the inter-continental face-off.
US | UK | |
Study time | US wins hands-down. I’m amazed we don’t keel over and die from the amount of stuff we have to do (I have no idea about the humanities, but we sciences have it rough). | |
Partying | Gotta give it to the UK folks. I was getting clubbing invites EVERY SINGLE DAY. And I know some people went EVERY SINGLE NIGHT. | |
Stress level | US hands-down again. Loans, homework, “OMFG I got a B and now I can’t get into law school”… | |
Relationships | Easy screws are common. But I certainly don’t see any girl bawling her eyes out over a man. | I saw a girl bawling her eyes out over a guy at least once a year. |
Maturity | US kids are much more mature. You have to be, if the tuition’s sky-rocketing. That, and marks count for your future career. | |
Extra comments | American university students are American workers in waiting, and therefore the lifestyle is a cushier version of it. Which means, by the end of the term, half of us are blue with worry, half of us are white with fatigue, and half of us are green from just ill health. Our lives are ruled with gadgets, e-mails, and professors demanding papers turned in via e-mail because the professor doesn’t want to carry 50 papers home to grade. Coffee is the staple of our diet. | British students seem to enjoy the last vestige of childhood before being sent out to service the unemployed and the Royal Family, but it seems in the inside they are envious of American yuppie-esque life-style with Starbucks runs and laptop totes. Nevertheless, they seem not to realise that the reason we need Starbucks is not to look cool but because we are so freakishly tired most of the time with the exams and we need caffeine to wake up. Well, some of us. Either way, they seem to have more fun. |
0 comments:
Post a Comment