Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Over-educated pushy strivers with expensive nonsense degrees become overconfident and think they're experts on everything, when they're not even experts in their lane. Dunning–Kruger effect.
+1
DMV attracts some of the most insufferable blowhards on the planet.
Anonymous wrote:Over-educated pushy strivers with expensive nonsense degrees become overconfident and think they're experts on everything, when they're not even experts in their lane. Dunning–Kruger effect.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think DC tends to attract the "maximizer" personality. They assume you want/need to strategize to get the best thing because that's what they do. Find more "satisficers" to hang out with, we are much more relaxed!
https://www.psychologistworld.com/cognitive/maximizers-satisficers-decision-making
Yes!!! I was a satisficer in a world of maximizers and left the DMV recently. It was exhausting! It’s so much more mentally peaceful where I am now. My anxiety was always sky high especially with other moms. I once set my alarm for midnight to be sure and get my kids in to summer camp as soon as it opened after several moms saying you’ll miss it if you don’t!! But to their credit they always had shit on lockdown and freely gave advice which helped in cases like this.
Anonymous wrote:I love hanging out with the maximizers! They do all my research for me. Like on here 😱😱😱
Anonymous wrote:I moved to the DMV from another part of the US and I like it a lot. This is not a "I hate DC" rant. I'm really glad I live here.
But something I've noticed is that many people in the DMV have a specific personality trait that I find is waaaaay less common elsewhere. And that the "advisor" personality -- people who are frequently telling other people where to go, what to do, how to approach this or that, etc. There are people like this everywhere, but the percent of people I meet in DC like this is very high. Do you think this is a function of so many highly educated people? Or maybe people who work in advisory fields like policy or law?
Sometimes the people like this really know what they are talking about but other times not. Most often, the subject they are advising on is extremely subject or dependent on context (something like where to send your kids to school, what neighborhood to live in, where to go on vacation, etc. -- stuff for which there truly is not one correct answer and you'd have to know a lot about an individuals situation in order to give them good advice, in my opinion), but people speak with such confidence! I do like getting all the suggestions and I have learned about some great things this way, though I also find myself disregarding probably 90% of the unsolicited advice I get here simply because I get so much of it.
Just wondering if others have noticed this about this area and might have insight into why many people here are like this. It feels like a distinct feature of the culture here as compared to other places I have lived (I'm from the midwest originally but have also lived in the Southwest, West Coast, and New England before moving to this area).
Anonymous wrote:I think DC tends to attract the "maximizer" personality. They assume you want/need to strategize to get the best thing because that's what they do. Find more "satisficers" to hang out with, we are much more relaxed!
https://www.psychologistworld.com/cognitive/maximizers-satisficers-decision-making
Anonymous wrote:I think DC tends to attract the "maximizer" personality. They assume you want/need to strategize to get the best thing because that's what they do. Find more "satisficers" to hang out with, we are much more relaxed!
https://www.psychologistworld.com/cognitive/maximizers-satisficers-decision-making
Anonymous wrote:I think DC tends to attract the "maximizer" personality. They assume you want/need to strategize to get the best thing because that's what they do. Find more "satisficers" to hang out with, we are much more relaxed!
https://www.psychologistworld.com/cognitive/maximizers-satisficers-decision-making
Anonymous wrote:I moved to the DMV from another part of the US and I like it a lot. This is not a "I hate DC" rant. I'm really glad I live here.
But something I've noticed is that many people in the DMV have a specific personality trait that I find is waaaaay less common elsewhere. And that the "advisor" personality -- people who are frequently telling other people where to go, what to do, how to approach this or that, etc. There are people like this everywhere, but the percent of people I meet in DC like this is very high. Do you think this is a function of so many highly educated people? Or maybe people who work in advisory fields like policy or law?
Sometimes the people like this really know what they are talking about but other times not. Most often, the subject they are advising on is extremely subject or dependent on context (something like where to send your kids to school, what neighborhood to live in, where to go on vacation, etc. -- stuff for which there truly is not one correct answer and you'd have to know a lot about an individuals situation in order to give them good advice, in my opinion), but people speak with such confidence! I do like getting all the suggestions and I have learned about some great things this way, though I also find myself disregarding probably 90% of the unsolicited advice I get here simply because I get so much of it.
Just wondering if others have noticed this about this area and might have insight into why many people here are like this. It feels like a distinct feature of the culture here as compared to other places I have lived (I'm from the midwest originally but have also lived in the Southwest, West Coast, and New England before moving to this area).