Trust me, I know. When I was a teen, I wanted desperately to become a full-fledged adult. Why? Because I apparently thought that it would mean more freedom. I wasn’t completely wrong, but it also means more responsibilities and work.
Well, today we are going to talk about the things that nobody told us that come with adulthood. So, what I don’t get is why school teaches us trigonometry rather than how to do taxes.
https://twitter.com/MichelleHux/status/842446838275952640
That adults are still just kids with old bodies.
— Richard Westm⬡reland (@RSWestmoreland) March 18, 2017
Comparing yourself to your parents when they were your age and realizing they didn’t know what the hell they were doing either.
— Chelsea (@chelsea_doll) January 25, 2018
https://twitter.com/mayhemmyles/status/957064070410194944
that I basically blink and ten years go by
— H O P E H I L T O N (@hopehilton) March 17, 2017
i did NOT know how soul-crushing leaving your house to go to work would be.
my parents were always dressed when i came downstairs.
i didn't know there were these long stretches of time where you lie in bed, staring at the ceiling, thinking of reasons to call in, wanting to die. https://t.co/7d4ZkdhAVI— fooler initiative (@metroadlib) January 27, 2018
The difficulty of maintaining a friendship when you have vastly different incomes/lifestyles/sxhedules. https://t.co/RXqGHbmxzd
— 🎓Cate Young 🎉📚 (@battymamzelle) March 16, 2017
earning a good-ish salary yet never having any money because bills
— KBfoodphotos (@kasiakatie) March 17, 2017
Loneliness. Even if you have great friends, you spend so much less time together as everyone gets older. https://t.co/eXOnLaIAfg
— Cass Morris 😷 (@CassRMorris) March 16, 2017
1-2 weeks vacation out of 52 weeks a year.
— WhoLieMore (@HonestLaugh) March 16, 2017
No one ever tells you *just* how expensive furniture is. Any furniture. https://t.co/Eh7r2XlraK
— KeVon from Inglewood💥 (@CallMeKeV_) March 16, 2017