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SERIOUSLY

2007-10-31 20:59:04 · 21 answers · asked by Μađħaνi 6 in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

21 answers

Living to be 18.

SERIOUSLY!

2007-10-31 22:06:55 · answer #1 · answered by Temple 5 · 0 0

Realize that at 17, you really dont know anything. You dont know anything at 20, 30, or 40 either. People who are older usually give good advice. Remember that. They may seem crazy when they say stuff, but they have much more expierence at alot more things. Also, realize that the friends you have now are probably not going to be the same ones you have in 5 years, so dont make drama and dont sweat about them. Find what interests you...youre about to make decisions that could have an impact on your entire life. Youre only a freshman in college once, and youre never going to get the chances you have now again in your life.

2007-10-31 21:48:45 · answer #2 · answered by Raelee 3 · 1 0

If you are still a senior at high school, go for the excellent grades, and start looking now at colleges you may want to attend... then look around now for scholarships that may be available to you; small ones are often offered by local banks and other businesses... for a larger one, research outside your town's limits-- check online or with your college prep counselor at school.

If you don't want to continue school right now, it might be good just to take at least one fun class at your local junior college... that way you will meet good people, and perhaps an interest in a new career will awaken; theater, photography, media, pottery... whatever it is, if you glimpse it, go for it.

Well, that's just what I think. And I wish you good luck at this point in your life!

2007-10-31 21:17:16 · answer #3 · answered by LK 7 · 0 0

Learning to earn, loving God completely, colleague as Self, and as Christ Jesus loves.
Not abusing drugs, alcohol, sex.

"Man, Master of His Destiny," O. M. Aivanhov;
"Expecting Adam," Martha Beck;
"Climb the Highest Mountain," Mark Prophet;
"The Reincarnation of Edgar Cayce?", Free and Wilcock;
"The Great Divorce," C. S. Lewis;
and "Watch Your Dreams," Ann Ree Colton,
are helpful.

cordially,

j.

2007-10-31 21:05:06 · answer #4 · answered by j153e 7 · 0 0

I'm 17, and trying to figure that out myself, so far I'm having a lot of different thoughts about that, but I think as long as your happy, nothing else really matters, always listen to your gut feeling, and make the right choices, do what you feel is right, not what others tell you.

2007-10-31 21:10:36 · answer #5 · answered by Spoken_Truth 3 · 0 0

No offence meant at all, but what's most important is getting to 18, so don't **** up. Think about your actions, your goals, your reactions. Choose them carefully so that after 18 you get to 19.

2007-11-01 02:30:45 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If you think you have at least proven something at seventeen for yourself whether it is a small or big achievement, judt do the following: stop,think and analyze if your actions have been worthwhile.
And you are the only who can rightly answer your question.

2007-10-31 21:39:58 · answer #7 · answered by brainwhacker 4 · 0 0

i've got faith little ones could study by using occasion. you could pontificate all day long yet while your little ones are staring at you doing diverse, then it rather is the place the questions commence. Love compassion and understanding and forgiveness could be first on the checklist. yet we could additionally exemplify those features to our transforming into destiny. we are the lecturers to our youthful.

2016-10-03 02:03:45 · answer #8 · answered by hagensee 4 · 0 0

At 17 make healthy choices...
considering your physical, emotional, and spiritual health.

2007-10-31 23:20:48 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Depends who your dealing with. Mine alternate between "Getting a certain guy to notice me" and "Thinking about the future, and planning for it"

2007-10-31 23:30:41 · answer #10 · answered by Anastasia K 3 · 0 0

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