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    Joined: Jun 2012
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    Originally Posted by Cricket2
    Originally Posted by ReaderGirl
    Let me start by saying I’m definitely not a troll; I’m not trying to mess with anyone. I really am having these issues, and my scores really are as I’ve posted. I’m not making any of it up. I really am confused and conflicted and worrying like crazy over this.

    To be honest, I was really surprised when the results came back and my IQ was average. Reading so much as I have about early reading and giftedness, I thought for sure my IQ would at least be in the 120s. I certainly wasn’t expecting some genius score or anything like that, though. I think part of the problem is that, because I couldn’t afford private testing, the free testing was concerned only about addressing my LD issues and nothing else, so it wasn’t as comprehensive and was more focused that a full assessment would’ve been.

    I think the reason I seem so wrapped up in this is because after years of research and believing I was a gifted reader and that it explained everything (reading before K and on a nearly 7th grade level in 4th with full comprehension despite parents who don’t read), I was finally tested and proved correct, and then I come on here and everyone’s telling me I’m not a gifted reader and I feel absolutely crushed.

    I wish I could just trust the psych’s judgment.

    I got my GED last year. I can’t afford college, but am pursuing a career as an author/aikido instructor.

    Thanks for your time.
    You and I were posting at the same time. This is a tricky one and I have just a few things I'll try to put together concisely. I can see as how having your self image questioned (average IQ, feeling that others are telling you that you are wrong) could be crushing.

    I do know children and younger teens who read at a level similar to what you describe (started early, read around 7th-8th grade level by 4th grade) and who have had IQ testing done more than once on full measures (WISC, SB) and who have smack dab 50th percentile IQ scores. Knowing some of these kids, I honestly don't doubt that the IQ measures are accurate. They are good kids, great students, great readers, but not high IQ kids.

    I don't think that it is out of the realm of possibility to say that someone with an average IQ can be a very advanced reader or very advanced in some other academic area. That isn't what I personally define as gifted, but as I said in my last post, there are so many different ways of defining gifted now a days that it is totally cool for you or the psych who tested you or any expert who defines gifted as high achievement in a domain to call you gifted.

    The second thing is that you are posting on a forum where a lot of people have highly to profoundly gifted children by IQ measures. Our opinions are skewed as a result. We are probably looking for something more extreme as a result. Don't let us crush your self concept.

    What brought you here in the first place if you were already inclined to view yourself as a gifted reader and the psych agreed? What left you asking if his report was right in the first place?

    Oops! Sorry about that. smile

    OK.

    Now that you mentioned it, I have noticed a lot of HG and PG stuff, but honestly, I had no idea where else to go about this. I've tried asking around online in other places and have basically been told to get therapy(!) and that gifted people don't get GEDs, and that it was stupid for me to feel uncomfortable about reading in front of my parents.

    I think what brought me here the most was that I was wondering how I could possibly score in the gifted range, even if only on an achievement test, and still have an average IQ.

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    Originally Posted by Cricket2
    Originally Posted by g2mom
    Though there are some people on this board who came from poverty and were able to get educated over time, most people on this board come from pretty priveledged backgrounds and cannot relate to your values or reasons for your angst.
    I do want to apologize if I am one of the ones who is making you feel crushed. I struggle between being honest with what my personal beliefs and definitions are and being kind to someone who is young and who may have, for all we know, incorrect measures for her.

    For what its worth, I do not come from privilege although I cannot claim to come from poverty either just somewhere in between. I have been living on my own since I was 16 and moved out of my parents' home, though, and did put myself through college. I do understand feeling alienated and misunderstood and I do have to admit that having the understanding of myself as gifted once I realized that was what was going on with my children has been healing for me. I would not want to deny someone else the same and my definition of gifted may be as incorrect as the next person's.

    No, no, no! You've been one of the most helpful; you keep answering my neurotic questions! I appreciate it tons, believe me. smile

    I definitely want you to be honest. I think I just have to remember that giftedness is measured/defined differently by different people, and the best thing I can do is just trust the psych and do what makes me happy without caring what other people think of me or my abilities, regardless of how hard that might be.

    Wow. It sounds like you've achieved a lot and been through a lot; good for you! smile

    I think the understanding that hit me when I opened the psych's report has absolutely made a difference in my life similar to yours. It made me feel so good to just sit there and read over it. It made me feel like I wasn't weird or a freak; I had proof of my abilities. When I started researching giftedness, I realized there were a lot of people like me, and although when I'm around my book-hating parents I tend to feel very alone and an alien, I'm not really an alien at all.

    I think it's the confirmation, the validation, actually having that "g" word on an official psych report. It made me feel loads better, about everything.

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    Originally Posted by g2mom
    "I was finally tested and proved correct, and then I come on here and everyone’s telling me I’m not a gifted reader and I feel absolutely crushed. "

    so stop listening.
    you do not need external validation to be a person of worth.
    not from your parents and not from folks on a web site you never met.
    you have great drive if you got your GED and are still striving to learn more. why did you pick Aikido? what draws you to this?
    begin to think about the positives in your live and moving forward. not the negatives and "might have beens"
    a test is just one momnet in time. if you are from people who are not educated ( like my family)perhaps you have that awe or innate respect for professionals like they have some power to see more. well guess what? they dont. they have tools they learn how to use. and they use them. just like aikido.
    do not assign more weight to an IQ test than it is worth. it doesnt make you or label you. unless you let it.
    Likewise the high scores dont label or make you either. they are just measurements made on one day by one guy using an imperfect yardstick.
    plus you are not average. if you were you wouldn't be on this board seeking answers. you would be in nail school or cosmetology school or sweeping up in a shop thinking about school or looking for a guy to take care of you.
    Though there are some people on this board who came from poverty and were able to get educated over time, most people on this board come from pretty priveledged backgrounds and cannot relate to your values or reasons for your angst.
    I was lucky and got scholarships eventually. It is really hard for kids now because college is so expensive and taking on a debt is not something that should be done lightly.
    but you can find free classes about writing and reading online and even at local libraries and community centers. Our library has a writers group that meets regularly and they take turns reading and commenting on one anothers work. there are also writiers workshops that have scholarships for promising young authors. there are more ways to learn for someone as bright as you without college. or without college just yet.
    You can always go later if the opportunity presents itself and you still want to.
    dont look for external validation. trust what you know to be true. and follow your dreams. they will be what you will write about later.

    Thank you for your time and advice! Honestly, I almost cried. No joke.

    I will definitely do as you say. I'm going to trust myself, do what I enjoy, and not let anybody get in my way/get me down.

    I've always been interested in the martial arts, but aikido appealed to me because strength actually made you weaker, women are generally better at it than men because of their lack of upper body strength, and because you can practice it for a lifetime because it is easy on the body.

    Thanks so much!

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    Originally Posted by Iucounu
    Originally Posted by ReaderGirl
    I really am confused and conflicted and worrying like crazy over this... I was really surprised when the results came back and my IQ was average... I think the reason I seem so wrapped up in this is because after years of research and believing I was a gifted reader and that it explained everything (reading before K and on a nearly 7th grade level in 4th with full comprehension despite parents who don’t read), I was finally tested and proved correct, and then I come on here and everyone’s telling me I’m not a gifted reader and I feel absolutely crushed.
    I'm seriously not trying to crush your ego. My wish for you is that you liberate yourself from these feelings.

    You know that you'll never be the most gifted person out there in any particular area, right? Someone will always be a more gifted reader by your definition-- reading earlier, more ahead by the fourth grade, or whatever. This will hopefully come as a sort of relief; no matter how hard you try, you're never going to be at the top of the measures you are a bit fixated upon.

    When you think about this, maybe you should consider why it is important to you that you see yourself as better than the great majority of the people out there that are average. Is it to give yourself courage, by thinking that even though you are just a GED holder you can achieve more in life than many with better credentials? (For what it's worth, I dropped out of high school at age 13 and later got my GED. Now I woudn't call myself a very high achiever or anything; I spent a decade in software engineering, where I certainly was at the top of my particular area of the game, and made some good money, but never achieved real fame and fortune. Later I went to law school and did well, but wasn't top in my class, partly because I have a tendency to focus very deeply on topics that interest me. But fairly often I've humiliated ultra-high-on-paper achievers in court, people from Harvard Law, people with vastly more experience, etc.)

    You know that giftedness doesn't directly determine success in life, right? Quit stressing about this; it's a losing game. You will wind up either feeling like you're not living up to your potential, resting on your laurels ("I've achieved so much despite such humble beginnings, all due to my ability"), feeling bad because you don't stack up to others higher up the rankings, or something else that doesn't wind up helping you succeed.

    It really doesn't matter how gifted (whatever that means) you are at this stage in your life; it matters what you do. Set yourself some goals and work toward them as hard as you can. If you really try as hard as humanly possible-- and I mean try so hard that you nearly break yourself-- you will almost certainly get somewhere that's good to be, even if you don't live up to your original self-concept in one way or another. Personally, I think it's more likely that you would exceed whatever you think yourself capable of by fixating on a couple of facets of your psychologist's report.

    Let it go. Let the psychologist's determination that you're a gifted reader be a happy little nugget of self-confidence that no one can take away from you, and go on with your life. Don't doubt yourself because of your history, your parents' reading ability, or anything else. Just get on with becoming whatever you will become.

    I know, and I appreciate your time and advice. smile

    I need to be grateful for what I have and who I am, and work hard to be as good as I can be, because that's what matters.

    I don't think I'm so much trying to see myself as better than a lot of other people, as I am trying to validate/explain my abilities/talents/gifts. But it's not exactly like I can change myself anyway...

    I love that "happy little nugget" comment...can I quote you on that? grin

    Thanks!

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    Originally Posted by Cricket2
    Originally Posted by ReaderGirl
    OK.

    I think I'm just looking for an answer to everything, as to why I'm different, why I'm bored a lot. That kind of thing.

    So, basically, I can trust what my psych said as long as I understand that my scores/diagnosis are going to mean different things to different people/professionals?
    Sounds good to me smile !

    Quote
    Can I ask why there's even a gifted label to start with? Isn't "advanced" a good enough term? Excuse me if I'm being REALLY naive here! smile
    I don't think that's naive at all in that it is something that is frequently discussed among experts in the field and parents alike. I think that, initially, the term gifted was in place to distinguish high IQ from other things, but then it morphed to mean a lot of different things. The term itself is not well loved b/c it implies that those who don't fall under that umbrella are lacking gifts.

    eta: I've always liked this essay b/c it defines gifted more as a qualitative difference, which is what I see it as as well: http://www.georgeparkyncentre.org/documents/high-achievers-pdf.pdf

    For me, that's the reason "advanced" isn't enough b/c it isn't just about academic advancement.

    Yay! grin

    Thanks for the essay. Am going to read.

    Thanks for everything!

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    I can't offer advise as great what's already been given, but I just wanted to give you one other tiny bit of food for thought... the most important factor in a person's life - whether they are happy/fulfilled, is the CHOICES they make. You don't have much control over anything else in life, beyond the choices that you make. How you choose to respond to the things in your life will determine your path. Continue making good choices, and investing time in things that make you happy and fulfill you, and no one can ever make you regret your life.

    My older sister was one of those kids who was so completely obviously gifted... but where is she today? After a lifetime of terrible choices and never taking responsibility for anything, she's jobless, married to a man who's constantly either working minimum wage or getting fired, has 3 kids she can't take care of, and spent most of last year in a homeless shelter! A high IQ and a 'gifted' label don't mean squat if you don't make good choices in your life!

    Last edited by epoh; 06/18/12 07:27 AM.

    ~amy
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    Originally Posted by epoh
    I can't offer advise as great what's already been given, but I just wanted to give you one other tiny bit of food for thought... the most important factor in a person's life - whether they are happy/fulfilled, is the CHOICES they make. You don't have much control over anything else in life, beyond the choices that you make. How you choose to respond to the things in your life will determine your path. Continue making good choices, and investing time in things that make you happy and fulfill you, and no one can ever make you regret your life.

    My older sister was one of those kids who was so completely obviously gifted... but where is she today? After a lifetime of terrible choices and never taking responsibility for anything, she's jobless, married to a man who's constantly either working minimum wage or getting fired, has 3 kids she can't take care of, and spent most of last year in a homeless shelter! A high IQ and a 'gifted' label don't mean squat if you don't make good choices in your life!

    Thanks, epoh! I'm definitely going to continue to work hard and do my best always. smile

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