Nothing planned. Seriously. If I plan things and don't accomplish them I'll feel like I let myself down. I'll just keep doing whatever I want whenever I want.
there are lots of things to do before i die mainly because i'm only 18 and i haven't really accomplished alot one thing i really want to do is get my tongue pierced but i'm currently living at home and folks would freak i want to get it done soon though as soon as i have enough money i'm currently in my 2nd year of college/university and it's damn expensive so...we'll see ~ many things to do
Travel more. Learn a craft. Have a couple kids. Forgive and forget. Know myself more. Learn to play another instrument. Publish a book.
take it easy have fun live in the moment live in new zealand for a year visit some more of the global power places learn how to kayak
On a realistic note: Go to college and get a degree Have a small family (so I can at least have some reason to not feel life's only purpose is to drive people insane) Send my own kids to college, or at least have some money so they have a headstart And revealing my extremely materialistic side that wishes for great fortunes: Own a piano (not so extravagant...) Own a pool again Go to Disneyworld to ride the deathtraps Own a shark (they cost thousands of dollars to maintain...but I want one so much!) Breed seahorses (they cost $80 a pop, but produce anywhere from 60 to 400 babies. Talk about money...) Have a really big aquarium (the shark will have his own tank, of course, lol) Own a sports car So far that's it on my list of "demands." I'll let you know when it grows...because it does. A lot. Sorry...I just want a lot of stuff. Haha.
A small one...not teeny tiny wimpy ones that they claim are sharks at your local petshop...but not a gigantic one that's only suitable for zoo aquariums and oceans. One that would be comfy living in a tank no bigger than the span of a 12 foot wall. It makes one question the ethics of having pet fish, but at the same time...if they are born domestic, then wouldn't it be unethical to set them free to fend for themselves in the big competetive ocean? Haha, anyway, this isn't an ethical debate. My boyfriend and I found sharks for sale on an aquarium site for about $758 and it highly recommended only zoos and qualified handlers purchase them, so probably not one of those. But we'd definitely study up as much as we could on the care and keeping of a pet shark and even take a course in it if available. We definitely wouldn't go into it without every intention of giving it a decent home. I almost forgot to add that if he started getting too large for his tank, we'd definitely donate him to a zoo aquarium with better accomodations. It would be cruel to keep an animal in a tank too small for his needs and most sharks eventually grow to be too large.
peyote aswell^^ a kid be wed in some form or another to whomever i love meet many many real people smoke my dad up smoke my mum up haha now thatd be funny
arent they like any other tank dwelling fish? meaning they'll only grow as big as thier environment will let them.
Well, their health becomes affected when they start to outgrow their tanks. I've been reading up on them...I know this, though, I don't want a bull shark. No siree, those suckers are mean and scary. And really big. I guess I'm gonna have to do a lot of research if we ever decide to actually get a shark because it's definitely not something a lot of aquarists encourage.