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| I have just failed Algebra. I am wondering if I really need all that bunk? What do you think? |
| When I was in high school, I felt the same way about algebra. I never, ever thought that I would pursue anything that algebra would have anything to do with I never thought I'd pursue anything that simple mathematics would have anything to do with. I'd already chosen what I wanted to do in life, and I'd suggest to you that if you think you're going to do something in life that doesn't call for you to be a genius when it comes to adding and subtracting and dividing and multiplying, then if I were you I wouldn't lose a lot of sleep over failing algebra.
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| I'm a horse trainer by profession (and a good one), but a horse falling on me two years ago caused me to have hip replacement surgery, and I'm just coming back, starting to ride again. How do you tell people who love you that risk-taking is your life when they all want you to stop? |
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Let (the people who love you) live pursuing what makes them happy, and let them know that you do not need any advice or help about your life. |
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| I find my boyfriend's flat very depressing, and while I want to spend time with him, I don't want to spend the night at his flat. How should I suggest he stays at mine whenever we spend the night together without telling him the real reason why? |
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For some reason, men seem to feel more comfortable in their own home. He probably likes it there probably feels, maybe, the same way that you do about his apartment. If I were you, I'd tell him that you felt that there could be some changes made to make you feel a little more comfortable, and that you think the world of him and you'd like to be with him, and see if he won't let you help him make those changes to his apartment. |
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Please note: Tripod, like most citizens of the Spaceship Earth, is in awe of Evel Knievel, his life, and his hard-earned position in American culture. However, neither Tripod nor its parent company, Lycos, Inc., necessarily share, espouse, or agree with the viewpoints expressed by Mr. Knievel, or any other Tripod columnist. (While we're at it, and to be perfectly candid, we are also fairly certain we don't agree with most of the viewpoints expressed by our high school teachers, parents, parole officers, therapists, and career bureaucrats employed by the United Nations.)
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