<strong>Happy birthday , after 21 becoming older is not interesting </strong><hr></blockquote>
Bullmanure Its not an age thing. The limit is when you stop studying and have to become an adult and manage your life. I am 26 years old and have two years left in Uni. Even though I have lived and owned my own apartment for seven years, make an income around $25000 on average per year etc. "real" life begins when I become a sociologist, have to work as such and base my (hopefully higher) income on basis of that title.
Those of them I grew up with that didn´t take an academic education and have worked for three to five years as salesmen, nurses, teachers aso. all have houses, cars and children and with that a huge debt. They work 40-50 hours every week, sit around the TV every night with their wife/husband and "never" get outside the house.
Mac, you still havent? The first thing I did was go but Coronas and Grand Marnier
had a mid life crisis wheni turned 20
Ya, me and just about all my friends hit that at 19. Real fun, unfortunatly it also tends to get you rather depressed. Nothing like going "Ok, Im here in university now, what am I going to do!?" and realizing that your there for nothing.
<strong>Mac, you still havent? The first thing I did was go but Coronas and Grand Marnier </strong><hr></blockquote>You sound a lot like one guy I know: the day he hit 18 he went out to buy a cigar and a porno mag... just because he could.
Bullmanure Its not an age thing. The limit is when you stop studying and have to become an adult and manage your life. I am 26 years old and have two years left in Uni. Even though I have lived and owned my own apartment for seven years, make an income around $25000 on average per year etc. "real" life begins when I become a sociologist, have to work as such and base my (hopefully higher) income on basis of that title.
Those of them I grew up with that didn´t take an academic education and have worked for three to five years as salesmen, nurses, teachers aso. all have houses, cars and children and with that a huge debt. They work 40-50 hours every week, sit around the TV every night with their wife/husband and "never" get outside the house.</strong><hr></blockquote>
I was meaning that after the age of 21 in a physiologic point of vue, your constitution become slowly worse and worse until your death
Of course you hare true the biggest change in life is when you stop studying and you start to manage your own life.
I wish for you that your income as sociologist will become higher. ( just a question in denmark does sociologist work only for the governement, or there is private institutes ?)
And for people who all have houses, cars and childrens and a huge debt, it's my perfect description . The fact that you have enter in long studies does not prevent you of this future (but you are free to make an other choice), the difference is that you will have (at least it's my case ) a bigger house, bigger cars and a much bigger debt .
The biggest change in the life is too have childs, it's the end (when especially there are youngs) of the evening entertainement, and each morning they prevent you and your wife to have little nasty activities <img src="graemlins/lol.gif" border="0" alt="[Laughing]" />
Comments
I'm 20 this year and quite frankly I'm scared at the thought of not being a teenager any more. Maybe we could all call it twentyteen?
J :cool:
Counting the days until July 20. . .
Haha, you poor american suckers, you only have to be 19 up here in BC
Of course in Europe its 16, and in some areas (Malta) often 9 year olds can buy <a href="http://www.engrish.com/images/buildings/fleshjuice.jpg" target="_blank">Alcools</a> (Though Im not sure if they can buy flesh juice).
73 more days 'til I'm outta my teens too.
i turned 21 last year and powerdoc is right. after that, you just live vicariously through your younger friends
<strong>Happy birthday , after 21 becoming older is not interesting </strong><hr></blockquote>
Bullmanure Its not an age thing. The limit is when you stop studying and have to become an adult and manage your life. I am 26 years old and have two years left in Uni. Even though I have lived and owned my own apartment for seven years, make an income around $25000 on average per year etc. "real" life begins when I become a sociologist, have to work as such and base my (hopefully higher) income on basis of that title.
Those of them I grew up with that didn´t take an academic education and have worked for three to five years as salesmen, nurses, teachers aso. all have houses, cars and children and with that a huge debt. They work 40-50 hours every week, sit around the TV every night with their wife/husband and "never" get outside the house.
sorry i'm late...
i'll be turning the big 18 in 3 weeks..... hopefully I won't get into any serious trouble....
-Paul
By the way, I'm 19 and I can buy alcohol. But I still haven't. Sucka!
had a mid life crisis wheni turned 20
Ya, me and just about all my friends hit that at 19. Real fun, unfortunatly it also tends to get you rather depressed. Nothing like going "Ok, Im here in university now, what am I going to do!?" and realizing that your there for nothing.
Oh right, not nothing, for an education...
<strong>Mac, you still havent? The first thing I did was go but Coronas and Grand Marnier </strong><hr></blockquote>You sound a lot like one guy I know: the day he hit 18 he went out to buy a cigar and a porno mag... just because he could.
And you call yourself a Canadian?!?!
I don't buy it.
You're 40!
<strong>
Bullmanure Its not an age thing. The limit is when you stop studying and have to become an adult and manage your life. I am 26 years old and have two years left in Uni. Even though I have lived and owned my own apartment for seven years, make an income around $25000 on average per year etc. "real" life begins when I become a sociologist, have to work as such and base my (hopefully higher) income on basis of that title.
Those of them I grew up with that didn´t take an academic education and have worked for three to five years as salesmen, nurses, teachers aso. all have houses, cars and children and with that a huge debt. They work 40-50 hours every week, sit around the TV every night with their wife/husband and "never" get outside the house.</strong><hr></blockquote>
I was meaning that after the age of 21 in a physiologic point of vue, your constitution become slowly worse and worse until your death
Of course you hare true the biggest change in life is when you stop studying and you start to manage your own life.
I wish for you that your income as sociologist will become higher. ( just a question in denmark does sociologist work only for the governement, or there is private institutes ?)
And for people who all have houses, cars and childrens and a huge debt, it's my perfect description . The fact that you have enter in long studies does not prevent you of this future (but you are free to make an other choice), the difference is that you will have (at least it's my case ) a bigger house, bigger cars and a much bigger debt .
The biggest change in the life is too have childs, it's the end (when especially there are youngs) of the evening entertainement, and each morning they prevent you and your wife to have little nasty activities <img src="graemlins/lol.gif" border="0" alt="[Laughing]" />