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Post by OttselHero on Mar 9, 2014 15:24:08 GMT -5
I only ask the community this question because I'm personally having a rough time in having a "fulfilling" weekend. I work hard week after week, and when the weekend comes, I simply don't know what to do. Playing games used to be the best way to spend a weekend throughout grade school, but in college I actually acquired friends. Throughout my 4 years at the university I attended, a good weekend constituted of hanging with my roommates. Now that I've graduated last year and none of my friends live near me, all of my weekends go by without satisfaction, and playing games doesn't really do it for me anymore. What should I do, or more importantly, what does everyone here do to have a "good" weekend?
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Post by SweetPoison13 on Mar 13, 2014 2:07:38 GMT -5
My most fulfilling weekends are usually ones where I do something a little bit different from the norm. A weekend spent playing video games is a weekend wasted, unless I absolutely love the video games in question or play them online with people who I haven’t spoken to in months. Routine kills my weekends. It probably also kills my weekdays.
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Post by Tross on Mar 15, 2014 21:13:43 GMT -5
I usually work on the weekends and visit my cousin on Sunday, where we play videogames, and talk. My days off tend to be in the middle of the week(Tuesday to Thursday). Those are my days spent playing videogames. I figure, the rest of my week is eventful enough. I actually do like having a routine, and my goal is to launch into a career I'll enjoy for the rest of my working life, start a family, and settle into a comfortable routine. I'm not opposed to doing something unusual and exciting, but most of the time, I'm content with the norm. If you're looking to spend time with people, maybe try joining some kind of club, or joining a gym, or church. I'm kind of weird with people in real life. I like having one or two close friends, and though I tend to be friends with just about anyone at my work, school, or church, I don't really see most people outside of the place I usually meet up with them. It's not that I don't enjoy company. I just enjoy company on my own terms, hence why I hate Facebook, and other similar sites. I will say that joining the church I currently attend, a few years ago, was one of the best things I could have done. There's a young adults group that I go to on Wednesday nights, and I really enjoy it.
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