High intelligence/giftedness
Gifted people aren't just capable of doing more, they need to do more to attain satisfaction/fulfillment.
When others fail to understand or respect that, high intelligence can become a curse.
Children and parenting
I don't have children of my own (and am so far undecided if I ever will), so this is from my own childhood and observing others:
- If you or your partner have a neurological condition which, if passed on, makes it likely that your child will require special attention (and this includes high intelligence/giftedness), then I'd strongly recommend settling for just one child if at all.
If you are dividing your attention between the children, it's unlikely that each one will get enough of it. - I find it disrespectful to "protect" children from subjects deemed "too hard" for them, especially in the case of gifted children. Never submit to the whim of anyone who sees fit to "bring down" your child to "normal" by withholding higher-level activities from them; if that happened to me, I wouldn't be here.
- I don't actually like the societal expectation that parents have to preempt children's misbehavior around other people; it's inauthentic (some things won't bother some people) and also a burden on the parents (as if they weren't having it hard enough anyway). People worry that someone might snap at their child; but parents nowadays are so stressed that they snap constantly anyway, so I'm not sure where the advantage is
- It pains me whenever adults push children to do something; in fact it barely even matters whether the thing itself is good or bad.
(And I'm generally disillusioned with all levels of formal education, observing the "results".)
Anime
There's only one anime I've come to like, namely Mitsudomoe. On the face of it, all its ingredients are wrong; the janky art, ropey expressions, superfluous panty shenanigans and clichéd premise don't appear to make it stand out from the crowd. But somehow, somewhere, something went right along the way.
While Mitsudomoe is ostensibly about a class of disobedient 6th-graders, to me it expresses that you can't "domesticate" children the way school tries to do. It indeed engages me in a manner shows set in "orderly" schools never have done; and the caring moments are thereby far more convincing and authentic. For a gag show, it also has moments of surprising intelligence: Yuki was really thoughtful in saying Miku wasn't bragging about her posh stuff (if being rich is all you have to boast about, then you don't have much of a life), and Kaieda dramatically demonstrates how the "strictest" people always seem to end up committing the strangest offenses . (I can point out a few real cases if you want )
It's just a pity that it only ran for a total of 22 episodes (including the even-spicier Episode 14 which was aired only belatedly). That, and something without an excess of borderline content would be nice; but I'm grateful enough that such a great show isn't a shotacon/lolicon (given Australia's attitudes there).
Frankly, I'm less worried about the content than I am about spoiling peoples' taste for other anime
I'd recommend starting from Episode 3 and getting back to 1 and 2 later (if you want to see them) though.
Note: The "Serious Squadron Gachi Rangers" subtitle in S02E01 requires the Impact font (which is only preinstalled on Windows and Mac OS).
If not installed, your system will probably auto-substitute a font too wide to fit. Decent-quality episodes are >300MB (at 720p; the original Blu-ray contained 1080p, but observing the lack of sharpness it was probably upscaled from 720p anyway, so not worth the extra gigabytes if you ask me).