In some ways it wouldโve been a better world for me, though I donโt yearn for its return.
Here I am referring to the days of โcomputer girlsโ calculating and working out equations while others โ usually men โ played with the ideas and discoveries*. I will never have any ability in math and I donโt seem to be trainable in that area, but Iโm a dab hand at connecting disparate arenas of science and thought, and understanding complex systems quickly.
In those ways, Iโm more well-suited to the worlds of the 1930s and the 1940s than I am the contemporary milieu where getting into science basically means taking a math-focused IQ test regardless of your other talents or abilities.
Then, I couldโve contributed something. Possibly a lot. Now, Iโd be written off because Iโm not interested in becoming a full-time mathematician with a small side of science. Not only am I not suited to it, I am extremely, agonizingly bored by pretty much all math.
*I know that many discoveries were probably actually made by these โcomputer girlsโ because sometimes the only way to discover is by doing, but this is mostly lost to history.