Thread:Arima no megane/@comment-25787298-20151018150208/@comment-25787298-20151019170317

Why thank you, although it was more of me settling than having a resolve. Like, I wanted to, but I felt wrong about it. Its good to know that someone who doesn't totally know me can still see the potential in me. In America, a student can make the decision to "drop out" with parental consent at 16. I wasn't even 16 at the time, but my mother made it a point that I wasn't going to be caught up in time, and urged that I just take the GED route at that point, so she registered me as Homeschooling. I wasn't forced, like many who hear this story seem to think. I then tried this unorthodox schooling system that turned out to be a way to scam the government, and all the efforts I put into that for the month I was there were nullified because they never actually enrolled me. However, if I could, I'd go back. Back in 2013 (what should've been my senior year), I was envious of those going to prom and reaping the immediate benefits and thrills of graduation.