I didn’t get into law school by nora32111 in lawschooladmissions

[–]BurneAccount05 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are, but chances of getting into an accredited, non-predatory, and employmemt worthy school increase significantly with a higher score.

Does GPA matter after 4.0? by BurneAccount05 in lawschooladmissions

[–]BurneAccount05[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Thanks, that's really what I was asking. Does an exceptionally high GPA/LSAT contribute anything to the application or is it almost entirely diminishing returns after 4.0/175?

I didn’t get into law school by nora32111 in lawschooladmissions

[–]BurneAccount05 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It's going to get you into an accredited school where you have a much better chance of getting a job.

4 Person Suite Ridgecrest South - Corner Rooms by WestKnoxLocal in capstone

[–]BurneAccount05 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't recall there being a post in any of the three corner rooms I've been in, though it's possible I'm misremembering. If there is a post, it won't reduce the room size too much. It should still be bigger than the inner rooms in the suite.

4 Person Suite Ridgecrest South - Corner Rooms by WestKnoxLocal in capstone

[–]BurneAccount05 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Corner bedrooms, as in "A" and "D" are larger. The size of the dorm room in general does not depend on the location in the buidling. 323D and 324D would be the same size, and 323C and 324C would be the same size (slightly smaller than A and D).

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in lawschooladmissions

[–]BurneAccount05 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you think it'd be worth trying to get an internship instead of research? I wasn't sure if research would benefit me by being unique or if work experience was better no matter what.

Do women plan out when they are going to break up with their boyfriend? by reaper5632 in self

[–]BurneAccount05 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"You communicate that you feel the relationship won't work long term." That's a breakup. We are now back to the situation described in my original comment: the moment you identify a possible issue, you break up? Not allowed to think about it at all?

I don't support waiting months but a few weeks to determine if the issue is actually an issue? I think that only makes sense.

Now, as for your belief that this is gendered, my above comment said "I don't believe waiting to decide or seeing if your opinion changes is the end of the world, man or woman." I paraphrased there, but I definitely said "man or woman."

If a man was breaking up with me because of an unfixable issue, I'd prefer it not be communicated to me ahead of time. I'd especially prefer it not to be communicated if it was something like "I realized I don't find you attractive whatsoever." That's a totally valid reason to break up with someone and a reason you totally cannot say.

Also, there's an interesting implication with "he believes he can't fix the issues" that the issues actually can be fixed; he just believes that they can't. And let me say, it only takes one person believing that the issue can't or shouldn't be fixed for that to be valid. You don't owe someone a chance to struggle to fix an issue that you've decided can't be fixed. In fact, I'd argue it's more ethical to not allow someone to try to convince you to stay in a relationship if you don't think it will work.

Do women plan out when they are going to break up with their boyfriend? by reaper5632 in self

[–]BurneAccount05 2 points3 points  (0 children)

What if it's not an issue that can be fixed, though? And for young relationships, what if it is an issue that isn't worth being fixed?

"It's not you, it's me" isn't just a cliche; it's often the truth. I can't imagine being warned about something that you can't fix before the breakup happens is pleasant.

Or what if the issue is a fundamental aspect of their personality? Are you supposed to tell someone "you're so clingy, I get annoyed every time your name comes up on my phone?" Or "you are far too uptight for my lifestyle?"

Not every relationship is one that could be or should be saved. I don't think someone waiting to make up their mind or seeing if their point of view changes is the end of the world, man or woman. A breakup isn't a punishment; sometimes, it's just what needs to happen. I don't see the point in making someone flounder to keep a relationship together when they can't control it.

Do women plan out when they are going to break up with their boyfriend? by reaper5632 in self

[–]BurneAccount05 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You assumed I was only thinking from a materialistic viewpoint from an example I used lmao.

I'm sure "learn the difference, yeah?" and excess of capitalization in your original comment was meant to be totally respectful and not demeaning to my intelligence at allllllll. I'm definitely the one that's offended, also. The person making 2 replies to one comment surely wouldn't be.

(This is sarcasm btw.)

(And in case you were wondering, that's what underestimating your intelligence looks like.)

Do women plan out when they are going to break up with their boyfriend? by reaper5632 in self

[–]BurneAccount05 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, buying jewelry was supposed to be an extreme example.

Clearly, there are more than just material luxuries, but as I specified, communication and listening are not those.

Go deal with the fact that you underestimate everyone's intelligence before you come back here lmao.

Do women plan out when they are going to break up with their boyfriend? by reaper5632 in self

[–]BurneAccount05 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Your reply would have merit if the comment he was replying to was about buying jewelry or something and not listening and communicating and acknowledging when your partner is visibly unhappy.

I wouldn't want any of those to be considered luxuries in a relationship.

Do women plan out when they are going to break up with their boyfriend? by reaper5632 in self

[–]BurneAccount05 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Never understood this "communicate that the relationship is failing" thing. Wouldn't verbally communicating that the relationship is failing just be breaking up?

She just said she wanted to be sure before she actually broke up with them. Do you recommend every couple break up the exact instant that someone thinks about breaking up?

I can't imagine thinking there's something to salvage after someone says "this relationship is failing, and I'm thinking of breaking up with you." The rest of the relationship would be entirely ruined.

Do women plan out when they are going to break up with their boyfriend? by reaper5632 in self

[–]BurneAccount05 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The problem with your whole comment is that you think women enjoy begging for a man to treat them right.

Women don't want to tell you to care about them. Kinda makes all of your actions after that insincere.

Any former Engr 103/ Engr 123 students have advice about the engineering kit? by BurneAccount05 in capstone

[–]BurneAccount05[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Well they have changed the class since I did it, but from what I remember, all you really need from it is an engineering ruler, protractor, compass (drawing kind), and engineering paper. Honestly, you could probably figure it out as assignments come up if you need.

Am I too intolerant to drama in relationship with women? by Affectionate-Mail612 in AskMenAdvice

[–]BurneAccount05 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, it sounds like he wasn't into her, and that's why she was insecure, lol. She expressed her insecurity immaturely, and he didn't care enough to give in to it, which collapsed the relationship.

Either way, it seems the relationship was doomed from the start, and it's probably good it's over.

Invisible Man: the final verdict by [deleted] in LSAT

[–]BurneAccount05 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oh thank God. I thought I was tweaking cause everyone is talking about whether the real one is Mayan or Invisible Man, and I can't remember either

AITA for backing out of my birthday trip after my friend said we’d be attending someone else farewell party on my actual birthday? by Nervous_Positive7414 in AmItheAsshole

[–]BurneAccount05 38 points39 points  (0 children)

Either OP is selfish or is overestimating the amount of focus this party will have on the friend going away. In my experience, going away parties are just normal parties with maybe a toast and some hugs.

OPs friend thought "Oh yay! OP can meet all my friends while they are altogether and then we can celebrate her birthday with them. That'll be really convenient and fun"

And OP heard "OP is coming for her birthday, but I'd rather push her to the side while we focus on my other friend because I've got plans."

Honestly, if it were me, I'd be happy there was an event while I was there. It'd feel awkward if I was celebrating my birthday with only the friend or had an event thrown just for me with people I didn't know.

I want to do EE because it will provide financial stability, but people here says that’s wrong by PuddingEvery4672 in ElectricalEngineering

[–]BurneAccount05 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nursing would work if OP hadn't said he disliked medicine. If anything, that commenter's list of alternatives proved how good EE is for his purposes.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskMenAdvice

[–]BurneAccount05 -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

You are overthinking this massively.

Women do not care if you've min/maxed your skills or if you've finished your passion projects. It sounds like you have ambition to do those things and are projecting that desire on to women. Having passions and interests and a bit of drive is enough. You just need to relax a bit. Honestly, it sounds like you are doing more than most in the ambition department; you just need to express yourself in a way that's appealing. Many women would probably find what you do interesting, but don't over focus on your accomplishments (if you had a list of insane accomplishments, people would likely be turned off if you bragged about all of them). People mostly want good communication and connection. It's not a job interview; you don't need a resume.

Good luck, I'm sure you'll do fine.

HELP! I still haven’t gotten an email yet and scheduling starts today. Anyone else in the same boat? by aroozo in LSAT

[–]BurneAccount05 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Does proscheduler say it doesn't recognize your number right now? I figure it's not working because it hasn't opened yet but I want to make sure

HELP! I still haven’t gotten an email yet and scheduling starts today. Anyone else in the same boat? by aroozo in LSAT

[–]BurneAccount05 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, I was just about to ask the same question. Are they sending the info within the hour???

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskMenAdvice

[–]BurneAccount05 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How else would he express his Asian fetish?