Author Topic: I'm done with state compulsory education  (Read 1285 times)



Gj, now you get to learn what it's like to have a lot of time on your hands and still not do anything :D

Gj, now you get to learn what it's like to have a lot of time on your hands and still not do anything :D

well he could get a job, save money, and buy stuff

there won't be any paying because it ain't happenin'
why not pal? forgeted up financials? already got a vocation lined up?

Or he could go to college and get a degree in something, flip burgers for a bit, then make omega money

why not pal? forgeted up financials? already got a vocation lined up?

I'm thinking of going to a trade school for plumbing, hvac/electrician work, or autmotive once I finish highschool.

the only things i'd train more for.

I'm thinking of going to a trade school for plumbing,
pretend to be Italian and wear red so you can go save princesses from giant turtles

pretend to be Italian and wear red so you can go save princesses from giant turtles

i think there's Italian in my blood somewhere so that sounds like-a great idea

well he could get a job, save money, and buy stuff
That's still not really doing anything.
Just surviving.

That's still not really doing anything.
Just surviving.

isn't surviving doing something  :cookieMonster:

I'm thinking of going to a trade school for plumbing, hvac/electrician work, or autmotive once I finish highschool.

the only things i'd train more for.
those are fine occupations, but you seem to be quite averse to schooling in general. Why's that?

those are fine occupations, but you seem to be quite averse to schooling in general. Why's that?

I am one of the many who simply find it uninteresting and tedious.

Of course, I was never really encouraged to do any work from the very beginning, so that doesn't help, but I know that I need to do it if I want to have some level of success in life.

Honestly if you enjoy the work and are good at it then trade skills like plumbing and electrical construction can earn you more than a decent living.

But you still need to go through initial schooling/training and be up to learn new skills throughout your career to be successful.

Probably one of the biggest downs (imo) to working in trades is you will be around a lot of really stuffty people. There's plenty of good blokes but there are a lot of people that are just angry all the time over nothing, and after spending a lot of time with such people, you can become the same.
Though if you can stick through it then it's all G.