I loved tax law...probably because it was almost entirely rules driven and not patchwork random judicial opinions.
My response is, you're in you're late 20s and you still lived with your mom?The independence will be nice. Enjoy it.
What type of tax work do you get to work on? Purely personal income tax, or do you get to dabble in partnership and corporate tax areas as well? I loved tax law...probably because it was almost entirely rules driven and not patchwork random judicial opinions.
Quote from: Makkotah on October 10, 2015, 03:25:31 AMMy response is, you're in you're late 20s and you still lived with your mom?The independence will be nice. Enjoy it.Since graduation, sharing bills and supporting her in household economy since I entered the workforce. Also caring for her to a degree as well. it's just sorta weird.Also, housekeeping basics aren't a problem, college taught me enough. I haven't been living in my parents' basement, after all.
True, it's very much a cultural thing. The majority of Japanese college students and even 20-something adults I know live with their parents. I asked this one girl why she was still living with her parents at 27, and her response was basically, "Why wouldn't I be?"This is one thing I'm pretty sure Americans get right though, although yes it is the much more expensive lifestyle if you don't have roommates. But I'd much rather live with friends than I would with parents? I mean, depending on the friends.
I think we got it right to a degree. It's good because being away from your parents makes it a lot easier to actually become a functioning adult. It's causes a more global failure in that it can be incredibly wasteful and you lose a lot of benefits of community living (because you don't live with friends by the time that community living tends to reap the best rewards). I suspect that dwindling resources in the future could prompt a change in U.S. culture at some point in the future.
Quote from: Makkotah on October 12, 2015, 12:35:02 PMTrue, it's very much a cultural thing. The majority of Japanese college students and even 20-something adults I know live with their parents. I asked this one girl why she was still living with her parents at 27, and her response was basically, "Why wouldn't I be?"This is one thing I'm pretty sure Americans get right though, although yes it is the much more expensive lifestyle if you don't have roommates. But I'd much rather live with friends than I would with parents? I mean, depending on the friends.I think we got it right to a degree. It's good because being away from your parents makes it a lot easier to actually become a functioning adult. It's causes a more global failure in that it can be incredibly wasteful and you lose a lot of benefits of community living (because you don't live with friends by the time that community living tends to reap the best rewards). I suspect that dwindling resources in the future could prompt a change in U.S. culture at some point in the future.