I don't understand the use of entitled as an insult, it means I have a claim or right over something, to refer to a title and to call someone by a title.
So how is it an insult?
Pic not related.
I don't understand the use of entitled as an insult, it means I have a claim or right over something...
I'll just leave you with this:
>Pic is actually very related
Got it from a RPG classes in real life in /tg/.
What movie was this again?
When people say "entitled" they usually mean "self-entitled"
It's quite simple, user:
Righteous is great
Self-righteous is shit
So they mean I crowned myself to gamer status?
The unwillingness to eat shit?
It sounds like a good thing no?
I found an article that people who complain on bugs are entitled and that you shouldn't say games/dlc is bad, I do not understand how is that came to professional journalism (if you can even call it professional)...
self-entitled means that you think you deserve something just because.
self-entitlement goes along with the notion that you are entitled to SOMETHING.
>I found an article that people who complain on bugs are entitled and that you shouldn't say games/dlc is bad, I do not understand how is that came to professional journalism (if you can even call it professional)...
well then someone has a different idea of what you are entitled to as a person who pays for a game.
I agree that bugs need to be fixed and that a paying user has the right to a flawless product, but that doesn't have much to do with the semantics we were discussing.
This is 'Murica. If you're not pulling a 19-hour shift down at the local steel-mill 6 days a week, you're an entitled little millennial shit.
Millenials ARE more self-entitled than the generations before them. Not all of them, of course, but in general they are.
Yeah, when they complain about the money/job situation they are entitled to do that (meaning: it's right for them to say that)
The reason why millenials are labeled as entitled has more to do with their demands on fields other than the aforementioned.
Why would schools offer courses/fields that are generally useless in society? That's almost like setting potential students up for failure just because they're bad at math and/or never got the help they needed growing up.
1st of all: nice trips
I don't know why schools offer courses that teach you nothing that contributes productively to society. I think it's pretty stupid, too.
But when idiots major in gender studies (not even sure you can take that as your major) and then expect society to bend backwards to shit out a job for them - that's (self-)entitled
I guess so. I say this because I majored in a non-STEM field (not entirely by choice), but have become disillusioned by it the closer I've gotten to graduation. Now, it's my last semester, and I'm kicking myself for making all the wrong decisions, but more bothered by schools actually offering things like Sociology and English as full-blown majors. What's even worse is the people who actually major in them: they tend to be the most self-centered cunts....
WOW that looks bad ass. I need to know
I'm no different to you in that regard. The realisation came too late. I can't prove it but I am certain that this is all due to the way we've been raised, the society we grew up in.
We're made to believe one of two things:
A, which is more popular:
>Everything has been set up for you, all you have to do is study
And B
>You can study all you want
>There are no jobs, your future is not stable
I'm against the notion that the moderate in-between is always the right answer, but in this case it is.
Jobs aren't waiting for us. That's a wrong way of thinking. We have to open our eyes ourselves and be grown ups. We have to go seize the opportunities.
Society has fabricated an environment so soft that we basically grew up without these instincts that'd get us jobs.
It's the way you're wired and the way you're "trained" to perceive the world.
Yes...that's part of why I'm just trying to move back abroad. I don't care if it means I'll be digging ditches in Cambodia and living in a straw hut, I have no desire to grow old and rot where I am now.
Just make sure this is not as premature as your other decision that you came to regret.
IMHO your first decision came out of passivity, apathy in the face of the real world situation, if you will.
Your second decision, the one you're planning to execute, seems to come out of reaction.
Both of these are bad motivators.
Don't get me wrong, badmouthing stranger's life choices is not what I get off to, but you should build your house on something real. You can probably do better than agriculture or back-breaking physical labour.
IMHO, again, what you need is a healthy load of confidence in yourself. That'd be your absolute foundation
Don't worry; this is something that I've been wanting to do for a VERY long time; I've based the last several years of my life on the realization of this goal, in fact. It won't be my first decision, but I'm sure it will be my best one yet. It's really all I've got left, in fact.
What's your plan and how deep have you planned it out?
Move to Japan to start as an English teacher, then build up IT skills and network while there. Also pass the N2 and eventually N1 of the JLPT for the language certifications. When my teaching contracts are up, I just work normally.
You planning on doing the JET? I'm hoping to take my N2 next july and move to japan the following year
Yes, signing up for JET (or at least attempting to) next month, taking N3 in December, and hope to be in Japan by this time next year. I'm also going to try Interac, or even EPIK though it's Korea (lived there for years before already). I just really need to leave this country as quickly as possible.