<p>I agree, having someone there can be a great thing.... until you get screwed over, at least. (Just slightly bitter at the moment haha) But it's great to know that people aren't obsessed with being in relationships in college. So many people "go out" in high school just be able to SAY they have a boyfriend/girlfriend. Does that bother anybody else?</p>
<p>haha wooow people DO that?? lol</p>
<p>i know quite a few people who have gotten through separate-college, long-distance relationships. i guess it is possible... but it takes a lot out of the college experience too i suppose.</p>
<p>when you have someone special, it really doesn't matter how the college experience is affected. maybe just being attached to him/her is enough. <em>shrug</em> </p>
<p>ideally, anyway...</p>
<p>Yeah, I've seen a few friends go through it this year, and they made it work. It takes a lot of trust, but I guess there is such a thing as "true love"?</p>
<p>no true love is ******** haha</p>
<p>bull5hit is what that was supposed t say</p>
<p>wow, I realized on the bright side, if 5% of the girls in the freshman class are really hot, thats still like more than 150 super-hotties. Niiiice thats half of my current class size. and times 4 classes is 600 really hot undergrads, thats still alot in raw numbers, even if its a huge community. Think if you put them all in one room with yourself guys... haha</p>
<p>Haha...I guess our math teachers really were right when they said we could use it later in life :)</p>
<p>haha yeah, now how can I apply integrals and summations to sex...</p>
<p>Get back to me on that :)</p>
<p>I had this emailed to me a few weeks ago. It's the closest comparison I can make:</p>
<p>CALCULUS SEX
The Relationship:</p>
<p>They integrated from the very point of origin. Her curves were continuous, and even though he was odd, he was a real number. They both wanted to get skewed. The day their lines first intersected, they became an ordered pair.</p>
<p>From then on it was a continuous function. They were both in their prime, so in next to no time they were horizontal and parallel.</p>
<p>She was awed by the magnitude of his perpendicular line, and he was amazed by her conical projections. "Bisect my angle!" she postulated each time she reached her local maximum. He taught her the chain rule as she implicitly defined the amplitude of his simple harmonic motion. They underwent multiple rotations of their axes, until at last they reached the vertex, the critical point, their finite limit. After that they slept like Logs. Later she found him taking a right-handed limit, that was a problem, it was improper form. He meanwhile had realized that she was irrational, not to mention square.</p>
<p>They diverged.</p>
<p>She's currently reaching the limit in a relationship that is somewhat undefined. He is currently unable to afford dating because he cosined a loan for his son, tan.</p>
<p>(I've reached a new peak of nerdiness but it made me laugh! Don't make fun of me too much, guys.)</p>
<p>wow, amazing!</p>
<p>LMAO!!!!!!!!!! You're my hero!!!!!!!!!!! :)</p>
<p>im am in awe...
WoOoW ^_^</p>
<p>Thanks Nicky!! :)</p>
<p>Haha no thank you for renewing my interest in calc!!!!!!!!! lol</p>
<p>lol that is really funny, mind if I bring that into my BC calc class?</p>
<p>Not at all, it's become a joke in my class as well! :)</p>
<p>wow, I love that thats awesome!</p>
<p>haha. that sounds like some dorky thing i would make up.</p>