Professor said:Without reading the thread in its entirety, I believe it was a very narrow-minded thing of you to do.
Dropping out was the result of numerous excuses you made up, all of which you could satisfy on your own accord. Take the initiative to learn that stuff on your own and understand that college would have taught you everything you're interested in once you completed HS. It was very selfish of you to drop out, especially if you weren't the one paying for the education. The fact that you still don't have your GED is proof that you made the wrong decision and completing HS would've been the gateway to everything else you needed to learn. Although HS is, to a degree, irrelevant in regards to learning material, you'd be surprised as to how critical your HS experience is in solidifying a base structure to grow from.
So, yes HS doesn't teach you very many important things, but that's why all relevant jobs require higher education. A GED or less will get you exactly what you've got - a part-time job and a mediocre lifestyle. You've not done anything by dropping out but perhaps hindered your own progress.
I strongly disagree with what you chose to do, but I wish you the best.
Cann!bal said:I talked about this in the OP.
"It was one of the best decisions I've ever made and I will never regret it."
Yeah, I am. I'm where I want to be, I'm more happy than ever and I'm enjoying my life. How isn't skyrocketing with success?
I have a voluntary part job, what about it?
If you did then point it out. I don't see anything to support your thoughts.
Your opinion is wrong and it's a shitty unsubstantiated one. You won't even back your statements up, so don't expect me to respect shit.
By definition, an opinion cannot be wrong. However, facts can be, such as your own 'facts' about the incompetence of the education system.
Sure, I'll point out the statements you fail to recognize.
[font=Tahoma, Verdana, Arial, sans-serif]"understand that college would have taught you everything you're interested in once you completed HS"[/font]
[font=Tahoma, Verdana, Arial, sans-serif]I never said HS was higher education because obviously it isn't; you were the one that said that for whatever reason.[/font]
[font=Tahoma, Verdana, Arial, sans-serif]"The fact that you still don't have your GED is proof that you made the wrong decision and completing HS would've been the gateway to everything else you needed to learn"[/font]
[font=Tahoma, Verdana, Arial, sans-serif]You stated that you dropped out to pursue your GED, which you still don't have. Had you stayed in school, and assuming you weren't behind, you would have it by now.[/font]
[font=Tahoma, Verdana, Arial, sans-serif]Although HS is, to a degree, irrelevant in regards to learning material, you'd be surprised as to how critical your HS experience is in solidifying a base structure to grow from. [/font]
[font=Tahoma, Verdana, Arial, sans-serif]What you take from high school are more life lessons than what you take materialistically. For example, your measurement of success is subpar at best. I don't give a shit if your ignorance continues to cloud your vision. On paper, you're a HS drop out with very little work experience and nothing to put on a resume aside from being a part-time volunteer hobbyist. No employer will be impressed by your decision and nobody gives a shit why you chose to drop out of highschool. You can consider me to be an asshole if you wish, but t[/font][font=Tahoma, Verdana, Arial, sans-serif]hat's just how life is. You'll see.[/font]
[font=Tahoma, Verdana, Arial, sans-serif]You say my opinion is unsubstantiated and therefore 'wrong', but my opinion is the result of experience and factual information. I am not seeking your respect. It means nothing to me - it's useless. I have no patience for useless things.[/font]
You've made the mistake of trading long-term gateways of opportunity for short-term liberation from the education system, all because you wanted to throw a pity party since your priorities mean more than everybody elses. Sorry you didn't get to learn everything you wanted to in high school, but you missed the point of high school altogether. There's a bigger picture.