girls lacrosse backpacks image
Patrick
Alright, this is pretty lame but there's this one girl I know who I think is in to me. Trouble is I really don't know how to start up a conversation without looking or sounding like an idiot! She's on the lacrosse team and I always see her in the weightroom. She works out really close to me, and yesterday was doing lunges and ab exercises almost right next to me despite having plenty of room to do so. Also, I think I saw her checking me out a couple of times, and today at lunch she put her backpack up on the counter right next to me and starting taking out tubbaware and whatnot, and made numerous passes by me.
Anyways, shes a senior, Im a junior, and I've always psyched myself out when talking to girls. I've never really had to put much effort forth to get them to notice me, but they'd normally initiate conversations. I'm not super tall, maybe 5'9 or so, so I'm a bit self concious about that. Also, I really don't even have a clue as what to say. I get the feeling that a lot of girls give me the "oppritunity" to start talking to them, but I really never know what to say, so I'd appreciate some help!
ALSO! I've had plenty of exeriences where girls do hit on me, only to tell me they have a Boyfriend, and its pretty frustrating! I've never seen her with a guy, but some of her facebook profiles have pictures of her with the same guy
Anyways, thanks!
Answer
You have to make common ground, do NOT just bombard her with ????s you have to say hey do u know how to get to room A6 or something like that and when she tells u say man i hope this class is over soon u ever had that...........talk about something she will like to talk about, and if u have a class together tell her u hope the teachers tests arent too hard
also, suggest she work out with you and FIND SOMETHING FUN to do, get tickets to a concert and surprise her with one and see if she wants to go.
do NOT just start acting like u like her because she will see that, and you have to make her laugh so u might want to watch dave chapelle and commedians, women love to laugh
and let her open up, it works VERY well when u do that+
You have to make common ground, do NOT just bombard her with ????s you have to say hey do u know how to get to room A6 or something like that and when she tells u say man i hope this class is over soon u ever had that...........talk about something she will like to talk about, and if u have a class together tell her u hope the teachers tests arent too hard
also, suggest she work out with you and FIND SOMETHING FUN to do, get tickets to a concert and surprise her with one and see if she wants to go.
do NOT just start acting like u like her because she will see that, and you have to make her laugh so u might want to watch dave chapelle and commedians, women love to laugh
and let her open up, it works VERY well when u do that+
All about high school help!?
Dani Gore
Hello! I'm writing a novel about a girl from Mexico who moves to the United States and enter a high school and I wanted to know all about it.
Schedule O
Vacations
Schedules
Materials
Breaks
Extracurricular activities
And I want to know about it, that when they have physical education will be changing and bathing the locker room or how is that?
thanks :D
I'm from Mexico
Answer
OK, so every high school across the country is different, and what you see in movies or on TV is NOT what high school is like for most students. Here we go:
-Schedule--most schools allow students to take 6-8 classes per semester. Some schools have the same classes in a row every day. At my high school, we have 8 classes but only 6 every day, so the schedule rotates around (A day=classes 1-6, B day=classes 7-8 and 1-4, etc.). Each period lasts under an hour (one is longer so we can eat lunch during the period), and we go to school from 7:30am to 2:00pm. In terms of classes, students typically take a year of English, math, science (biology, chemistry, physics, earth science), and social studies (including history, world studies, government, and economics) all four years,and some form of physical education/health for three years. Most students also take a year of a foreign language each year. Students can then take elective classes (such as art, music, business, or an additional English/science/history) to fill the rest of the classes, or students will have free periods so they can study or go home.
-Vacations/breaks--This varies greatly by high school. Here in Connecticut, we have summer vacation from mid/late June to the beginning of September, while other schools in the country have their breaks from the end of May to mid-August. We get a few days off for national or religoius holidays. We also get a half-week off around Thanksgiving, a full week off between Christmas and New Year's, and a week off in mid-April. Some schools may add a week off in February.
-Materials--Pencils, pens, calculator, notebook, textbook (1 per class), backpack, lunch money or a lunch. The most valuable material a high schooler can have is a backpack to keep everything in. Today, most homework is done on a computer, but work in school is done on pencil and paper.
-Extracurricular activities--SO MANY!! Most students participate in at least one sport. These include American football, soccer (real football), volleyball, field hockey and cross-country in the fall; basketball, swimming, wrestling, or hockey in the winter; and baseball, softball, lacrosse, tennis, golf and track in the spring. Other students participate in arts groups like band, chorus, orchestra, art or drama. Other clubs include clubs for any academic subject, student council, honor society, community service clubs (Interact is a big one), business clubs, chess team, quiz bowl...our school has close to a hundred clubs and sports. I do band (marching, concert and jazz), plus National Honor Society and science bowl. (No sports, though--I'm not an athlete!)
-Physical education--students are required to change for gym, although typically it's just the outerwear. We don't use the showers after class unless we're in the swimming unit (yeah, our high school has a pool. Not too common.)
I hope this info helps. Good luck!
OK, so every high school across the country is different, and what you see in movies or on TV is NOT what high school is like for most students. Here we go:
-Schedule--most schools allow students to take 6-8 classes per semester. Some schools have the same classes in a row every day. At my high school, we have 8 classes but only 6 every day, so the schedule rotates around (A day=classes 1-6, B day=classes 7-8 and 1-4, etc.). Each period lasts under an hour (one is longer so we can eat lunch during the period), and we go to school from 7:30am to 2:00pm. In terms of classes, students typically take a year of English, math, science (biology, chemistry, physics, earth science), and social studies (including history, world studies, government, and economics) all four years,and some form of physical education/health for three years. Most students also take a year of a foreign language each year. Students can then take elective classes (such as art, music, business, or an additional English/science/history) to fill the rest of the classes, or students will have free periods so they can study or go home.
-Vacations/breaks--This varies greatly by high school. Here in Connecticut, we have summer vacation from mid/late June to the beginning of September, while other schools in the country have their breaks from the end of May to mid-August. We get a few days off for national or religoius holidays. We also get a half-week off around Thanksgiving, a full week off between Christmas and New Year's, and a week off in mid-April. Some schools may add a week off in February.
-Materials--Pencils, pens, calculator, notebook, textbook (1 per class), backpack, lunch money or a lunch. The most valuable material a high schooler can have is a backpack to keep everything in. Today, most homework is done on a computer, but work in school is done on pencil and paper.
-Extracurricular activities--SO MANY!! Most students participate in at least one sport. These include American football, soccer (real football), volleyball, field hockey and cross-country in the fall; basketball, swimming, wrestling, or hockey in the winter; and baseball, softball, lacrosse, tennis, golf and track in the spring. Other students participate in arts groups like band, chorus, orchestra, art or drama. Other clubs include clubs for any academic subject, student council, honor society, community service clubs (Interact is a big one), business clubs, chess team, quiz bowl...our school has close to a hundred clubs and sports. I do band (marching, concert and jazz), plus National Honor Society and science bowl. (No sports, though--I'm not an athlete!)
-Physical education--students are required to change for gym, although typically it's just the outerwear. We don't use the showers after class unless we're in the swimming unit (yeah, our high school has a pool. Not too common.)
I hope this info helps. Good luck!
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