A lot of our thoughts are about our futures and the unknown. We are constantly making decisions about what we want to become or do. But what about our past? What we made? What we did? How did we get here? How will we get through the next few years? All these are important questions when you consider the future and the choices you make.
That’s a great question to ask yourself but unfortunately, it’s a very difficult question to answer. We can’t remember past events and we can’t predict the future. We have no idea what will happen, and we don’t know how to explain our choices to our children. We can only “memorize and re-memorize” those decisions and then try to make them real.
I am a firm believer that if there is something good about what we are doing, that it will survive. So we are trying to make our lives better by not getting caught up in the past. And the past is a part of us; it takes up space that we want to save for our children. We can’t change the past, but we can try to change the future.
I am a firm believer that if there is something good about what we are doing, that it will survive. So we are trying to make our lives better by not getting caught up in the past. And the past is a part of us it takes up space that we want to save for our children. We cant change the past, but we can try to change the future.
It’s not like you’re going to find any past that’s worth saving by doing all that you’re doing. I mean, it’s like you’re going to find a future.
I don’t know what the future is, but I do know that I want to change the future, so I think that we should stop thinking about it.
This is sort of like the same sort of thing, but we want to save the future, not the past. The future is like “I’m going to be someone.” If you don’t want to be someone, you shouldn’t want to be that person.
While I agree with the sentiment, I also feel it’s a little overreaching. We should save the future, not the past. Because as with anything, there will always be a way to change the future. But there is a lot of resistance to change in the present for the exact same reason we resist it in the past: that we don’t want to change our past. But it’s the same reason people resist change in the present: it’s not fair.
Personally, I think the idea of applying for tech school in the middle of a recession, or even in the middle of the first recession of the new millennium, is kind of ridiculous. While I understand the sentiment, it doesnt make sense. Most of the tech field has become so successful in recent years, it doesnt really make sense to go into what seems to be a great job and then come out of it with a degree that doesnt really matter.
I had a friend ask me this question recently. Why does no one apply for tech school in the middle of a recession? I told her, it’s because we don’t even know what recession is. I think its pretty obvious what it is, but I dont know what it is.