Also don't get the lols at the sudden change in career path. I had to re-learn basic math to pass exams when I was 30, long after I ever thought I'd need it. Folks are going to need to be extremely flexible to succeed over the coming generations. Very few of us will have the luxury of staying in one career our whole lives.
Werd to that, yo. Look at the boom in "internet professionals" and half-assed HTML editors and that whole boom/bust economy. Think back to desktop publishing houses, and even the small-run print houses that were all over. Linotype machine operators, and before that, lead typesetters. I'm looking back over my short life, and seeing all kinds of jobs that just don't exist anymore.
I'm pretty decent at math, though I think schools now start kids earlier, so they tend to be more advance. I was at a decent high school, but "Intro to Calculus Mathematics" was the highest class they offered normally. Isn't regular calculus a fairly standard offering nowadays?
I studied ICM for half a year, until one day I went to the teacher and asked him for help on a topic, and he asked me why I was bothering to take math since I'd already cleared all the college prep stuff with Trigonometry. I didn't have a good answer.
So I took a free period instead; looking back, I think he was prodding me to see if I was a serious math student. That's a dumb thing to do to a 17 year old; the only reason anybody is in any high school class is because they have to be. Only in college did I start following up on topics because I was actually interested in them.
On topic: I can usually work my way back through a lot of math, and I'm looking forward to helping my kids with their math homework.
What the fuck? Aren't you out of school? And you study math?
Sure, just like I still study computer science and music. If you have a serious interest in a subject, learning about it is a lifelong endeavor.
That's just about the coolest thing I've seen you write.