Post by account_disabled on Dec 19, 2023 8:23:47 GMT
Coming from the mathematics-informatics profile, I always believed that this should be my path in life, and that's why I chose to attend the courses of the Faculty of Cybernetics at ASE. I was very excited at the beginning, I think more so because I no longer had to go to high school, which I hated with all my heart (except for the conductor, about other professors and a few colleagues). But after one semester, I could already feel myself panicking when I thought that I would have to do programming for the rest of my life, which bored me terribly. I didn't even wait for the first session to start because I told my folks that I was going to quit Cybernetics and go somewhere else. Initially, I wanted to go into Journalism, I always liked to talk, write, learn new things and document myself. When I was little I always liked to pretend I was a news anchor.
But, in order to avoid my parents disinheriting me if I went to a country email list college that for them had no future, after long discussions we decided together that the best choice would be to go to Law (because I still liked to right with everyone - they said). At first I was afraid that I wouldn't be able to prepare enough for admission, I knew former colleagues who prepared for a whole year, and I only had time from February to July, when the entrance exam was held. Many encouraged me, but just as many "friends" tried to discourage me, their ultimate argument being that I would have too much to learn.
The preparation period, the admission went well and here I am, a student at the Faculty of Law of the University of Bucharest. When I first read the timetable, I thought I was going to die: History of Romanian Law and Roman Law. History. I was never in the mood to learn. I was very surprised to find that not only did I learn easily for the two subjects, but I also started to like them (and I think that the teachers also had an important contribution). I was so excited when college started that I might actually enjoy. And that's how it was. With few exceptions, obviously. But anyway, it was much better than at ASE, where I felt like I was losing all the joy in my soul, how much I disliked it. Of all the rumors floating around college from my older peers, only one turned out to be entirely true: I had hundreds and hundreds of pages to learn.
But, in order to avoid my parents disinheriting me if I went to a country email list college that for them had no future, after long discussions we decided together that the best choice would be to go to Law (because I still liked to right with everyone - they said). At first I was afraid that I wouldn't be able to prepare enough for admission, I knew former colleagues who prepared for a whole year, and I only had time from February to July, when the entrance exam was held. Many encouraged me, but just as many "friends" tried to discourage me, their ultimate argument being that I would have too much to learn.
The preparation period, the admission went well and here I am, a student at the Faculty of Law of the University of Bucharest. When I first read the timetable, I thought I was going to die: History of Romanian Law and Roman Law. History. I was never in the mood to learn. I was very surprised to find that not only did I learn easily for the two subjects, but I also started to like them (and I think that the teachers also had an important contribution). I was so excited when college started that I might actually enjoy. And that's how it was. With few exceptions, obviously. But anyway, it was much better than at ASE, where I felt like I was losing all the joy in my soul, how much I disliked it. Of all the rumors floating around college from my older peers, only one turned out to be entirely true: I had hundreds and hundreds of pages to learn.