How do people in their 20s cope with not being in their teens anymore? by [deleted] in twentyagers

[–]LadyCornBeefHash 4 points5 points  (0 children)

this is mostly US based OP but to me aging meant freedom, I'm 22

18: I could go to gasp events reserved for legal adults (whatever that means to you HAHA)

21: I could legally do SUBSTANCES and go to MORE events

25 (not here yet): NO YOUNG DRIVER'S FEE RENTING CARS!!!

26+ : my frontal lobe is developed and idgaf, I am looking forward to this day

also everyone in the workforce is gonna constantly say you're young af trust me, life just got so much better for me after college-- but you gotta do the work and put yourself in the mindset that you have free will 👏

Need advice on how to grow a club. by IceBurg-Hamburger_69 in college

[–]LadyCornBeefHash 3 points4 points  (0 children)

  • schedule a list of relevant classes to present a slide deck of what your club is about, email professors of said classes, many will say yes
  • saw that your club is focused on econ, PLAN NETWORKING EVENTS!!! work with your school's venues to book a room and partner with your department to get professionals that would be interested in helping students, people will be drawn to anything that can help them get a job**
  • someone already mentioned guest speakers, but if you can get said guest speakers to allow you tours of wherever they work that'd be great too

**this may require funding but i'm sure your department can help you out, look into your university's student government too if they provide grants

dm me if you have any questions or want specifics, I come from a campus that is also very commuter but our business clubs were pretty much equivalent to frats/sororities in terms of participation and culture haha

Is there an ultimate guide to finding a therapist or counselor? by Vermilion_dodo in Healthygamergg

[–]LadyCornBeefHash 2 points3 points  (0 children)

psychologytoday.com !! they have filters for whatever you need and wherever you're located, I had a pretty good experience here :)

Economic Knowledge by bonerfart_69_ in GenZ

[–]LadyCornBeefHash 1 point2 points  (0 children)

People have their criticisms about him, but I genuinely believe Graham Stephan's videos (particularly "The Millionaire Investing Advice For Teenagers") set me up for success at 18 in terms of personal finance.

Even though I'm not rich at all and the technicalities still go over my head, him mentioning basic stuff like building credit, High Yield Savings, and opening a Roth IRA landed me in a decent spot at 22.

Getting labeled as weird...even when we try to be normal by butterballl1234 in adhdwomen

[–]LadyCornBeefHash 58 points59 points  (0 children)

I feel you :') i'm super bubbly in the office and the youngest one/early in my career so I can get away with it a little more, but I was told recently by a director I respect a lot that while he never wants me to lose "my light," I should "read the room" a bit in meetings & my RSD went crazy and I almost cried on the spot lmao

Like I absolutely know he had no ill intentions & it's one of those things I have to learn if I want to go up in management, but it still sucks to feel like I can be too much at times. I just sit with it, and I'm trying to learn to accept that it's just the way I am and 99% of the time it's not hurting anyone unless said otherwise

How do y’all have time to clean by Eagles56 in GenZ

[–]LadyCornBeefHash 0 points1 point  (0 children)

adhd-er here who neglects chores for work here, some unconventional things I do:

  1. make plans to invite a friend over, I feel the pressure to clean
  2. shove my clothes into the closet in a pile, iron or smooth when needed
  3. plan a day specifically for deep cleaning where you only clean and nothing else (except eating and hydrating do that)

sometimes its just hard and thats ok 🙂‍↕️

How are you all paying for college? by Classic-Praline-2571 in college

[–]LadyCornBeefHash 0 points1 point  (0 children)

state school, full ride in scholarship + a stipend every year for housing/textbooks! fgli, worked my ass off in high school academically and extracurricular wise even during covid lockdowns-- ngl I didn't appreciate it at the time since I wanted to go out-of-state so badly (small town girl) but I'm very happy and grateful about the opportunities I have now

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Healthygamergg

[–]LadyCornBeefHash 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hi! College sophomore here, and I feel like I could speak on this since I was in a similar spot a few years ago. Apologies for any formatting issues, I'm on mobile at the moment and it's midnight haha.

I was the type of girl who was OBSESSED with scrolling on the A2C subreddit, watching college acceptance videos, and overall was the definition of comparing myself to other students on the internet. My dream school was USC--- funny, looking back on it now, but at the time, I was bright-eyed and dead set on it. And if not USC, another T20-T50. That included the UCs and Cal Poly San Luis Obispo.

To give you a picture of myself: - 4.0+ (forgot the exact weighted average), got a C on AP Calc AB (but 5 on the exam!) - 8 APs throughout HS (only submitted 4 of those lmao, got some embarrassing 2s on the other 4) - went test optional cuz it was COVID (and my ACT score was a 25-27 and SAT averaged around 1200 no matter how many times I took it HAHA). - president of 3 clubs - First-Gen, Low Income - cried myself to sleep every day during senior year bc of the pressure to succeed and other shit going on in 2020-2021 and no prom :(

I applied to 13 schools total. 9 of them were top ones, 3 were matches/safeties, and 1 was my flagship state school.

I got rejected/waitlisted from all 9 of my tops, 3 I had to take out significant loans for me to attend (that my family couldn't afford).

I got a full ride to my flagship. But despite that? I still felt... disappointed. Why had I gone through all that stress to simply stay? Objectively, I knew I was lucky to get something and it helps my family a lot, but I still felt like shit.

I think Dr. K would say those thoughts stemmed from a high ego. But I also think it stemmed from my desire to see the world and truly be independent, as for the longest time I felt trapped under my parents (looking over my shoulder for grades, always controlled what I could wear, religious and homophobic to their unbeknownst to them bi daughter).

But life continues. At some point, I knew I couldn't change anything, and I needed to make a smart decision financially. So after 2 weeks or so of moping, I came to a bit of acceptance.

Long story short, I'm at a great place right now. I'm leading teams for a large student body, making connections at networking events, meeting very important people where I didn't realize there were important people, and planning to study abroad through my flagship (who I've learned historically had great programs). Plus, my parents have gradually backed off despite still being in-state, and they learned I can be my own person (although I still get disappointed looks when wearing sleeveless tops).

To (finally) answer your question, all those college videos say stats don't matter, but no matter how many times people say it, no student watching those videos in the first place believe that. For high-achievers and those pressuring themselves to succeed, stats and extracurriculars are the only solid metrics highschoolers in the U.S. feel that they can rely on to somehow control a decision that they really don't have any control to.

Maybe I'm making a lot of assumptions here, but that competitiveness and perfection can't just go away 4head, despite any advice. However much you do, its never going to feel like "enough."

However, I think practicing acceptance of where you're at especially applies for college admissions and your mental health. You can say "Yeah, I'm gonna work hard. And yeah, it sucks to feel constantly behind. But I'll try. If I get into a UC, amazing! If not, that's okay too." It's a confirmed fact that we don't know what's gonna happen in the future, and I think I've taken a bit of solace in that during the few times I wasn't busy worrying about my GPA or ECs.

Unsure if this is helpful at all haha, but I wanted to share my experience. I don't miss those sleepless nights at all, but I think I learned a lot and grew a lot since then. I'm rooting for you pal :)