My room was too cluttered to concentrate in. Now it's not. I am quite proud of the metamorphosis (which took no longer than 30 minutes), so I would like to share it with you below:
Hmm, impressive. If your law school plan doesn't pan out, I sense a career oppertunity in housekeeping or interior design. Keep it in mind.
My history teacher, who also had a degree in law, always said that if he had it all to do over again, he wouldn't have become a lawyer/teacher. He would have been a garbage man instead.
If I had to do it all over again, I would have A) studied harder in college, and B) accepted the year-long editorial assistant position I was offered at the Weekly Standard. My friend Lee did it the year before, ended up becoming associate editor, and now writes speeches for President Bush!
It seems to me that being a speechwriter for Bush would be one of the most frustrating jobs on the planet. You spend hours upon hours finely tuning a precise and beautiful argument, and then watch all your work go in vain.
Would he even want to put that on his resume for fear of his prospective employers thinking that he made such bad speeches?
If I had it to do all over again, the only thing I would have done differently was to go to Korea instead of Japan. Easier language and better food. Thought I'd do both, but after 9 months in Japan I'd had enough. Eh, even moving to the midwest is turning out to not be so bad. Just took some adjusting. -flwersrfun
4 Comments:
Hmm, impressive. If your law school plan doesn't pan out, I sense a career oppertunity in housekeeping or interior design. Keep it in mind.
My history teacher, who also had a degree in law, always said that if he had it all to do over again, he wouldn't have become a lawyer/teacher. He would have been a garbage man instead.
By Anthiypatus, at 5:06 AM
Thank you Anthipaytus.
If I had to do it all over again, I would have A) studied harder in college, and B) accepted the year-long editorial assistant position I was offered at the Weekly Standard. My friend Lee did it the year before, ended up becoming associate editor, and now writes speeches for President Bush!
But I'll be fine.
By Matt, at 2:56 PM
It seems to me that being a speechwriter for Bush would be one of the most frustrating jobs on the planet. You spend hours upon hours finely tuning a precise and beautiful argument, and then watch all your work go in vain.
Would he even want to put that on his resume for fear of his prospective employers thinking that he made such bad speeches?
By Anthiypatus, at 6:22 PM
If I had it to do all over again, the only thing I would have done differently was to go to Korea instead of Japan. Easier language and better food. Thought I'd do both, but after 9 months in Japan I'd had enough. Eh, even moving to the midwest is turning out to not be so bad. Just took some adjusting.
-flwersrfun
By Anonymous, at 10:46 PM
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