Really?

If I magically had the option to trade what I had now to go back to my childhood, I wouldn't take it. I don't think I've ever even entertained that notion.
Most of the close friends I know IRL became significantly happier and better off once they graduated... which is kind of why I made that post. lol[/quote]
You know this already, but I lean more towards Regs' comment, here. Except that my worst days in high school weren't even half as bad as my bad days have been since. And I used to be consistently content back then, whereas since leaving, well... not so much. Luckily for me, I'm starting to get some of that back lately, I think.
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I'm kind of on the fence, but leaning towards liking University a bit more. It honestly depends on which era of high school (here in the UK meaning all the way from 11-18) we are talking about.
11-13.5: Stellar - a few minor hiccups
13.5-15: Grim - a specific set of girls (that I had never actually talked to before) said some pretty cruel things about me for no good reason over a 3 month period.
15-16: Pretty great - probably the best part for me in terms of personal happiness/friends/attainment
16-18: Dark. Darkest point of my life so far, probably, for multiple reasons I have already mentioned extensively. Worst point was probably September - December 2012. I honestly thought I was never going to be happy ever again. I posted sporadically here on MLK at the time and I find it very hard to look back at them now and realise just how bad a place I was in.
In terms of personal happiness, I'm liking University a lot more than high school. I haven't felt like myself in a long time, but I'm closer to that person now than I have been since I was 16. For a long time I felt like the bad things would just keep on coming, but so far this year has been kind. Things have actually been working out, it would seem.
I do miss the structure that school gave, though. I miss seeing my friends every single day all in the same place, for example. I miss being told where to go and when (oddly). I miss that sense my school gave us of being looked after. Being solely responsible for yourself suddenly is quite daunting and at first threw me off quite a bit.