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@sweatystartup I was the oldest kid in my grade and it’s the single greatest thing my parents ever did for me.
Both academically and athletically it set me ahead of my peers.
It played a huge role in me playing college sports at the level I did.
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@code4scale There is something to be said for being good at life early on.
Leads to a lot of success later!
Love this!
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@code4scale @sweatystartup No you were behind your fucking peers. You couldn’t compete with kids your own age fucking loser
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@code4scale @sweatystartup Except they were not your peers, you were simply lording over younger kids. No good.
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@code4scale @sweatystartup The kids that play above their age group keep pushing to improve while the kids that play below their age group become complacent
As an example, kids that are really good at juniors tennis are playing kids 2 or 3 yrs older by design
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@code4scale @sweatystartup So basically a full blown loser who could not compete with peers his age? This is not a flex, its sadness, lol.
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I am trying my hand at a startup to help small businesses leverage AI to effectively scale their business!
I offer AI coaching as well :)
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@code4scale @sweatystartup Thanks for admitting you couldn’t succeed on a level playing field. You had to game the system. You’re a loser, plain and simple.
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@code4scale @sweatystartup I was 17 for the first two months of my college athletics career and I was laughing my ass off at the 26 year old who was the backup PG behind me.
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@code4scale @sweatystartup I was the opposite, youngest in the grade.
It didn't help, but I survived.
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@code4scale @sweatystartup I was a year younger than my grade which made me better athletically because i had to keep up with the older kids.
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@code4scale @sweatystartup I was a year ahead in school and still played college baseball and soccer. Made the teams at 16 yrs old. You must’ve sucked.
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I was the youngest by almost a year and I struggled academically, socially, and athletically, not to mention I’m left handed and there were no accommodations for that when I was in school. It took me well into adulthood until I read Gladwell and I often wonder what it would have been like if I was at least the same age as my school peers.
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@code4scale @sweatystartup Could you not compete with your peers well?
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@code4scale @sweatystartup Because they weren’t your “peers,” moron.
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@code4scale @sweatystartup I agree. Delayed enrollment often creates a maturity gap that shows up in confidence, participation, and leadership, not just grades. Small early advantages tend to compound.
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@code4scale @sweatystartup Guess they didn’t believe in you
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@code4scale @sweatystartup lol i had it differently but the same outcome, i was the youngest but always hung with the oldest n competed with the oldest that was MY David vs Goliath. It all depends on the person if i had it yalls way i would have turned out the opposite
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@code4scale @sweatystartup They weren't your peers , dumbo. They were the younger kids.
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@code4scale @sweatystartup Imagine how successful you could have been if your parents had held you back TWO years!!!
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@code4scale @sweatystartup My brother, a Sept birthday, remains upset with my parents to this day that they made him the youngest in his grade over the oldest.
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@code4scale @sweatystartup Damn til a younger kid is still bigger and better
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@code4scale @sweatystartup What sport did you play in college
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@code4scale @sweatystartup Your parents didn't do anything. U just kept failing.
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@code4scale @sweatystartup False my parents put me with older kids n when I got to play with kids my age I dominated to hold ur kids back intentionally for ur own personal reasons is wild
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@code4scale @sweatystartup Yeah but if you turn 19 in grade 12 you legally can’t play against high schoolers
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