Starting high school everyone says they are ready to graduate, and everyone who graduated says they miss it more than anything. That was my mentality up until this year, Senior year. I realized that when I graduate there goes 90% of the people I talk to on a day to day basis, and I know I will miss that. High school taught me more lessons than I think everything up to high school ever taught me. When I look back I know I will miss this miserable place, because I loved every second of it. Nerves and Inner Chaos is how one describes the first day of Freshman year. Hundreds of people who tower over you and you don’t know. Only thing holding your inner peace together, is seeing if you have classes with friends. After that first long scary day …show more content…
By now most of you and/or your upperclassmen friends are Vehicle mobile which is your true first taste of freedom. I drove my family everywhere on my permit, and halfway through the year I was blessed with my license. My sophomore year consisted of learning about being free, and some of the consequences of being free. Freedom always comes with a cost. In this case I had to have a job, but some instances are arrests, having children, or even drug and alcohol mistakes. Most kids who don’t learn the rules don’t understand there is a difference between partying, and being a burn-out. That's what the freedom of sophomore year is supposed to bring, but freedom always comes at a cost. What starts out as harmless fun leads to one fumble after another and the consequences set in. I’ve heard plenty of stories where people have cried because of how sick they were, where people drove home endangering others because of their reckless ways, and people who have died or been hospitalized. The ages around sophomore year are when you start becoming older, and that’s when my dad started mentoring me to be a functioning member of society, and to know right from wrong so I may be