Coffee |
Coffee |
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#1
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![]() Senior Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Administrator Posts: 2,648 Joined: Apr 2008 Member No: 639,265 ![]() |
I bought a cup of coffee at a café a few days ago. This simple act is insignificant for most people, but I almost never drink coffee. I visited the café because I’d just picked up an anthology of short plays by Tennessee Williams, and I wanted a quiet place to read; it seemed rude to take up a table and not buy a drink.
As I sat sipping and reading by myself, I thought how coffee always seemed to me to be a sign of maturity. As a kid, I recognized coffee as an "adult drink", just a tiny step down from beer and liquor. During high school, my friend Dan, a year my senior, perpetually carried around a travel mug of the brew. Secretly I viewed it with some suspicion; in my mind, a high school kid was too young to be drinking coffee. But I always put the appropriate age for coffee consumption into the future: even in college, I never felt like I was "old enough" to drink it. As I sat in the café, reading Williams and drinking coffee, it finally hit me: now, at age 23, I am a mature adult. Maybe I was always right: as an 18-year-old, perhaps I was too young for both coffee and college. This morning's epiphany reinforced a long-held belief that kids are pushed into college -- and out the other side, into the dreaded "real world" -- far too early and far too fast, before they even really know themselves. What hope do they have to make any real decisions about their futures? How do you really know you're old enough to drink the coffee? (True confessions: this is actually cross-posted from my blog. But I thought it was one of my more...interesting entries, so I re-posted it here.) |
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#2
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![]() This bag is not a toy. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Staff Alumni Posts: 3,090 Joined: Oct 2007 Member No: 583,108 ![]() |
I actually kinda feel the same way about kids getting pushed into college. There are plenty who survive just fine in college going right after high school, but there are even more who flunk out their first year. I know a lot of people who dropped out of college and came back a few years later with a new perspective.
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#3
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![]() Senior Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Administrator Posts: 2,648 Joined: Apr 2008 Member No: 639,265 ![]() |
I actually kinda feel the same way about kids getting pushed into college. There are plenty who survive just fine in college going right after high school, but there are even more who flunk out their first year. I know a lot of people who dropped out of college and came back a few years later with a new perspective. Yeah, I don't know if 18-year-olds can really be expected to fully grasp the weight of the future. Then again, when I was an 18-year-old freshman, I did know my strengths, and I did know what I wanted. Then I got off-track when I was 20. ![]() |
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