling for so long to break through this huge wall- it’s like i know i learn and do all of these things but something is holding me back and this really helped me understand more as to what’s preventing me from doing what i need to

  • @mr.drakanator
    @mr.drakanator Před rokem +9

    As a “gifted” kid who wants to be a professor, the “study to teach” point really hit home. When I read the textbook and pretend I am doing it with the intent of explaining it to other students I feel 10x more motivated

  • @just__mate
    @just__mate Před rokem +32

    Personally I found that the only way I can learn is by observing other people (mainly teachers/profs) doing something 2-3 times and then doing it myself, which can generally work out, especially in subjects where you don't have definite truths, but has definitely prevented me from studying in STEM, despite excelling at it up until going to college, since in college you don't get enough time to study that way.

  • @caro_alexandra
    @caro_alexandra Před rokem

    Wow. This is certainly eye opening.
    Not only do you explain what's happening, but you actually provide helpful tips!
    I've known about the pomodoro method, but I love how you explain that we're training our brains to study/take breaks independently of the motivation we may be feeling at the moment. Also, the tip about studying to teach instead of to just get through the stuff is great.
    This seems exactly what I need, I've been struggling in university, I will certainly put all this to the test and I hope I will break that freaking wall that hit me so hard.

  • @funpinkgnome
    @funpinkgnome Před rokem +2

    This is one of my favorite videos you've ever put out. Touches on everything I knew I needed and even things I didn't know I needed, even outside of studying.
    Things always seemed to come naturally to me so I never learned most of these crucial skills. Tried so hard to improve my lack of motivation and inconsistent efforts by mimicking what I thought a normal, successful person would do, only to end up "doing everything right" yet never seeing changes. Plus with so many issues that need fixing, it gets overwhelming very easily. Every second of this video had me thinking "hey, that's me" and addressed a problem I've been trying to solve, right when I needed something like this the most. THANK YOU.

  • @bf7592
    @bf7592 Před rokem +51

    You have some really great points here, but I think you also missed something really important. I was one of the 'gifted but failing' types, which now that I'm older and have been exploring my neurodivergence, I've learned is a combination of things that made understanding the underlying concepts the most efficient way for my mind to work around my disabilities. So, I was always a great conceptual learner, because I have to be, because I need it like it's being explained to a preschooler, but I had to get to those understandings myself, since that's not the way schools teach. Where I struggled and school absolutely failed me was in application, school is totally divorced from being able to use any of your knowledge for real things. I didn't do any homework in high-school aside from essays because I had another friend who was similar to me and we would have fun writing really insightful essays about books we didn't read and things like that, or connecting ideas that other people wouldn't. It was one place we actually were allowed to apply ourselves. Schools never let you work on real problems, and so the application part of learning is totally absent. You spend all your time working on "problems" that aren't real problems because they've been curated to fit the methods the school wants to teach instead of letting you use your mind as a tool and become adept at that. Even things like word problems are written with the equation they want you to make in mind. Both my friend and I ended up going to the same college at different times where we learned to drive ships and navigate them across oceans, in other words, solving actual dynamic problems. Both my friend and I went on to become really strong autodidact learners, but we both really did it in spite of the education system, which in my mind really atrophies the minds of most students by not letting them work on the fundamental problem of "what type of thinking should I apply to this situation?" So many people get left in this state of either wanting to be told what to do all the time, or having a chip on their shoulder in self defense. I eventually got the chip off my shoulder, but it took years of just feeling totally lost. Learning to study IS a really important thing to learn, but gifted kids don't need to meet the measure of a fundamentally flawed schooling system, the schooling system needs to be completely reworked because it's failing everyone and then blaming it on the people it hurts.

    • @ishitaagrawal1752
      @ishitaagrawal1752 Před rokem +5

      You just narrated my life story here. I have faced this problem too, I would like to elaborate my story but I have an exam tomorrow which I have to study for. I’ll come back here to comment my story.

    • @ainternet_userisnteveryone524
      @ainternet_userisnteveryone524 Před rokem

      @@ishitaagrawal1752 Are you exams over now and are you free? I would like to hear your story

    • @ainternet_userisnteveryone524
      @ainternet_userisnteveryone524 Před rokem

      Can you tell what are autodidact leaners? And how did you explore your neurodivergence?

    • @pigeons5998
      @pigeons5998 Před rokem +1

      While you are 100% correct in saying the school system is flawed, a video won’t be able to change that. I think that the video has some excellent strategies to deal with the messed up system that school is, which is very helpful

  • @helena1136
    @helena1136 Před rokem +70

    doctor K you are my biggest inspiration, mainly because you were a gifted kid too, I'm 19 years old and I'm a little discouraged from the entrance exam and my current course, you being a psychiatrist who also mixes the human part in your videos without ever forgetting the the physiological part helps me not just to see my emotions as something raw and hard to overcome and encourages me to be better every day even with so many difficulties. I hope soon to be able to say that I got into the course I want, and if I do, you deserve a lot of credit for teaching me through your videos how to deal with my problems and how to come up with practical solutions for them. We love you

  • @cblank777
    @cblank777 Před 11 měsíci

    Dr K, your channel is absolutely revolutionary and making me re-evaluate everything (in a good way). You are making me realize so much about myself. I have struggled with studying so much as a gifted student. It sounds silly to call myself gifted but it’s true. I always opt to work super hard on homework’s and lab reports rather than studying for tests. And it always works out. Until it doesn’t when I have a HUGEEE test. But I normally get away with it. Thank you so much for this video. I feel so much less alone

  • @khizzard_069
    @khizzard_069 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Never have been a video been so relatable to me. Always have been a gifted kid, and things started to dwindle by the end of middle school. As soon as he talked of studying for teaching instead of studying for learning, giving a big purpose for the task, it really resonated with me. Thanks so much for your altruistic work, sir!

  • @mv_octex5654
    @mv_octex5654 Před rokem +24

    I'm not sure if I'm a gifted kid or not but I suffer from the problems you described in this video. It really helps me to see there are methods and ways to deal with those kinds of problems and that I'm not the only one out there struggling with it and having an opportunity to change something. I really appreciate you and your work, even if I stumbled across your channel just an hour ago. Stick to producing such helpful content and I will try to take your advice. Hopefully I'll notice a positive change in my nearest future. 🙏

  • @oscarzolcinski6905
    @oscarzolcinski6905 Před rokem +21

    Wow, this hit me like a train. I've always displayed this pattern of getting extremely passionate about some new interest and learning all about it as fast as I could only to abandon the subject sooner or later. I think I've always knew this was a thing even if I didn't give it too much thought but when I was talking to my therapist about it a few weeks ago I described it in EXACTLY the same way. That at some point it's as if I hit a wall with progress in those interests, either an "intellectual" or a practical one. I either don't know how to proceed or lack opportunities/resources to (and I don't mean this to sound like I'm underprivileged because I'm not, what I mean is you can't just buy a bunch of stuff and enroll in extracurriculars every time you get interested in something new lol). I'm newly diagnosed with adhd which makes it tricky because you can't really divorce a pattern like that from how adhd presents but the two probably add up considering the sheer intensity and number of things I've been interested in. I also don't recall having studied in grades 1-7 pretty much ever which is quite telling. I'm actually not confirmed gifted but the more I learn about it the more it resonates with me. The construct of a gifted kid isn't really a thing in my country so I couldn't have known, I'm only undergoing an assessment now at 19
    Also, "100 wells dug one foot deep" is such a good alternative to jack of all trades

  • @jonathonreeck2038
    @jonathonreeck2038 Před 8 měsíci

    I think you are my favorite person! Your videos have helped me really understand myself and my past. Thank you. Through trial and error, I "discovered" and used this approach to write my PhD dissertation several years ago. However, I realize now that it has great benefits in my everyday world. Applying this approach to stay on task and ignore the dopamine seeking behaviors. For me, it isn't video games anymore, but instead difficult problems and people struggling.

  • @samuelgiraudo8748
    @samuelgiraudo8748 Před rokem

    There's a lot of golden advice in here. I really appreciate the way this has been edited together and presented. It makes it super easy to take the info on board :)

  • @bootleggedpanda205
    @bootleggedpanda205 Před rokem +10

    I always thought it was me, i knew i learned differently than others and that i got bored hella easy but i didnt know it was that deep. I feel what made it worse for me and lead me to just think "oh, i'm lazy and just not putting in the effort like i should" was my parents did the same thing you described and they along with some teachers would tell me "oh youre borderline gifted you just need to stop being lazy"

  • @tjmanifest
    @tjmanifest Před rokem +14

    This describes most of my childhood and early adult years perfectly 😐.. I know that I would have benefited greatly from most or all of the interventions/advice that you mention, and I hope that schools (and parents) are aware of this phenomenon now. It took getting a masters and spending my mid 20s to early 30s grinding myself out of the hole to eventually become what I consider "successful". I strongly believe it wouldn't have taken me so long to get here had I been taught and treated a bit differently.

    • @yasarovicmiqomotan1496
      @yasarovicmiqomotan1496 Před rokem +1

      Hey how cool is it that you shaped up and even got a masters, nice!
      I finished my bachelor 1.5 years ago, and started working. I'm finding myself wanting to go back and do a masters. Keeping the context of this video in mind, is it something I can jump into and start changing my habits/mentality or is there more help needed before starting? How did you help yourself?

    • @tjmanifest
      @tjmanifest Před rokem +1

      @@yasarovicmiqomotan1496 So after underperforming in my undergrad studies, it was difficult to find a regular job, which I did eventually. It didn't pay well, and I didn't like it, but I stuck with it. I tried for years to get a better job, to no avail. But something happened to me through all that struggle: I became more mature, and learned how to work hard. I really had to convince myself that a master's would help my situation, and that I would be able to finish it. Once I was there, I did my master's in a year and a half while working full-time. Studying/homework no longer felt like an optional chore and I crushed my classes. There was a night-and-day difference between my undergrad performance and graduate. Choosing which master's to pursue was another struggle, but that's an entirely different conversation. I don't know where you are mentally, so I can't really say whether or not you are ready to jump into it. All I know is that I was not ready 1.5 years after undergrad, it took me longer.

    • @yasarovicmiqomotan1496
      @yasarovicmiqomotan1496 Před rokem +1

      @@tjmanifest quite inspiring, you flipped the switch and pulled through with all the effort required. Good on you for real, it's inspiring to me :) I guess in terms of my mental state I went from "I have to do xyz" to "I get to experience xyz". I started liking studying and working more because it allows me to learn, and I love learning. I do admit I usually struggle with putting in effort for things that aren't as appealing, or when I can't get an explanation why we are doing the task(s). Others usually describe myself as a rather curious individual. Could you perhaps elaborate on what master you chose? I'm also quite in the same struggle.. My background is in Finance, and honestly I have an okay job but it doesn't feel quite satisfying. Something inside me knows that I could put a lot more effort when I find something that keeps scratching my curiosity, instead of being busy with things that I can't even question..

    • @tjmanifest
      @tjmanifest Před rokem

      @@yasarovicmiqomotan1496 Firstly, thank you. Second, I don't think telling you which masters I decided to pursue will help, because different things appeal to all of us. I considered going back to school for many things: mech or chem engineering, nursing, MBA, accounting, pharmacy, MD, Computer Science, etc... You sound like your mindset has started to mature, which is great! I will say that in my experience the vast majority of jobs are not really satisfying, and coming to terms with that is a hurdle many face. I'm finally content in my career because I work with good people, my knowledge and opinions are respected, there's good work/life balance, and it pays decently. I don't have all the answers, I just hoped my story might help someone. If I could go back and do things all over again starting at 17/18, I'd probably go for medicine or something more interesting to me personally, but at my age with my responsibilities it wouldn't be feasible. A few other things: Your job is "okay", so can you climb the ladder? Get certifications? Have you tried understanding on a deep level why you're asked to do these tasks a certain way (on your own)? Finance with an MBA can be a solid combo, but more schooling isn't always going to help (unless your employer will pay for it, then go for it). It may not feel like it, but you have time to figure things out and learn more about yourself. Best wishes!

    • @yasarovicmiqomotan1496
      @yasarovicmiqomotan1496 Před rokem +1

      @@tjmanifest From all of the comments you typed it does really sound like you're content, it's kind of radiating. You're right that different thing appeal to us. I do have options to climb up within the company. Since I have not much financial obligations, I don't have much responsibilities to give up if I do decide to switch up into another study or field. It is a bit tough though, it gives you career anxiety. If there's still so many options to choose for me, it has to be the "right" choice if that makes sense. Then again your last sentences are right, there is time to figure it out and maybe the uncertainty should be something empowering instead of debilitating
      Cheers, best wishes to you aswell

  • @tusharsingh1872
    @tusharsingh1872 Před 3 měsíci

    most relatable video I've ever seen on studying... this is my first comment ever on CZcams, i just wanted to appreciate this video so much.
    He just summed up my life.
    Thanks man, hope this helps me.
    I'll write feedback later, currently I'm just feeling so much better, I've a feeling this will surely help.

  • @misterchief242
    @misterchief242 Před rokem +1

    Love the videos! Started listening to similar advice you have given in older videos and I’ve definitely gained better studying habits! I hope I can apply some more of this stuff too

  • @antonk.653
    @antonk.653 Před rokem +35

    This is very relatable, because I also see myself as a (former) gifted kid. Many symptoms are a perfect description of me when I was a kid / young adult. Now as a somewhat functional adult, many solutions presented by DR. K are also very familiar. Incredible how my condition was finally being understood and diagnosed.
    Storytime: I struggled twice in life, once during middle school and once at university during my bachelor's degree. In school, it was more the classic laziness / shame / gifted kid syndrome but I somehow pulled myself up and started studying again and it worked. The bigger hit came during my bachelor's degree in physics where my work group of students started to break up, because we were all transitioning into our master's program and everyone picked their own courses. Suddenly I was alone and not used to being alone (and some other private factors), and it all overwhelmed me. I became the guy I despised the most, lazy, procrastinating, useless, overweight, no goal in life. To this day I regard it as a miracle that on some rainy october day, I suddenly said to myself "enough. No more, time to get my life in order.", I then kept crying the whole day, I confessed to my then girlfriend how useless I was, and then I started the very painful climb up again. The side effects of year-long procrastination were severe: I forgot much of physics and had to relearn it, I forgot how to study and focus, I forgot how to write a thesis, forgot how to manage my finances, forgot how to be punctual, basically everything. Now I am married, having kids and being alot wiser.
    I am actually impressed how much of my painfully obtained wisdom is so beautifully described by Dr. K. Deep respect for sharing this and attempting to help other gifted kids.

  • @nDmykART
    @nDmykART Před rokem +3

    Nice haircut! I haven't watched the full video but it's been pretty informative so far!

  • @radfoxus
    @radfoxus Před rokem

    Your insight really are invaluable to the community, thank you!

  • @Infinatus25
    @Infinatus25 Před rokem

    This is my favorite Dr K video. I needed this. Thank you, good sir.

  • @JohnDiggle21
    @JohnDiggle21 Před rokem +8

    I'm currently retaking my second year at uni, this basically explains my issues with studying completely. I've tried pomodoro before but I would never get far due to how i went about my breaks, I hope with your tips I can actually get it to work.

  • @SBResolute
    @SBResolute Před rokem +8

    I definitely identify with some of these issues…100 wells 1 foot deep is the story of my life. I’ve implemented some of these tips and absolutely agree they’re critical for someone who didn’t need to study originally. Will look more at studying to teach I HAVE always liked helping people understand things

  • @gurudhevkrishnakumar2356

    This is one of the best videos I have ever seen...its like he is talking to me knowing my problems exactly...great video...earned my sub...

  • @pigeons5998
    @pigeons5998 Před rokem

    Thank you so much for this video, it could not have come at a better time. I’m in my final year of high school and just did some of my exams. I hadn’t done so well, which is a stark contrast to how I’d been consistently topping the class in most subjects up until now. My parents have been on my back about this, and telling me I haven’t been doing enough, making me feel pretty bad about myself, but this video has really taught me strategies for how to study since I had never been taught. Thank you again

  • @buybuydandavis
    @buybuydandavis Před rokem +38

    Is being more motivated to help other people than help yourself a general thing around here?
    I've often been frustrated that I just don't have the same motivation to help myself.
    8:01 other interesting things the first is
    8:02 that gifted kids generally speaking are
    8:05 really good at helping other people like
    8:06 usually you won't do stuff for yourself
    8:08 but you're actually totally fine helping
    8:10 other human beings

    • @vaisakhkm783
      @vaisakhkm783 Před rokem +3

      yes, i constantly helping others, eventhough i am failing in every single thing....
      past year i helped more than 20 people to make projects, collage projects and actually production projects, yet, i sucked at completing my own collage project unless it's a group project that someone rely on me... i teach others when they ask for help, yet i only learn what i need to teach and i almost fail in every exam

    • @reklom2334
      @reklom2334 Před rokem

      Oddly enough I remember using that motivation to help in order to learn. Through teaching classmates who were having a hard time with the study materials, it gave me the motivation to take the time to really learn and understand the material because the next step was okay how can I relay that information easily and effectively for other people. And different people require different teaching strategies so it helped me learn in more ways than one

    • @themagnificentorange672
      @themagnificentorange672 Před rokem

      Yep i literally was helping people last week when i should've been revising for the same test 😭

    • @svejobaron
      @svejobaron Před rokem

      I think that as generally true but perhabs more for us gifted Kids (now stressed out adults).
      I really don't see the worth in doing something for me. I know logically that I should and it's Important but I don't love myself enough to care most of the times. But Heck do I love my friends and family.
      I do so much stuff for other people that I was asked a couple of weeks ago from a fellow volentary firefighter of my station how I show so much efford to others but not myself (I wear clothes that are old got holes and a ugly, sometimes my body Hygiene is not the best, reckless behavior if I am the only one endangered) and I just sad there for a minute and replayed "I just don't feel worthy of my love..." kinda hurt saying that to my self but it felt right.

    • @Noelciaaa
      @Noelciaaa Před rokem +1

      Yeah. I also need to reframe every pursuit as somehow, at least indirectly, being for the sake of others. I can't seem to care about what happens to me, my own success or happiness. Those are just tools to have more energy and influence to help people, make bigger waves of change... I've found this to be my greatest motivator.

  • @kamilahtroup9842
    @kamilahtroup9842 Před rokem +10

    This video makes me feel incredibly seen and validated. Thank you.

  • @EliasEspinoza92
    @EliasEspinoza92 Před 11 měsíci

    Thank you so much. This is so helpful, I'm 27 so feel way behind but have wanted to go back to university for a while. Your videos have helped so much with things such as ego, I got into Jordan Peterson for a while which helped me have some humility but his insistence on having a high goal just crushed me and seeing you in the episode with the gifted students say that 'You think you're up here but you're actually down here.' Was such a relief. Sure its nice for us to romanticise our lost potential but being an 'average guy' and taking on tasks that are appropriate is a much more engaging way to live. Its almost like you are showing me how to give myself permission to actually live my life, to fail and learn. Thank you so much!

  • @kezia8027
    @kezia8027 Před rokem +1

    Thank you Dr K for being the FIRST person to explain how/why the pomodoro technique works. I've always been one to 'keep going because I finally have the motivation so don't stop or who knows when it will happen again' and now that I understand the purpose of taking the 5 minute breaks it all has finally clicked in my head about where I've been getting stuck these last decades.

  • @manavnayyar
    @manavnayyar Před rokem +14

    This video is an Absolute Goldmine! I had been trying to incorporate pomodoro technique for a month but got bored eventually even though it worked well. I think the missing piece of the puzzle was your first tip. 'Study to Teach'. Will try and see how that works. Also I am going to watch this video again and takes notes. Thank you Dr. K.
    - from another Gifted Indian Kid :)

  • @alextilson9741
    @alextilson9741 Před rokem +3

    A technique for studying I've used (and I've had great success with) is awlays stop studying/working when you get to a point that makes you happy.
    Never stop at a point where you're bored/stressed/exhausted/etc. or you'll start to associate those feelings with the work.
    I never heard of the Pomodoro technique, but my technique was inspired by some basic research into neuro lingustic programming (NLP). Its its worked a bloody charm for both studying and doing work in general.

    • @alextilson9741
      @alextilson9741 Před rokem +1

      A better way to put it is to always keep studying until you find something interesting enough to leave it on a cliffhanger.

    • @alextilson9741
      @alextilson9741 Před rokem +1

      Example: When I worked as a software engineer, I had to program things. One problem might be boring and repetitive, or it might be a super frustrating bug that I cant figure out. But then there might also be a new problem that I dont know how to solve yet, and I have to research a solution. And that solution might be something super cool.
      To structure my day, I'll first research that new problem to look for an interesting solution, when I find it, I'll stop there. Then I'll start working on the frustrating bugs and repetitive problems. Near to the end of the day, I start prototyping that thing I researched earlier, and I typically get super involved. The day ends, I head home, and the next day, I can't wait to go in to work on that prototype.
      Say I run into some annoying bugs with that prototype, I'll keep working on them until I resolve one, and I'll start working on the next thing, then when it feels resolved and less stressful, I'll move back to the boring and repetitive stuff. End of the day, start working on that interesting prototype again. Rince and repeat.
      Not sure how much that made sense but meh.

  • @christinaaa5449
    @christinaaa5449 Před rokem +1

    Please keep making these videos.
    I never really had to put any effort into school but somehow always came in first or second place. The teachers always praised me and hence I was labelled the "gifted popular kid" which was fun in the beginning but slowly I started noticing a shift in 6th grade. Some teachers were obsessed with me while the others despised me for grasping the concept way before my classmates. Some made sure that everyone knew I was their favorite while some subtly mocked me for being "cocky". Some told me my confidence was my best trait while some told me that I was overconfident. This was so confusing as a little kid and without realizing it, I started dumbing myself down to be seen as an average student. The scary thing is it was so easy to be average. I just stopped studying at all and copied homeworks from others and just winged it at exams. But I still was in the top 3%. College, however does not favour winging it and I have been trying to break this cycle of procrastinating till last minute and cramming the night before under immense pressure but still using my painfully average score as an excuse as to why I am never consistent. To go from the smartest kid in the class to the laziest and average in a newer setting has been hard on me. Because none of the teachers or students in my college knew me as a kid, my identity as the "gifted kid" is constantly being threatened and I really want to do better. Your videos help me understand myself and make me feel less alone. So, thank you!

  • @selbyhill4905
    @selbyhill4905 Před 3 měsíci

    This is great, thank you. I didn’t hit a wall until about junior year in high school and when I hit it, it was HARD. I did fine until college and then the stability of high school and having someone there helping me with mundane tasks, like food and shelter, disappeared and I was lost. I’m still having to take my time overcoming the panic I feel towards school now and it sucks. I love learning and I can be extremely good at it but I’m struggling so much with balancing everything. I tend to be a 100% or nothing person and I feel trapped when I can’t give 100%. If I can’t learn EVERYTHING about what I’m interested in, then I tend to not even try and college classes go so fast that I tend to feel like we’re only skimming the surface and not delving deep enough and I hate it. So thank you for breaking it down like this and helping people like me start a journey towards taking control of our education. It makes me feel less alone.

  • @AstraIVagabond
    @AstraIVagabond Před rokem +6

    Ooh, new Dr. K video dropped! I _was_ just about to about to study, but I guess it can wait a bit!

  • @realhumeyra
    @realhumeyra Před rokem +8

    At the end of the video I literally cried. I felt so seen. I'm in med school and I'm struggling since the first day. Almost everybody around me kinda know how to study. And here I am, fighting depression and anxiety before every single exam. I feel like I didn't accomplished anything and I'm here by chances. That's really exhausting. I was starting to believe I'm a lazy, rubbish person.
    Thanks for the video, I'm going to try what you said.

  • @medicostudy101
    @medicostudy101 Před 10 měsíci

    Every word is so true. The teach, the eustress part all of it! Throughout I was like "How do you know me so well,"
    Thanks a ton Dr. K❤
    No wonder I had to start a YT since d/t the boredom. Learning for Teaching helps so much with learning.

  • @speedude0164
    @speedude0164 Před rokem +1

    You basically described my childhood word for word at the beginning. Most of my work/study life has been a repeating process of feeling so far behind everyone around me with no way of effectively fixing the problem. I felt super lazy, the adults in my life likely having contributed to that as well, and I began fearing that I had just lost the motivation to learn and was no longer built to succeed in this world. Through extensive self-reflection and watching videos like this one, I've come to understand and empathize with myself so much more. Not only have I realized that there was simply nothing I could've done to prevent myself from ending up in this situation, I also know I am capable of turning things around and succeeding. I'm 20 years old and have no clue what I want to do with my life, so I figure the best I can do is work to make a profit and build as much experience as possible until I figure it out. This level of uncertainty is terrifying, but by learning more about myself and what works best for me, I know I can make it.

  • @zachkrein883
    @zachkrein883 Před rokem +4

    Im 19 and am a gifted kid. Fascinating to see that I have been accidentally following most of these helpful tips all my life! All during highschool, I created study packets for my classmates, and would often teach them. These not only created a very rigorous study habit, but also made me want to pursue teaching as my profession. So I guess ya win some ya lose some 😂

  • @Wyulliam
    @Wyulliam Před rokem +3

    What an amazing video. I never realised I didn't know how to learn. He said about not needing to study until you "hit a wall" and think that you are just lazy. I hit that wall multiple times and really didn't understand what was going on. I feel like I just learned the most important skill on my life: How to learn

  • @lua_queiroz
    @lua_queiroz Před 3 měsíci

    Wow! Thank you so much for this video. Everything you said in this video makes sense to me! I’m currently with 24 years old and I am pursuing a dual-degree in aerospace engineering in France(I’m Brazilian), but I have faced some problems in my academic life where I was diagnosed with anxiety and depression, and honestly it has always been linked to the fact that I am not performing as well as before! Despite already having completed my degrees, all of these teachings will help me a lot!

  • @AL_is_my_name
    @AL_is_my_name Před 3 měsíci

    Really glad that CZcams just randomly recommend your Channel. Thanks for your quality content.

  • @vincentstartuplarbin2786
    @vincentstartuplarbin2786 Před rokem +17

    I can so much relate... I'm trying not to make the same mistake with my child that my parents (psychological therapist and psychiatrist, not kidding) did with me.

  • @ninsophy9798
    @ninsophy9798 Před rokem +3

    And the people at HGgg reddit told me that wanting to learn how to learn was overthinking. like, fellas, i wouldnt wanna learn if i could just learn it??
    so yes, this was closure that was very much needed by me. veey appreciated, HGgg team 😌🙏

  • @poleritude6222
    @poleritude6222 Před rokem +1

    I really resonate with the "Study to teach" advice. I think this is a technique I came across accidentally as I frequently in my life had situations where I wanted to be able to better present and distill a concept to other people, but I definitely can attest that my retention of the material and expansion of understanding on the topics was greatly increased when operating under this motivation and goal.

  • @agastyagill
    @agastyagill Před rokem

    I never knew I was a gifted kid until this video . Watching this has changed me so much!! I used to get such good grades earlier but then came the pandemic , after which nothing has been the same . I’ve been struggling in 8th grade quite a bit . Sometimes I would study hard only to see myself get an 7/10or 8/10. I’ve figured that the method of studying depends a lot on the outcome . Will try to do these methods for sure . You gained a like and a subscriber buddy , nice vid !

  • @GetOfflineGetGood
    @GetOfflineGetGood Před rokem +3

    I was a gifted kid who was also below the poverty line with a single abusive/neglectful parent. I made it through school the first time on sheer anxiety but I never studied. I'm about to go back for a second degree as an adult who has been through a lot of therapy, and I'm nervous. I don't totally trust myself. I feel FUBAR honestly, but I don't really have any other options. I feel like I keep hitting dead ends and I've got to do something to give myself a leg up. I'm doing some self-guided studying to prepare and working a minimum wage job that leaves me exhausted. I wish therapy was enough to overcome a lifetime of poverty and trauma but I'm still in the trenches every day.

  • @then6951
    @then6951 Před rokem +4

    Thanks!

  • @gnusis
    @gnusis Před rokem +1

    I'm 40y, all what you say on this subject across many videos resonates so much on me, now as a parent of a 11y girl who's facing many of these challenges (because school has been easy for her so far), I'm glad I'm finding ways to help her and hopefully alleviate the struggles she may have once getting into college.

  • @yushi8373
    @yushi8373 Před rokem

    Omg Thank you! I've been saying being smart is the biggest obstacle in learning for so long and people thought I was being insincere 😭
    Everything sounds super applicable. I'll be using these now. Saved the video so I can keep coming back to it.

  • @RomanBellicTaxi
    @RomanBellicTaxi Před rokem +3

    This is me. Jesus Christ, how is that possible. The depression, the longing for an objective, the 100 wells 1 foot deep, the fear of failure. Even the studying to teach! I build the craziest lectures in my mind when I'm excited about learning something new. But only on, automatic mode, and never actively about something I really should do.
    I wish this video was posted a couple of years before, but, it is never too late. I can try now.

  • @shauncheng3507
    @shauncheng3507 Před rokem +5

    god yeah i feel like i could end life anytime now considering how boring life is and finding out how meaningless everything is. As a gifted kid growing up until the junior year of high school, I could consider myself a gifted-gifted kid. That a hundred wells dug one foot deep was so well said because I was learning college materials right before junior year started. The first half year was perfectly fine but because it was fully quaratined, the bare minimum thing started to go below bare minimum. Then the below bare minimum A's start to become b's and c's. Sooner or later I find myself soo behind all the other kids. The worst part was I had two classes fail that year and it struck me hard. The next year I had one class with juniors a grade behind me and then everything started going downhill. I didn't want to do anything and the moments I had trying to get back up always seem to failed. Self-esteem also got damaged hard. Now I'm in college doing super bare minimum to just try to get pass and I feel lazy again because everything just seems so stupid and boring to me now. Also the guilt I feel that I feel like im disappointing my parents after they say its alright, they just want me to be safe and normal. Also about how this college was also a bare minimum choice out of the other colleges I wanted to go to. How I think it's a low class university, but hey. It is what it is and to think of it, what if I could make it out alive and do even better than those good colleges? Honestly thanks to HGGG or else idk what to do. I'm like lazy to the point I don't want to see a therapist because I'm scared of my parents finding out about my problems. They've already had enough from life. These videos for real deep down in my heart, I really do appreciate them. Thank you.

  • @merenwennumesse
    @merenwennumesse Před rokem +1

    Hi. So much thanks for this video! As a mum I always struggled with school and just barely got through each grade. My younger brother didn't even need to open any textbooks to get through school until he didn't anymore. (And went a far more complicated way to studying - but that's another story)
    But our parents never had time patients or the skills to help us learn how to study. And I just learned what I can through trial and error (and in young years teaching my brother before he actually needed to go to school himself -maybe another reason why he never needed to study himself)
    Yet I already see the first signs in my 5yo son. Who is very bright and understands a lot but not good in keeping his focus and staying concentrated (in comparison to other kids his age - also according to a psychiatrist)
    So I hope this will help me getting ideas on how to help him once he goes to school starting September.

  • @Physicsope875
    @Physicsope875 Před 2 měsíci

    This video literally changed my life, thank you so much

  • @milkysnack
    @milkysnack Před rokem +7

    Oh my God... this is what i have been looking for so long. Thank you ! I think it will realy help me to not feel like a loser and finally get my stuff together.

  • @TumblinWeeds
    @TumblinWeeds Před rokem +13

    What bugs me about the pomodero technique is that 5 minutes doesn’t seem like much of a break at all 😅 and I’ve actually never been able to focus for a full 1.5 hours (outside of cramming that is). I can’t see how I would be able to prevent myself from just getting extremely distracted

    • @Mars-oc2gq
      @Mars-oc2gq Před rokem +5

      That's why I vary my pomodoro times depending on what task I'm doing. I like to take slightly longer breaks than 5 minutes, but I also usually work longer. The exact amount of time I set is dependent on the exact activity I'm doing, as I'm gotten fairly good at estimating how long I take to complete certain tasks and/or the amount of time I can focus before I need a break.
      If you are really consistent with using a pomodoro timer, you will notice that over time, you will naturally be able to focus longer and will be able to adjust the break and work times accordingly. As far as distractions, I hear you, that can be very challenging to avoid. I have no idea what kind of distractions might be in your environment, so I can't say much about that other than it's helpful to study/work in different locations. Studying in different locations can also improve your retention of information.
      Anyway, I hope you end up trying the pomodoro technique again sometime, as I have found it immensely helpful in both my study and work life and hope it works for you, as well. Obviously, do whatever technique suits you best, you know yourself better than a random person on the internet. Haha. Cheers.

    • @angeldude101
      @angeldude101 Před rokem +1

      @@Mars-oc2gq I can say that there is no way I'd be able to do Pomodoro without an external timer, and then I need to actually remember to set it. As for "go for a 5 minute walk, I don't know how long five minutes is, and I have nowhere to walk to in that amount of time. Do I just spin in circles? If I'm in the library, do I start browsing other books and risk getting distracted by that?

    • @aphbagtm7799
      @aphbagtm7799 Před rokem +2

      The method i use is 50:10 minutes (sometimes 60:15), so I have to focus on work longer but get a longer break. To avoid distractions, i usually put my phone on do not disturb and spend my break doing something else- eating a snack, reading a book, taking a walk. Not letting my phone try to talk to me (and having my computer, where i do all my work, closed) really helps me avoid getting distracted with doomscrolling while not trying to be all work all the time.
      I hope that was helpful! Always remember that these techniques are supposed to help you, so you can change them as much as you want!

  • @beeclimbing
    @beeclimbing Před rokem +1

    As someone who had 0 studying skills going into college, I can relate to the difficulty of learning how to actually allow yourself to learn material studying. This is some very insightful knowledge that took lots of trial and error to find out on my own. Thank you for sharing this with others, I’m sure it will help many!

  • @no0525
    @no0525 Před 6 měsíci +1

    OMG I'm shocked... you just helped me understand my entire life... by the mourning that's coming up in me now of what was and what will never be... I'm guessing that this is the root cause I was searching for. thank you!

  • @drummerofawe
    @drummerofawe Před rokem +2

    One struggle I found particularly hard was realizing in high school that a lot of kids would be friendly with me only when they needed my help with schoolwork, and then not care about me otherwise.
    It made 'studying to teach' lose a lot of its appeal and I think formed a negative association with academic success in my mind.