You know life sucks, you're supposed to have fun in spite of it.
I don't even have a car to break, I'm living with my parents, I'm going back to school and hating almost all my classes (incidentally, the only classmates I've really spoken to are a guy I knew in high school and another who's oldest daughter was a year behind me,) and I somehow feel better than when I'm supposed to have.
Stop being sick. If I somehow wind up with a more positive viewpoint than you, I fear for the state of humanity.
living with one's parents is a very smart thing to do while going to college, for as long as you can stand it. wish I could have; I wouldn't owe near as much money right now.
as for hating the classes, well, school is rarely fun. what really sucks is that it's hardly even interesting until you start getting into the real meat of your major, and because it's so dull until then, lots of people don't make it that far. I donno though; you might enjoy it more in a university setting. I think the fact that the classroom experience was distinctly different from high school contributed greatly to my level of satisfaction the first few years. *shrugs* then again, if I'd gone to community college for the basics, I'd have saved a ton of money.
and I'll stop being sick when I'm good and damn ready. or, y'know, whenever these alien-eggs disappear from my forehead, whichever comes first.
I'm actually going to a community college extension campus where, though I've managed to avoid them thus far, several of the "professors" are teachers I had in high school.
I don't even have a car to break, I'm living with my parents, I'm going back to school and hating almost all my classes (incidentally, the only classmates I've really spoken to are a guy I knew in high school and another who's oldest daughter was a year behind me,) and I somehow feel better than when I'm supposed to have.
Stop being sick. If I somehow wind up with a more positive viewpoint than you, I fear for the state of humanity.
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as for hating the classes, well, school is rarely fun. what really sucks is that it's hardly even interesting until you start getting into the real meat of your major, and because it's so dull until then, lots of people don't make it that far. I donno though; you might enjoy it more in a university setting. I think the fact that the classroom experience was distinctly different from high school contributed greatly to my level of satisfaction the first few years. *shrugs* then again, if I'd gone to community college for the basics, I'd have saved a ton of money.
and I'll stop being sick when I'm good and damn ready. or, y'know, whenever these alien-eggs disappear from my forehead, whichever comes first.
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