Knifeboy, you're--like--the second person (besides myself) I've ever heard say they like Signs, and the other person is a Christian.
I loved Signs. However! I felt tricked at the end, and not in the good way. I had no spoilers for the film. I never saw the Christian "God knows all, sees all, influences all" message coming. For me, this creepy, well-written, well-acted move has a kind of proselytizing "God knows best" sappy ending.
But still, I enjoyed it. The ending didn't ruin it for me, but it didn't sit well with me either. Like I said, I felt kind of tricked. When I learned later that the director is a Christian it made more sense.
I loved Unbreakable and Sixth Sense too. Hell, I even enjoyed The Village. Found it creepy and very well-acted. And, once again, I didn't see the ending coming. So I enjoyed it. Supposedly, every single other person who saw this film, guessed the twist ending but me...
I loved Signs, and I'm a very apathetic christian...
Oh, finally got a job interview for what seems like a decent job. Though I might have to put my degree on hold, or into part time... gah, only one more year left, or a great job... what to do with my life!
Working full-time, while trying to attend school part-time is horrid, but doable.
Just don't forget: you're going into this interview from a position of strength. If they say no, you still have school, so it's not the end of the world if you don't get the position. That should leave off a lot of stress and nerves.
Think of it this way: you're interviewing them. Are they worth leaving school for? Are they worth the hassle of full-time job/part-time school? Think 5-10 years down the line. What if administration changes and you hate your new boss? Would the job still be worth leaving school for?
If it is, then go for it. You're so young, you could always return to school later without setting yourself back. Hell, I didn't even start college until I was 25, and by then I knew what I wanted.
Working full-time, while trying to attend school part-time is horrid, but doable.
Just don't forget: you're going into this interview from a position of strength. If they say no, you still have school, so it's not the end of the world if you don't get the position. That should leave off a lot of stress and nerves.
Think of it this way: you're interviewing them. Are they worth leaving school for? Are they worth the hassle of full-time job/part-time school? Think 5-10 years down the line. What if administration changes and you hate your new boss? Would the job still be worth leaving school for?
If it is, then go for it. You're so young, you could always return to school later without setting yourself back. Hell, I didn't even start college until I was 25, and by then I knew what I wanted.
Brilliant outlook on it. actually opened my eyes on how i should approach this interview. At the same time, i shouldn't get too assertive, there could be about 50 other web designers lined up, possibly more experienced and better than me... I do sorta want this job at the end of the day, they've worked for some pretty decent clients.
Brilliant outlook on it. actually opened my eyes on how i should approach this interview. At the same time, i shouldn't get too assertive, there could be about 50 other web designers lined up, possibly more experienced and better than me... I do sorta want this job at the end of the day, they've worked for some pretty decent clients.
This is exactly how you should be thinking, Scott. Why you'd want it. Or why you might not want to leave school for it.
But always keep in mind that you'll be interviewing them as much as they'll be interviewing you.
preferably in a brothel? That would take the edge off.
sigpic
We'll fuck standing and we'll fuck then lying, if they had wings we'll fuck them flying, when they are dead and long forgotten we'll dig them up and fuck them rotten.
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