Quote:
Originally Posted by Vman455
Did she think you're wrong about your career in some technical aspect, or wrong somehow for having chosen that career? You can't be "wrong" for choosing a career when that choice is arbitrary, personal, and subjective, unless you are arguing that you chose it for some objective reason (i.e. "I chose to become a marine art historian because the starting salary for marine art historians is one million dollars per year." "You're wrong about that." vs. "I chose to become a rutabaga farmer because I like rutabagas and farming them." "I can't say you're wrong about that, because that is impossible for me to know.").
|
I went running with a friend and as we walked back to my car, a friend of his invited him somewhere, and he asked if I wanted to come along. In the future, I will forgo her company.
She is also friends with an old roommate and I used to only know that he was home because I would hear her inexplicably loud laughter while I was studying or sleeping. I used to ask her to work on her inside voice, I was trying to study.
I told my friend something about looking for a job and she started talking over me.
My second Bachelor's is the undergraduate to become a Speech Language Pathologist (speech therapist) and I want to work as an SLP Assistant until I can earn my Master's, but there are far more SLP job postings than for SLPAs, and assistants are legally prohibited from doing many of the responsibilities of SLPs. I told my friend that SLPAs usually do not receive as many hours as their supervisors and his friend interrupted and started telling me how I was wrong.