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by BeetleB 754 days ago
As the OC mentioned in a sibling comment, it's actually the societal aspect that leads people to abandon pursuing things like mathematics.

When I was in grad school, I was surrounded by people who had these interests. I could work on a cool math problem, and people would be interested. I could have a conversation with them about it.

Fast forward to the "work" world, and there's not a single person I know in my city with whom I can have these discussions. And trust me, I looked.

As the OC said, it becomes an incredibly lonely life. If I want to study a typical grad level math course after work hours, it can easily consume all my free time (trying to solve a given problem could take hours).[1] After a few years of trying, I had to abandon it for the sake of my mental health.

In retrospect, there probably is a middle ground, and if I return to it, I'll aim for that middle ground. Intentionally choose topics I can do in bite sized amounts, and topics that I can share online that have a higher chance of engagement.

[1] And this was when I was single without kids. Imagine how much less time you have with kids.

1 comments

On the Internet, the city has billions of people.

Rural towns are devoid of most things. Every urban area has math PhDs.

> On the Internet, the city has billions of people.

Quality of conversation is very different. Here I am, talking to you randomly. But I can't keep pinging you to discuss math.

> Rural towns are devoid of most things. Every urban area has math PhDs.

Most of whom have "moved" on and do not want to do math in their free time.