Lol! That's an annual average of almost 2000 posts!I’m only 25 lol.
Lol! That's an annual average of almost 2000 posts!I’m only 25 lol.
i agree with the idea that discipline is the most important part of success, but you also need to be undisciplined for a long enough period to discover new things. maybe it happens naturally. it did for me i think in my personal life. i am disciplined with my own things which brings me happiness. work is just work. it doesn't make me feel better or worseSchool is of different value to different people. I think learning outside your primary discipline makes you a well rounded person....but oftentimes the most important lesson that some college classes teaches you is to do work you don't like and has no point because you have to. Given, I didn't learn that lesson at the time (I dropped out of college after 5 years), but the lesson was learned by me...eventually.
i agree with the idea that discipline is the most important part of success, but you also need to be undisciplined for a long enough period to discover new things. maybe it happens naturally. it did for me i think in my personal life. i am disciplined with my own things which brings me happiness. work is just work. it doesn't make me feel better or worse
school doesn't really count. it's not nearly the same as just working a job. jobs are way easier imo... even the hardest jobs. i say that this because you can't really improve an institution like you can a company. organizations will make a more direct effort to evaluate and act upon feedback. being in school just feels helpless and trapped. they're making money off of you instead of through you in a way. it's depressing, hopefully you make it out alive
i get that. i'm kind of the opposite. i tend to be more hard on myself and don't really care how others evaluate me, cause i know if i'm doing a good job or not. this is probably why i do better in jobs. school was always a boring grind to me. i did pretty well but that idea that someone had to tell me how i was doing when i already knew how i was doing sucked the life out of it for me... so i primarily hated the idea of school unless my professors were almost totally hands off and only reacted when i legitimately came to them for external evaluationI like your points but I'd argue against them equally. In school you can work hard and succeed alone through the short term validation of a grade. With a job you can work hard long or short term and not receive that personal gratification of a good grade. It' an interesting dynamic to think about. I find working harder than my peers at a job that you don't get a graded validation from to be more stressful in the longterm. That being said my job forces me to write my own yearly review and merely have a superior sign off on it. I essentially evaluate myself and if my superiors are lazy they just check off a box and say yep I agree. My personality needs personal validation to give creedance to my hard work but one could argue that's a charter flaw lol
It's a nice starter home for the kids to use.The owners of the Buffalo Bills and Buffalo Sabres, through their East Property Management, bought the 57-acre Aurora estate of Richard E. Garman, the former owner of Buffalo Crushed Stone. The purchase price paid to Garman's estate was $2.5 million.
Pegulas purchase Aurora estate for $2.5 million
It's a nice starter home for the kids to use.
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Laurel or Yanni?
I hear Laurel no matter what
covfefe!!! lol
I was making a non-PG joke about the whole conversation. Yoni vs. lingam.
Oh haha..because some people hear it that way.
Chip off the old blockCaution! Hockey in the OT thread!
My son is currently watching highlight videos for various yet-to-be drafted kids. I think he's watching Svechnikov or Zadina because I keep hearing "he scored AGAIN" from the living room.