Home
»
Question of the Week
»
I Drank Meths (pointless teenage things you did to shock)
»
Post 85590
| Search
I Drank Meths (pointless teenage things you did to shock)
As a teenager I spent a whole summer bare-foot to show I wasn't going to bow to rules imposed by society.
(soon forgot all about that idea when the pavements got icy, I tell you)
I was telling a friend this when he trumped my story - he used to put water in a meths bottle and drink it in public. See, that'll bring down society.
What similarly classy nonsense have you got up to in the name of rebellion?
Apologies for accidentally closing this question earlier
( , Thu 19 Jul 2007, 12:07)
As a teenager I spent a whole summer bare-foot to show I wasn't going to bow to rules imposed by society.
(soon forgot all about that idea when the pavements got icy, I tell you)
I was telling a friend this when he trumped my story - he used to put water in a meths bottle and drink it in public. See, that'll bring down society.
What similarly classy nonsense have you got up to in the name of rebellion?
Apologies for accidentally closing this question earlier
( , Thu 19 Jul 2007, 12:07)
« Go Back
I tried very hard to shock.
It didn't really work.
Stalker Boy tried this, but as far as I got with rebelling, I ended up being encouraged by my mum, who would be the one helping me to dye my hair or whatever.
The furthest I got was being an incredibly mopey teenager, even if I did always do my work and so on and never stayed out late. The benefits are that my parents now totally trust me and never tell me I can't go somewhere or do something. So you see, it's not worth it because trust me, it'll all pay off later.
( , Mon 23 Jul 2007, 21:05, Reply)
It didn't really work.
Stalker Boy tried this, but as far as I got with rebelling, I ended up being encouraged by my mum, who would be the one helping me to dye my hair or whatever.
The furthest I got was being an incredibly mopey teenager, even if I did always do my work and so on and never stayed out late. The benefits are that my parents now totally trust me and never tell me I can't go somewhere or do something. So you see, it's not worth it because trust me, it'll all pay off later.
( , Mon 23 Jul 2007, 21:05, Reply)
« Go Back