Posted on 11/26/2006 5:02:22 AM PST by shrinkermd
I just thought as another stupid engineer I'd say "hello".
Well, anyway, it definitely looks like we are on the same track (and apparently attracted to the same kinds of threads!). Enjoy your karate!
It's scary what is raising the next generation. It's going to affect us all. There's no getting around it.
there will always be hoes who choose hoe-dom
guilty conscience accy???????
Pretty much every post you've made on this thread identifies you as an elitist, classist snob. If I'm wrong, then why have so many other Freepers independently come to the same conclusion? But let's look at a particular example:
If I went out with a soldier especially an enlisted man, I'd probably have nothing in common with him. I don't know many Army guys who enjoy wine tasting, art museums, and political lectures, all hobbies of mine. And I really don't enjoy camping or watching football...*snip*...I enjoy going to museums and concerts and other intellectual pursuits. I don't think that someone who flips burgers for a living would enjoy these things.
OK, how about a couple of questions...
Do you enjoy wine tasting, art museums, concerts and political lectures because they appeal to you personally, or because you were taught to do so in college?
Do you believe that "Army guys" are taught to enjoy camping and football during basic training, or maybe at the burger-flipping academy?
And finally, what do you think makes you "intellectual"?
Yep between $80,000 and 100,000 right after graduation
DREAM on oh promiscuious one
Your posts are out of line.
In other words, given a choice as a role model for children between someone who is honest, kind, loving, generous, Godly, and flips burgers for a living, versus Ken Lay ... you'd choose Ken Lay?
When you get around to the idea that you need to hold the father of your children as indispensable to them as you are, and when you get around to the idea that men aren't just meal tickets any more than women are just cooks, you will have made some progress.
My grandmother worked when her kids were grown. She worked at a department store. That was in the 50s.
I think women did more then you think.
Friday night football in Texas is a very fun activity!
I was in the band in Dallas when I grew up, and it was tons of fun. You didn't have to be great to participate, but I wanted to be great. I worked hard to get on the Color Guard for marching season, and then I worked hard to get into the first band.
My parents were not into any of it. They are not musically inclined. They are into sports, and I'm not a sports person.
I did all of it for myself, and I loved it!!!!!!!!!!!! I wish I could do it for fun now.
I bet you still live at home and the parents are footing the bill for your school (am I right?). Before you start throwing fast food employees, soldiers, and mechanics under the bus, take a walk in their shoes.
This thread is turning into a bizzaro counseling session to help you to get an MBA and a rich date.
You are putting waaaaay too much emphasis on MBA programs. You seem consumed by the prospect of getting into an elite b-school.
A desire to get sufficient education to pursue a rewarding career is laudable. People with the most useful skills will do far better than those who fritter away all their time on a PS3.
That said, balance between work and family is important, and getting harder for professionals whose employers expect very long hours for the hefty paychecks. Someone wise once observed that when a person approaches the end of their life, they rarely lament that they should have spent more time at work.
I gather from your previous posts that you are too young to have experienced the 1950s firsthand. So where are you getting all of your "facts" about life during that period?
Books, television and movies? See bottom of post #360.
I do all the week's cooking over the weekend and put it in the fridge.
Try it.
Cheers!
I agree with your comments about family-work balance. You are absolutely right.
The "pot roast", June Cleaver sophistry is rubbish.
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