What would you change and why?

  • Chippys_mittens@lemmy.world
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    7 hours ago

    Would have skipped college and gone straight into my feild (stationary engineering). You don’t really need a degree in my state and I could have been making a shit load of money by 21-22. Still in a good spot but I’d be way ahead.

    • Aneb@lemmy.world
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      40 minutes ago

      As someone who did drop out at 20, freshman year, the job market sucks and the degree you hold does have value. I’m 26 and almost completely given up on finding a job in the field I want to work in, Software Development. AI and the tech boom have really stalled my advances. I took some community college courses but still employers are looking for a bachelor’s degree or higher. I have tons of experience coding but that never translates to a job

  • starlinguk@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    I went to a café just before the Covid lockdown and got Covid. Been chronically ill for the past 6 years. I should have stayed at home.

    • Cherry@piefed.social
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      12 hours ago

      Years ago you would have been called a little tart but not now, It’s acceptable don’t stress.

  • disregardable@lemmy.zip
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    23 hours ago

    Today, between classes, I decided to go to the co-op instead of the library and doing my property reading. I told myself I’d just pick up some red lentils, since my grocery store is out. It’s only a 20 minute bus. -$113 dollars later and missing the bus and standing outside in the freezing cold for an uber and missing my property quiz again…should’ve just went to the library…

  • zxqwas@lemmy.world
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    24 hours ago

    I wish I had learnt social skills earlier. Brilliant at maths and science but did not start paying attention to the soft skills until mid 20s.

    • FinjaminPoach@lemmy.world
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      23 hours ago

      If it makes you feel better, there are so many people like this 😅.

      On the flip side, people can also “lose” their social skills - I feel like I have had good social skills since being a kid/teenager, but they got rusty because trauma meant that I shut down and stopped talking to people as much. I was facing so much anxiety around social interactions that I sought a diagnosis for autism as an adult, but the doc made a strong case that it was other factors, and since getting a better understanding of it all I’ve become more of a social butterfly again.

  • scytale@piefed.zip
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    22 hours ago

    Bought a house on a corner lot. I liked that we would have one less neighbor around us and the potential resale value of a corner lot property. Only realized later the pain to mow a larger area and having to deal with people letting their dogs pee all over the side yard as they pass by. Also, kids throwing trash (sometimes into the yard) as they walk home from school.

    • chunes@lemmy.world
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      21 hours ago

      Neighbors can be a lot worse than everything you listed. Carry on by imagining the missing neighbor would have been the neighbor of nightmares

  • YappyMonotheist@lemmy.world
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    18 hours ago

    Nothing I’ve done, as stupid as it might have been, has resulted in me having a worse life altogether or has destroyed/heavily negatively altered anyone else’s life. It was stupid of me to move to a different country in a far away continent so young and without knowing how important other people’s company was in my life (and, more importantly, without speaking the language fluently enough to feel comfortable enough to crack jokes and make friends!), I flunked out of uni, my visa expired and was massively depressed… but then I joined the army, became a national, God helped me find my now wife and my wife helped me find God. I would do it again, no hesitation.

    The one thing I do regret is losing touch with one friend from my army days. I simply forget to reply and then months later I feel embarrassed to do so. I have somewhat changed my ways since, and he was married so it’s not like they didn’t have each other, but I still feel a little bad about that one.

  • chaosCruiser@futurology.today
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    16 hours ago

    Nah. What’s done is done. Hard lessons, but those are the ones I remember.

    But let’s imagine I could send a message to an alternate timeline version of past me. I have some ideas.

    Don’t hang out with the people on this list. Learn about mental illnesses such as narcissism, bipolar disorder, paranoia, depression, and psychosis. Read a bit about conspiratorial thinking too.

    Equipped with this info, you no longer need that list of names. You can notice when it is the time to leave a particular crowd. Now that you didn’t learn things the hard way, you avoided some hardship and trouble.