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Jessica Lopez's avatar

This is amazing. I've had a passion for learning most of my adult life. Just like you, it came to me once I gained the freedom and autonomy to decide what I wanted to learn. I'm so glad I stumbled upon your page.

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Zara Bogaski's avatar

Love this. I was raised by my grandparents to be autodidactic along with my studies. It was the natural thing to do with them, my uncles and cousins.

My grandfather was the best example of it. He barely finished high school and became an artist for a living. The condition my grandmother imposed in order to marry him was that he had to be an independent artist. So he worked from home making portraits. He also made illustrations for educational materials. But he was truly a renaissance man. He had a love for books, was also a photographer, an inventor and astronomer. He made his own telescopes from scratch and became an expert at optics, taking months to grind and polish his lenses. They named the optics lab after him. Grandfather adapted things for his work and photography. He learned It all in books and magazines. It was also a different age, and I was indoctrinated in their style of learning.

My grandmother was a teacher that became a stay at home housewife and had complete strict control of the house and what activities we did. We did a lot of cultural activities like concerts, museums, art, archeology, university lectures, theology, philosophy, etc. and of course reading. She would have me reading classics to her out loud while she was cooking or sat me down to translate Shakespeare to Spanish. Occasionally she would let me read whatever I wanted.

But many times, like them, I didn't start learning from basic broad topics to specific. Many times like my grandfather I would learn something specific because of curiosity, and maybe then fill in the blanks and learn a lot about the basics. It was more of an archeologist approach than a university approach. I still function a little that way. But I do deep dives down rabbit holes sometimes. I also include videos and podcasts. But like the archeologist, I keep digging for the original source.

I laud you for promoting autodidactic learning, and just wanted to mention the other approach.

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