Decent at tests; terrible at being in a classroom
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It was relatively easy for me. I wasn't really social either, I didn't make really any close friends while at school, and I didn't keep in touch with them either. I just have my small circle of friends now, and I like it that way. I didn't find high school to be particularly useful knowledge-wise, just as a mean to an end.
To be honest, I learned a lot of tech before going specializing in it out of sheer curiosity and passion, but getting the actual diploma helped me getting where I am today. Technology is a vast domain, and sure there is some stuff you need to memorize and you need to understands the basics to have a good foundation, but some of it you only get good at it by understanding a vast array of concepts, a bit like medicine (even if a bit presomptuous). Some are better than the others to quickly grasps those concepts, and they don't really teach you how to make those connections, and frankly that's the interesting part.
I'm pretty sure it gave me the edge against some who didn't have any diploma at first, but now my CV is mostly speaking for itself. I don't really have trouble finding work that pays a salary that suits my consumption habits (I'm tend to save as much as I can, to spend when I really need to), and I find my life as a whole as satisfying.