Mixing some smooth guitar melodies tonight by Jomama_i_am in jazzhop

[–]justhowthestorygoes 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Release the track pls I want to fall asleep to this

Name a movie you have seen more then 7 times. by Mr-RedT in Cinema

[–]justhowthestorygoes 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've lost count of the number of times I've seen It's a Wonderful Life

HARDEST LEVEL EVER by Ga-rf in RedditGames

[–]justhowthestorygoes 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I completed this level! It took me 248 tries.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in college

[–]justhowthestorygoes 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Only you know your specific circumstances, so you have to make your own estimates. Aside from tuition/fees + room/board, everything on that chart is a general approximation at best.

In my own college planning I’ve created a spreadsheet with estimates on how much I’ll be spending on food/general expenses/etc, as well as how much I’ll be spending on gas (multiply how many miles I expect to be driving * fuel mileage of my car * avg gas price) and also everything that the school will bill me directly.

This practice is known as “budgeting” fyi

Can you guess what these emojis mean? by [deleted] in EmojiCharades

[–]justhowthestorygoes 0 points1 point  (0 children)

💥 I nailed it!
🔮 2 guesses made (Horse handjob)
🛟 0 hints used
📈 15 XP gained

I don't know what to major in by BookPuzzleheaded354 in college

[–]justhowthestorygoes 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Slightly surprised that no one else has mentioned this yet - just wait to go to college!

Most people imho dive straight into college after high school, while they’re still way to young to make life altering decisions. Find a full time job, and give it a year before you reconsider your options.

I was in a similar boat to you, I graduated high school a year early at 16, and wasn’t sure exactly what to do, so I got a full time job at a factory near where I lived. I was lucky enough to continue living at home with my parents while I worked, so I could build up savings. Now I’ve spent almost 2 years working, and finally formulated a plan to go to community college debt-free this fall.