Fnord wrote:
Friends are irrelevant to earning a degree, and are only 'friendly' for their own advancement.
But, hey ... if someone wants to waste valuable study time by making friends, then their eventual failure is not on me![/color]
This is a
really grim view. It is unreasonable to tell someone to "forget about making friends" for multiple years of their life. One shouldn't have to put life on "pause" for the sake of a degree. I can't stand by this view at all, and I think it could even be an invitation for mental health decline. The OP obviously thinks it is worth her time, and it isn't your place to say whether it is a "waste".
Furthermore, you seem to be making the assumption that everyone going to college has the
sole goal of attaining a degree. I'm sorry if your experience at uni led you to believe that every person there was only there to take advantage of you or those around them, but in all actuality this just isn't realistic. College can be potential opportunity for neurodivergent people to meet similar people, find their bearings in this ridiculously difficult world, and even grow their special interests (alongside others).
I wouldn't have called myself a "social butterfly"(I think I'm incapable of that) ---and I still had many struggles of course-- but the friendships I
DID manage to make in college were long-lasting and very special. I have been out of college for many years, but I still remain in contact with these friends to this day. I consider them to be a part of my family. My acquisition of these friends had nothing to do with popularity (we were complete nerds, and the rest of our classmates thought we were weirdos) or the advancement of my degree. We helped each other study, shared similar special interests, and even comforted each other during tough times.
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