When someone exceptionally bright struggles, it’s tempting to explain it as a personal flaw—odd temperament, lack of drive, bad attitude. The deeper pattern is often mismatch.
A person can master complex ideas and still fail at the negotiations that turn knowledge into opportunity: dealing with gatekeepers, tolerating bureaucracy, asking for terms instead of permission. Those skills are survival tools in a world built from institutions. If you don’t know the rules, you spend your energy fighting the wrong battles, and you interpret resistance as fate.
Class matters again. Some people grow up learning to press, appeal, and insist. Others learn that authority is immovable. Brilliance without context can become stranded talent: a mind capable of extraordinary work, blocked by environments that never taught it how to claim space.