jgerlica Posted June 29, 2004 Posted June 29, 2004 I am now officially a drop out. I love life... Though on the bright side, my wife now has a job with a respectable firm, so relocating doesn't seem like so terrible an option. It would be great to stay and all, but I'm not going to watch her take a job in no way related to her degree just so I can piddle around.
Dave Posted June 29, 2004 Posted June 29, 2004 Blah, wish I could drop a few of mine next year. What's your reason for becoming a loafer?
jgerlica Posted June 29, 2004 Author Posted June 29, 2004 My wife received an unexpected job offer in Green Bay, Wi. So we're moving.
Tesseract Posted June 29, 2004 Posted June 29, 2004 My wife received an unexpected job offer in Green Bay, Wi. So we're moving. Be sure to take your computer with you...
jgerlica Posted June 29, 2004 Author Posted June 29, 2004 must feel good telling everyone to f off You don't even know, it's the greatest feeling in the world!
Dave Posted June 29, 2004 Posted June 29, 2004 You don't even know, it's the greatest feeling in the world! I'll enjoy it at my graduation methinks
J'Dona Posted June 29, 2004 Posted June 29, 2004 Well I finished my last exams today and now look forward to about 15 months of undefined activities (also known as a "gap year"). My current music is "I Don't Have to Work Tomorrow" by The Gaskets. And I agree, it feels grand!
J'Dona Posted June 29, 2004 Posted June 29, 2004 Well, I have to get a part-time job now, and I'll be trying to write something in my new livejournal account (fiction writing) every day, and lots and lots of reading of fiction and non-fiction - fiction to improve my writing, and non-fiction to improve my chances of getting accepted at the next Cambridge interview. I figure if I can write 3000 words a day, or even 2500, I should have done a million words by the end of the year, and when I really get into a novel I can finish it in about 3 days so I'll have read a lot by then too. I start my first stuff on that account in two days, and I'll be spending most of tomorrow working on the first stuff. But I'll probably still be bored after 2 weeks. I'm sure you'll find a way to pass the time though jgerlica. The secret lies in doing the same thing for a long time without getting bored of it. Computer games are not the answer (and I'm speaking from experience here, though I confess I am about the start playing one right after posting this), unless you found some form of consructive RPG (ha!) that suited you, in which csae you can kiss goodbye to a good 9 months of your life in one year alone. I were you though I'd take this opportunity to do all those things you'll just say some time later when you have a job that you can't do "because you don't have time", like learn another language or a musical instrument. Out of curiousity, what were the subjects that you were doing, and why did you decide to drop them?
Dave Posted June 29, 2004 Posted June 29, 2004 Get a good part-time job; don't become a tea maker. This is talking from the voice of much experience of making tea. It's great fun, honest.
JaKiri Posted June 30, 2004 Posted June 30, 2004 You'll be bored after 2 weeks, guaranteed That sounds like a challenge to me.
Dave Posted June 30, 2004 Posted June 30, 2004 I've learnt that sitting on SFN all day hurts my brain.
bloodhound Posted June 30, 2004 Posted June 30, 2004 how can brain hurt. i brains had no sensors in it.
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