I rise up from Muspelheim
My fury is sublime
The sword I bring burns violently
With wild and lethal flames
I march against the Asagods
To bring the end of time
I am pure and endless pain
And Surtur is my name
Swordless Frej with horn in hand
Rises to his final stand
He doesn't stand a single chance
I'll split his living corpse in half
And yet he stabbed me in the eye
He drove the horn in deep
The overwhelming, raging pain
Is driving me insane!
The waves of flames that
I've unleashed will eat us all alive
The rage that burns within my hearth
Is uncontrolled and wild
And now everything shall die!
Doesn't sound too good. Giving you all energy you need *hugs*.
Quite good but really busy with my university courses have labs to do including writing reports also have a project running where I have to develop and program a robot. Moreover preparing for 8 exams in the beginning of July.
That's true but you always have to be a little bit realistic. There is no use studying a long dead language or other stuff that gets you no job possibilities later on. Not counting the possibility that one is so rich that there is no need to ever work again ^^.
Well, these days, courses at universities tend to focus on the transferable skills you can gain, so even if you decided to study something like a dead language, you would be gaining analytical and grammar skills .
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That is something I can not discuss about since I don't know enough about these courses. Probably also different for every university and country. I for myself want to study something which is useful for me later on. But to each their own. Still what is useful and what not depends on the viewpoint of the person questioned so not a good mark either. ^^
An example of transferable skills being taken into account:
A history student graduates and becomes a lawyer.
They can get that job because they have the skills needed to do it.
Yes they will have to be trained on laws and such whilst working, but the point is they have the skills necessary to do it.
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Yeah could be possible but when you have the choice between a law student and a history student in a lawyer company you would always choose to employ the lawyer not saying that it is totally impossible to get that job as history student but can get quite hard.
Might be a little bit cultural differences coming into play here since as I know here in Germany in certain jobs it is really hard to get a place when you don't have the required skills and knowledge. Still nothing is impossible.
That is quite a feat since such a jump is not easy still not saying it is totally impossible. But for some jobs here you need clearance in form of a university degree in a related subject or special certificates and courses done by the state. But at the same time not for all jobs so those hard cases are more of a rarity.
Hmm, like I said, I think it's a cultural difference.
We focus more on the transferable skills, than the course that was done.
Unless it was for a medical degree, or course.
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