Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:French Lit
Carpenter (apprentice to master carpenter)
No clue but does truly beautiful work. He’s supporting himself.
That's fantastic! Sounds like you raised an interesting person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:French Lit
Carpenter (apprentice to master carpenter)
No clue but does truly beautiful work. He’s supporting himself.
That's fantastic! Sounds like you raised an interesting person.
I love this one too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:French Lit
Carpenter (apprentice to master carpenter)
No clue but does truly beautiful work. He’s supporting himself.
That's fantastic! Sounds like you raised an interesting person.
Anonymous wrote:French Lit
Carpenter (apprentice to master carpenter)
No clue but does truly beautiful work. He’s supporting himself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teaching in Asia, serving in the Peace Corp, running a day camp at a luxury hotel in Hawaii, etc are brilliant life experiences for 22 yr olds! Too many parents want their kids to join the rat race immediately out of college and there’s no reason. No future employer or graduate program will ever see their experiences as anything but a plus.
They’ll all join us in mortgages, health insurance premiums, retirement contributions, long commutes, and societal expectations soon enough. Hell, they’re only 22!
+1.
I did this in the early 90’s. Taught in Japan and traveled all over Asia. I had incredible experiences and made life long friends. After returning to the US, most of my friends hadn’t really done much. No regrets.
Right. Most kids right out of school are still trying to figure out life and working a boring job. Many will go back to graduate school. So, why not explore the world when you’re 22?
My nephew graduated from an Ivy and played minor league baseball for three years. He traveled all over the country, played and was coached by guys he never would have met in his sheltered life, worked his butt off for pennies, and got to play baseball (his dream). He settled into a great job when he “retired”. Even my brother and SIL, who footed the bill for that Ivy education encouraged him to do it while he he could.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teaching in Asia, serving in the Peace Corp, running a day camp at a luxury hotel in Hawaii, etc are brilliant life experiences for 22 yr olds! Too many parents want their kids to join the rat race immediately out of college and there’s no reason. No future employer or graduate program will ever see their experiences as anything but a plus.
They’ll all join us in mortgages, health insurance premiums, retirement contributions, long commutes, and societal expectations soon enough. Hell, they’re only 22!
+1.
I did this in the early 90’s. Taught in Japan and traveled all over Asia. I had incredible experiences and made life long friends. After returning to the US, most of my friends hadn’t really done much. No regrets.
Right. Most kids right out of school are still trying to figure out life and working a boring job. Many will go back to graduate school. So, why not explore the world when you’re 22?
My nephew graduated from an Ivy and played minor league baseball for three years. He traveled all over the country, played and was coached by guys he never would have met in his sheltered life, worked his butt off for pennies, and got to play baseball (his dream). He settled into a great job when he “retired”. Even my brother and SIL, who footed the bill for that Ivy education encouraged him to do it while he he could.
Then he married an heiress and lived down the street from me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teaching in Asia, serving in the Peace Corp, running a day camp at a luxury hotel in Hawaii, etc are brilliant life experiences for 22 yr olds! Too many parents want their kids to join the rat race immediately out of college and there’s no reason. No future employer or graduate program will ever see their experiences as anything but a plus.
They’ll all join us in mortgages, health insurance premiums, retirement contributions, long commutes, and societal expectations soon enough. Hell, they’re only 22!
+1.
I did this in the early 90’s. Taught in Japan and traveled all over Asia. I had incredible experiences and made life long friends. After returning to the US, most of my friends hadn’t really done much. No regrets.
Right. Most kids right out of school are still trying to figure out life and working a boring job. Many will go back to graduate school. So, why not explore the world when you’re 22?
My nephew graduated from an Ivy and played minor league baseball for three years. He traveled all over the country, played and was coached by guys he never would have met in his sheltered life, worked his butt off for pennies, and got to play baseball (his dream). He settled into a great job when he “retired”. Even my brother and SIL, who footed the bill for that Ivy education encouraged him to do it while he he could.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teaching in Asia, serving in the Peace Corp, running a day camp at a luxury hotel in Hawaii, etc are brilliant life experiences for 22 yr olds! Too many parents want their kids to join the rat race immediately out of college and there’s no reason. No future employer or graduate program will ever see their experiences as anything but a plus.
They’ll all join us in mortgages, health insurance premiums, retirement contributions, long commutes, and societal expectations soon enough. Hell, they’re only 22!
+1.
I did this in the early 90’s. Taught in Japan and traveled all over Asia. I had incredible experiences and made life long friends. After returning to the US, most of my friends hadn’t really done much. No regrets.
Right. Most kids right out of school are still trying to figure out life and working a boring job. Many will go back to graduate school. So, why not explore the world when you’re 22?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teaching in Asia, serving in the Peace Corp, running a day camp at a luxury hotel in Hawaii, etc are brilliant life experiences for 22 yr olds! Too many parents want their kids to join the rat race immediately out of college and there’s no reason. No future employer or graduate program will ever see their experiences as anything but a plus.
They’ll all join us in mortgages, health insurance premiums, retirement contributions, long commutes, and societal expectations soon enough. Hell, they’re only 22!
+1.
I did this in the early 90’s. Taught in Japan and traveled all over Asia. I had incredible experiences and made life long friends. After returning to the US, most of my friends hadn’t really done much. No regrets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Teaching in Asia, serving in the Peace Corp, running a day camp at a luxury hotel in Hawaii, etc are brilliant life experiences for 22 yr olds! Too many parents want their kids to join the rat race immediately out of college and there’s no reason. No future employer or graduate program will ever see their experiences as anything but a plus.
They’ll all join us in mortgages, health insurance premiums, retirement contributions, long commutes, and societal expectations soon enough. Hell, they’re only 22!
+1.
Anonymous wrote:Teaching in Asia, serving in the Peace Corp, running a day camp at a luxury hotel in Hawaii, etc are brilliant life experiences for 22 yr olds! Too many parents want their kids to join the rat race immediately out of college and there’s no reason. No future employer or graduate program will ever see their experiences as anything but a plus.
They’ll all join us in mortgages, health insurance premiums, retirement contributions, long commutes, and societal expectations soon enough. Hell, they’re only 22!
Anonymous wrote:Connections
Undergrad institution
Major
Salary
Profession
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am guffawing at these posts. Man, y'all are delusional liars.
I honestly have no clue why you think people are lying. A couple yearly salaries were surprisingly high but the majority fell into range.