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Scott,

_I'm_ sure you've made a difference.

In addition, never doubt that your presentations and/or explanations
are by far some of the best I've ever come across. In fact, in trying
to figure out what I could submit as an article...one of my main
concerns is how badly my presentation would look compared to what you
put out!

Sincerely,
Charles Wilt

On Mon, Jul 26, 2010 at 1:29 PM, Scott Klement
<rpg400-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi Dennis,

Yes.  When one has tried, over and over, to persuade others in the merits of
his own ways, the fault is obviously with the others.  It could not possibly
be related to presentation or ability to teach/lead.  There was an
instructor with that attitude at a university I attended.  He wasn't there
long, though.  Keep telling yourself this, John.

(sigh)

In some cases, you're right, it's the instructors fault.  But on the
other hand, you can't teach someone who won't listen or even try to learn.

I've done my best, for years, trying _very_ hard to make a change to
this community.  To get people to wake up to new possibilities, to
improve their skills, so that RPG and IBM i aren't left forever with
that "legacy" stigma.  I think I've made a difference, but still by and
large, the RPG community is decades out of date.

But as you say, perhaps it's my ability to present.  Or my ability to
teach/lead.  I'm not a teacher (by trade) so perhaps I was a fool to try.

And since there's no money in teaching, I still have to work my "real"
job.  So after 7 years of giving up my free time, vacation time, etc to
teach (while still working full-time as a programmer, not a teacher) I'm
extremely burned out and just tired... sooooo tired...

I read somewhere that people are happiest when trying something new. The
happiest periods of people's lives is when they're successful in trying
new things.  Yet, their natural inclination is to keep doing what
they're already doing, and not to change at all.

Isn't that ironic?
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