IQ alone won't do that. Mine used to test really high when I was little (it never has since then), and while some of my difficulties got explained away in terms of it, all that resulted in was pressure to perform at a level I was ultimately incapable of sustaining. It certainly didn't make my life easier. I even still felt like I was stupid, because despite testing high (which I wasn't even told I'd done), I understood far less of most everyday things than people who had average or even below-average IQs around me. (For instance, when I was tested as a supposed "genius", I did not know the meaning of the word "test" or a number of other everyday words.) I never fit in with other kids labeled gifted either, if anything they behaved worse to me than regular kids because they used more elaborate means of bullying.
The only upside I can give is that it postponed my being defined as a writeoff until I was old enough that I'd already been treated like a person (the way everyone should regardless of IQ) in some regards at least for a long time. Which meant that instead of having a lifetime of not being considered a person, I lost the trait of being considered a person, which meant that I was able to perceive the difference. The downside is that every time I screwed up at something, it was thought to be either deliberate, the result of carelessness, or a sign that I needed more and more advanced work. Even if I was already working harder than the other kids for less result. And that wasn't fair to either me or the other kids.
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"In my world it's a place of patterns and feel. In my world it's a haven for what is real. It's my world, nobody can steal it, but people like me, we live in the shadows." -Donna Williams