In that case I think you should feel both proud and lucky for having the strength of character to withstand the pressures leading those other girls to such limited ambitions. You are an outlier.mozg wrote:And it really wasn't that fucking hard, you know? I had the same expectations put on me as the men that I graduated with, and that was entirely fair.
I never considered, even growing up in rural fucking bible beating hillbilly country America where most other girls had getting married and having lots of babies as their two life goals that science, math and engineering weren't for me. I wasn't pushed in the direction of engineering, I got there because that's where I gravitated.
The problem I was trying to point out is NOT that you, with your determination, faced challenges in becoming an engineer. The problem is that those other girls are being told by society that they shouldn't have engineering as a goal in the first place. The bible tells them their place is beside their man. Pop culture tell them they have to work in "soft" careers, spend all their time impressing men, etc.
They may have the same opportunities to EXERCISE their desires, but they don't have the same opportunities to DEVELOP their desires.
Same goes for male kids who like pink, as Wumbologist was talking about (iirc)
I'm an outlier too. I'm one of those people who managed to get into a successful technical career without graduating high school (I took the California High School Proficiency Exam my Junior year), or college (I only took a couple semesters of comp sci & math class before deciding school is not how I learn). But I never would have "dropped out" of those things if I didn't have a supportive family who understood my capabilities. When I was more of a libertarian, I believed this meant school was useless. If *I* can get ahead in life, having grown up on welfare, without doing any hardcore schooling, so should anyone. Right?
Well no. Reality struck me over the last couple years... I'm a white male. That in and of itself is a huge leg up. Add a smattering of natural talent for abstract thinking & problem solving, and a HUGE amount of luck as far as which positions I was placed at by temp agencies, and I have a REALLY hard time claiming any credit for the position I'm in now.
We are all victims of circumstance, which is the main reason I don't identify as libertarian anymore (and especially not the anarcho-capitalist I used to be). The libertarian ideal of equal opportunity simply doesn't exist in the real world. Equal opportunity needs to be an active process, given human nature.