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90 People Describe What Someone Who Peaked Back In High School Behaves Like Now

Tags: school credit

One of the most insidious fears that some people can have is believing that their best days are behind them. If you zoom out and look at things mathematically, it’s inevitable that some chapters of your life are going to be better than others. Whether in terms of your quality of life or achievements. But that doesn’t mean that it’s all ‘downhill from there.’ Life is still very much worth living, and it’s worth putting in the effort to aim for new goals. Some people, however, cling to past victories, completely ignoring opportunities in the present.

Redditor u/realHDNA sparked an interesting discussion on the r/AskReddit subreddit, about all the things that ‘scream’ that someone peaked all the way back in high School. From bragging about their long-forgotten glory days and making their entire personalities a continuation of who they were as teenagers to bullying others as grownups, these internet users shared some of the saddest things that adults can end up doing. Scroll down for their stories and opinions.

Bored Panda got in touch with Andrea Bonior, Ph.D., with a couple of questions about why some adults miss their school days so much, as well as what can help them realize that their lives can be just as good as (if not better than!) when they were young. Dr. Bonior is the host of the mental health advice podcast ‘Baggage Check’ and the bestselling author of ‘Detox Your Thoughts.’ Read on for her insights!

#1

They want to organize high school reunions every 5 years.

Image credits: Pesto57

#2

Anyone who bullies other adults as if they were still in High School

Image credits: pkeit32

#3

You continue to brag how you scored four touchdowns in a single game while playing for your high school team over 20 years later. And now you sell shoes.

Image credits: damageddude

Dr. Bonior, the host of the 'Baggage Check' podcast, was kind enough to answer our questions about grownups who might have peaked in high school or constantly miss what their lives were like back then so much. Many of us have at least some regrets from our past, including about opportunities not taken.

"I think as the saying goes, 'youth is wasted on the young.' As we get older we look back at those golden times and perhaps feel like we didn't appreciate them. That we missed an opportunity to make the most of those times, that we didn't realize how easy we had it, that we were free from adult responsibilities, that we had young bodies without aches and pains... it makes us want to go back and revisit those times, because our perspective now is so different," she explained to Bored Panda.

"Some people also might really be struggling with the fact that they DO feel like they 'peaked' in high school, and they feel like they are not measuring up anymore. And so their self-esteem is struggling because they had an identity as a 'star athlete' or a 'popular kid' or a class president and they haven't ever been able to replace it with anything else that is as potent for their self-image. So they want to go back in time," Bonior noted that, for some individuals, their high school days actually were the best times of their lives, and they yearn for the success they had back then.

#4

My ex stepmother constantly bragged about being a cheerleader in high school and winning a beauty walk (in a town of like 500 people). She was still bragging about these the last time I saw her. She was in her mid 40s.

Image credits: jewelsforfools

#5

Bragging about high-school hookups in their thirties

Image credits: SuvenPan

#6

"Hey Girl! Long time no talk! Hope you and your GORGEOUS family are doing well! You crossed my mind the other day and I realized you would be SO PERFECT to join me in the amazing business opportunity I just started!" emoji emoji emoji emoji emoji emoji!!

Image credits: clydiebaby

We were interested in what can help these people realize that they can still have a great life, even outside the schoolyard gates. Dr. Bonior said that what's really important is a reality check.

"Maybe we felt stressed or lonely or that things were tough in high school, even if in retrospect our lives seemed simpler then. So it comes down to being able to make the most of what you have in the moment," she said that we need to take a realistic look at what our lives are like now and what they were back then.

"If you don't think you appreciated your high school life as much as you should have, might you be doing the same thing with your mid-20s life or mid-50s life, all by comparing it to something else? It's you who chooses the path that you will or will not regret in another five or ten years," she gave some excellent advice.

"By thinking about your values and what is most meaningful to you, you can build a life that is more authentic right now because you have learned many things that you didn't yet know in high school. And thank goodness for that!" If you found what Dr. Bonior shared interesting and useful, consider checking out her mental health advice podcast 'Baggage Check' and taking a look at her book, 'Detox Your Thoughts.'

#7

Talking about your IQ and advanced placement classes when you umm did nothing afterwards. Like being 48 and talking about honors English. That was a minute ago, friend.

Image credits: kellygreenbean

#8

Still acting like a typical "Mean Girl" when they're damn near (or past) 30

Image credits: cpsg1995

#9

I had a teacher who said "these are the best years of your lives".

Since I graduated in 2003, every single year has been better than every year of school since I can really remember.

High school was f*****g awful and seriously depressing.

I had to work as a janitor through grades 11 and 12 to pay rent. I dropped out with 1 class left to get a union construction job.

I'm back in university now doing an engineering degree because I have worked to get my life in a position where this is possible.

Image credits: DeckerR

What makes people constantly brag about their success from when they were still in school is the realization that the life they have as grownups falls short, quality-wise. Maybe they’re no longer as physically fit as they used to be when they were the star quarterback or the striker for the soccer team. Perhaps they had high hopes of becoming famous, only to end up working a dead-end office job. Or they used to be social butterflies and the most popular kids in their home towns, only to end up as completely average individuals now that they’ve moved out.

Hopes get dashed. Ambitions crumble. Dreams change. Life forces you to adapt to various circumstances after you leave school. You grow to realize that you’re no longer the person you used to be in the 12th grade; nor are you exactly the person you imagined you’d grow up to be. And that’s all right! Living a good life doesn’t mean that things have to be exactly the way they were or what you wanted them to be like when you were a teenager. It all starts with getting the basics right.

#10

a girl my siblings and i went to hs with has put on her cheerleading uniform too many times and posted on fb to show that it still fits. it’s pretty pathetic. we’re in our late 30s/early 40s

Image credits: notplacenta

#11

"Hey girl hey! Do you wanna be your own boss babe while working from home?!" and its just a pyramid scheme

Image credits: Tyler_origami94

#12

They keep insisting for the next 30 years that they would have taken state if coach would have put them in the game.

Image credits: stumpdawg

Human beings are social animals—we need others to thrive and survive. So at the core of all the things that make life worth living are the connections we have with others. Having an active social life keeps us active and happy. According to research, they also make us healthier and live longer. Meanwhile, social isolation endangers our health and is around as bad for us as smoking.

It’s easier to form social connections at school because we’re constantly surrounded by people our age, with more or less shared interests. We spend a huge part of our day with them, going to class, eating lunch together, and attending extracurricular activities. There are plenty of opportunities to spend time with others. Going to college or university is similar.

But when we enter the workforce, we suddenly find ourselves pressed for free time, burdened with responsibilities, and dealing with people who might have completely different values, likes, and hobbies. Sure, they might be perfectly nice people, but it’s harder to forge a genuine connection from scratch. As a result, we might yearn for the days when all of our closest friends literally lived next door or a short bike ride away.

#13

Still going to every high school football game and sitting in the student section

Image credits: larryapparently

#14

"It doesn't get better once you grow up" I told a sub teacher at my school that people told me this all the time and she told me the only people that say that are the ones that peaked in highschool. I miss her every day.

Image credits: HoudaRat

#15

One guy I knew literally got our school emblem and mascot in a huge "CLASS OF 2010" tattooed on his shoulder.

Image credits: Empowered_Jackfruit

Some other things that help you live your life to the fullest include taking good care of your health. If you get the basics right, you’re much more likely to enjoy the present, and will be much more capable of taking opportunities that come your way. And, let’s face it, it’s a lot more fun to feel energetic than it is to be constantly exhausted, always wishing for Friday (or to time travel to back when you were still in school, so you could do things ‘better this time around’).

Eat nutritious food, make sure that you move your body, spend time out in nature, have a healthy work/life balance, take breaks from overusing tech. Avoid drinking alcohol, smoking, and eating sugary snacks and fast food for every meal. It’s very simple on paper, but far harder to get right in real life when you’re bombarded with work deadlines, stress at home, and are grasping for motivation. Quality living is a habit that you have to nurture. And it’s never too late to start. Your true glory days might be right in front of you.

#16

Having a "my son can beat up your honor student" bumper sticker.

#17

"I could have joined the military and run the place but I don't do well with authority so I would have kicked a drill sergeant's a*s on day one and been terminated. Also I have a bad knee."

Uh huh, uh huh, sure.

#18

I used to work with a guy, we used to call him roid rage. He was very muscular, very masculine, and let everybody know both those things about him constantly.

One day I'm sitting next to him in the break room and he's talking to me, unprompted as always, about how he went to attend an award ceremony for his son who won something regarding his football performance. I said "Well that was nice of you to go and support him"

"Nice?" He said. "It was f*****g sad man. That used to be me. Now I'm the old guy in the room who has to watch someone else win something I should have had" and all I could think was what a loser, you can't just be happy your son won this award and be proud of him. You have to make it about you.

Image credits: gamercboy5

Many of us feel nostalgic for the good old days, when we were young, full of energy, and had way fewer responsibilities than we do now. Remembering these times can give us the boost that we need to feel more optimistic about the future and to get through any challenges that we face now. However, there is such a thing as too much nostalgia.

Generally speaking, if we’re constantly living in the past, daydreaming about our childhoods, and completely neglecting our responsibilities and ambitions in the present, then there’s a problem. Just because you were a star athlete or a top-performing student a decade or two ago doesn’t mean that the rest of your life is supposed to be a pale shadow in comparison.

Something that can help you get over that kind of funk is to pay more attention to what surrounds you in your daily life. Try to think of all the things you're grateful for. Gratitude helps you hone in on the successes in the here and now. High school was (probably) great—and you’ve got decades and decades in front of you to continue to grow as a person and enjoy life to the fullest.

#19

I’ll probably get hate for this, but as someone who was big in HS and now opposite, seeing all the people that used to be so unkind to me get fat made me realize a lot of people peak in HS and then have babies with all the same people from the same class, and remain in the same dusty old town we grew up in, peaking by having children and sending them to the same schools we went to, and the cycle continues. Move out of your hometown so you don’t peak in HS from karma for picking on the fat person just to get fat yourself ?

#20

In my experience, it's the people that talk about things that happened in HS as if it were yesterday. Constantly.

I had an ex who would always tell me crazy stories. I'd ask ,"When did this happen?" She would say "Sophomore year" and we were mid-20's.

Over time, it became clear that HS was the best years of her life and most likely will continue to be as she didn't have much ambition after HS.

I had 1 good year in HS and reminisce about it every now and then but it is not on the forefront of my mind.

Image credits: sharkfest473

#21

"I'm an alpha male."

Image credits: ghallway

#22

My sister is one of these. Most frustrating are these moments.

Her: "You were never good in math."

Me: "I have a degree in Robotics, a very math heavy subject."

Her: "Well, I took a high school math class that earned me college credit, so that is better than what you have."

Me: "You are comparing one high school class against an entire college degree."

Her: "I earned college credit."

Me: "Maybe...at most, three hours. And you would have to find a school that would accept those hours, and you graduated over 20 years ago. What you have is pointless."

Image credits: Binder_of_chains

#23

The "popular girls" in my middle school used to tan. Like every f*****g day. Or so it seemed. Apparently one of their parents had a tanning bed and they would all go over there and do nothing but tan. I swear i had like 4-5 chocolate/orange girls in my class. We're talking Swedes here. They stuck out. I haven't seen any of them irl in like 15 years but judging by the few photos I've seen they didn't stop tanning..

.. Every time I see people who overdo tanning or make up or put s**t in their lips i just ... ?‍♂️?‍♂️

#24

when you're 50 years old and you still talk about all the parties you went to in high school.

i.e my father

#25

Nurses who are super rude. I was horrified to learn how many of my childhood bullies were pursuing medicine.

#26

Still acting as if the “popular” people from high school are still popular in real life.

Image credits: tightlikespandex

#27

Anybody who actually says, unironically, that high school was the best time of their life. I don't feel like I was even a real person until after college, and my late 20s/low 30s are better than any time previously in my life - I can't imagine peaking in high school.

Edit: Lots of good comments but a lot of them are "well what about this example" or "actually I enjoyed high school" and I was just making a broad statement so obviously exceptions apply. FWIW I had to move during high school and I was a jaded b***h, I had almost no friends in my new school and I was glad to get the f**k out and never go back. Thankfully I had and still have many friends from my first high school that I'm always thankful for. I didn't know who I even was or wanted to be in college and I didn't figure that out until my mid 20s. So for me the thought of peaking in high school is insane because I can't relate to that experience - but I know that some people certainly do.

Image credits: Original_Redman

#28

Regularly reposting the same picture of the one notable moment that they had in high school.

Image credits: MissingDarts

#29

I graduated in 05. I was sitting at a tire shop waiting for my truck to get done and an employee slightly older than me walks up to me and asks me, with no previous interaction, if I played football in high school. Wondering where this was going, I responded that I did, but I wasn’t great at it. He asked what school I went to, and I told him. Then he starts talking about himself. How he was “all conference” and walking me through all of his high school accolades…

I never asked for this conversation. I just sat there wondering why this nearly 40 year old, wildly out of shape, tire shop supervisor was telling me all of this. Then just as soon as it started he bid me good day and walked off. It was bizarre.

The best comparison I could make was that he was like the manager “Dan” from the movie waiting. That was his vibe.

That’s how I knew he peaked in high school.

Image credits: aznuke

#30

I grew up in a super small town, so this might not apply to others. But if I had a venn diagram of "peaked in high school" and "never left the hometown" ... it could almost be one circle.

#31

I had an abusive boyfriend. One of the things he told me was how disgusting I am because I didn’t have many friends in highschool meanwhile he did. He said he was so popular and deserves someone who was popular too. He said this when he was 26.

#32

Being mean and picking on peoples insecurities as their only form of conversation and entertainment. Nothing screams “I peaked in high school” like an old jock messaging me if I’m interested in crypto since I seemed like a cool guy back then to “I would’ve absolutely wrecked you in the weight room” when I declined his invitation to lose all my money.

#33

Constantly posting “throwbacks” and their senior pictures. Sharing Fb memories consistently, or putting Snapchat memories of high school on their story.

Image credits: Head-Investment-8462

#34

They kept hanging out with high-schoolers years after we graduated.

Image credits: loblegonst

#35

When they call themself a retired mean girl. When they live through their kids. When they believe that teachers have something against their kid because their kid gets in trouble. People who kept their full uniform for the purpose of just keeping it. People who made fun of what other people were wearing to prom or the girls that told other girls to change because they brought the same colour dress.

Image credits: Ziggy_Stardust567

#36

I graduated almost forty years ago and ran into one of the more popular students at a bar a few years back. They kept trying to convince me I had been the object/victim of a mean prank their clique had pulled back in Jr. High.

I had no idea what they were referring to, and after listening to them jabber about it for about ten minutes, I realized this person was hoping to shame and embarrass me in front of family and friends.

When they finally wound down after realizing I wasn't reacting in the manner they had hoped for, I told them sorry, that wasn't me, however, since they brought it up, did they ever stop to think that the person they were referring to did not deserve said prank and weren't they a little old to be playing childish games at this point of their life and that their current life must be pretty s****y if c**p like this is all they have to offer.

I ended it by writing "Do I like you? Check yes or no" on a napkin with a big old checkmark in the no box. They turned bright red and slunk off giving me dirty looks for the rest of the evening. Sheesh...

And no, whatever they were referring to was not me, I still have no idea who or what they were referring to.

Edit: 1) I am relatively new to Reddit, so I apologize if my writing style is difficult to understand, I will work on it.
2) No, nobody clapped, high fived, catcalled or any other melodramatic c**p, we all kind of chuckled about it and went back to hanging out. 3) Yes I responded to their childishness with an equally childish act, while it may not have been the best course of action, I stand by it. It served its purpose in getting them to leave me alone.

#37

They say that college is overrated even though they didn't have the grades to get in.

#38

My uncle, who is 55 years old, has his high school senior picture as his Facebook profile. He also has his letterman jacket on display in his "office". He's also named all of his dogs after teammates from high school basketball.

#39

Constantly talking about their high school sport experiences.

Buddy you’re 32. Nobody gives a flying f**k that you lettered in lacrosse and basketball

Image credits: Remarkable-Motor7704

#40

They tattooed their last name across their shoulders

Image credits: haleyfrostphotograph

#41

Wearing their letterman jacket after graduation. The moment the robe comes off that jacket needs to go in a box. Wearing it post-graduation says that their life peaked the night they scored four touchdowns in a single game while playing for the Polk High School Panthers in the city championship game versus Andrew Johnson High School, including the game-winning touchdown in the final seconds against their old nemesis, Bubba "Spare Tire" Dixon.

I saw someone from my school days wearing their jacket a decade later. I chose not to engage.

#42

But all he kept talking about was
Glory days well they'll pass you by
Glory days in the wink of a young girl's eye
Glory days, glory days

#43

10 years ago a member of the local Mom’s club post a picture of a person I graduated along with a description of his vehicle as part of a creep alert.

He was still driving the car he had in high school.

We graduated in 1985…

#44

Slamming beers and shouting at a tv when sports are on

#45

I see a lot of guys I went to school with still wearing the same style baggy pants and backwards Unc hats with loop earrings and a Figaro silver chain.... these mfs are early and mid 40s.

#46

In the early 2000's I went back to my home city for my mom's funeral. Two of my closest high school buddies were there which was nice... and nice to catch up. One of them was a very successful business owner who had a great family and life. The other was **still** **living in his dad's basement, still working the same school bus driver job his parents got him in High School, still smoking pot all day long every day and still pining away for his high school sweetheart.** He was pretty burnt out from all the weed and in fact, my cousin who was severely brain damaged, was even making fun of him. We were all in our mid 40's by then.

#47

40 year-old dude-bro who only got his job because his buddy is the boss. Wears basketball shorts all the time, loose brightly colored shirts, athletic shoes with no socks, and a backward neon yellow hat. He yells at his employees because he's in charge, and it's how he behaves when he coaches kids football. He walks around with his chest puffed out and a strut that he thinks looks intimidating but only looks like he has hip problems. He talks like he's still in high school and calls everyone bro. Insists everyone calls him by his last name.

Unfortunately, I just described my former boss. Everything about him screams peaked in high school. The less I dealt with his steroid addeld attitude, the better.

#48

Pushing "cliquey" behavior in any setting. Like I'm thinking of moms making videos about how "stay at home moms" vs "working moms" drop their kids off at school. Comparing X type of mom to Y type of mom. "We ~dance moms~ do X! *Regular* moms do Y!" "when the teacher knows you're a [insert] mom!"

Or, at a job I had there was one girl who clearly wanted there to be an "in group", pushed inside jokes, saving a seat at a table, taking lunches together (at a call center). To me it screamed 'trying to recreate high school". Any time any adult is pushing an "us vs them" or cliques in a social or work setting it screams high school to me.

#49

Really average looking mums that don't say thanks if you hold a door or something, or they are standing in the middle of a thoroughfare and get confused when people are annoyed at them. Imo they were high school hot so everyone just put up with their s**t. Now father time has played his hand and they don't get treated like royalty everywhere they are awful bitches instead.

This says to me you peaked in high school

#50

Under "College/University" in their Facebook profile, it says "School of Hard Knocks."

#51

I talk about when I was in wrestling for high school from time to time. For me it was the only positive moment in high school, my best friend (since we were 4 y.o.) and I were on the team and training partners. We had a blast and took nothing too serious. Just the pure joy of beating the c**p out of one another in practice and still being friends after it was over.

He died when he was 24. It’s been almost 7 years without him. My world is different without him in it and talking about those days keeps him alive.

I didn’t peak in high school, I wasn’t popular, I never went to prom, never even had a girlfriend but those days are the few good memories I have left of him. Before he died, he was in a downward spiral and I refuse to remember him that way. That’s not who he was.

#52

Cheer moms. I find cheer for young girls incredibly creepy because I don’t want to see your 8 year old in a tiny skirt, a face full of makeup and big hair. I think being on the squad in high school is fine because it’s an extra-curricular. The whole cheer mom cliques screams high school to me and I’m glad my daughter isn’t interested.

#53

I know a guy pushing 40 that still wears his varsity letterman jacket…..

Image credits: AMorder0517

#54

When the former high school bully you beat in a karate tournament with an illegal face kick shows up at your business and all your employees know exactly who he is.

Image credits: AKASquared

#55

They only talk about high-school, probably because that was the highlight of their life so far.

#56

Talking about high school in every conversation and gossips like a high schooler.

#57

If they are in their 30s - 40s and:

They wear their letter jacket outside of things like high school reunions where it's only barely appropriate

They still brag about their High School GPA, or any accomplishment they made in high school

They wear their HS class ring outside of things like high school reunions

High school could have been fun, it's fine to reminisce [like how at my HS they made a random freshman swallow a goldfish whole as a school sanctioned event], but if it defines you still, you peaked in HS.

#58

1)Trying to keep a dying school alive so they can keep going to local high school sports events. Even when the students would be much better off if it dissolved. 2)and when they still talk about school and exploits 30 years later.

Edited to note these are two separate things and clarification on second point

#59

Neck beard, MAGA hat, cigarette hanging out of mouth, listening to country music in his lifted truck.

#60

They usually hang out with all of the same people they did in high school, going to all of the same places they did in high school, doing all of the same things they used to do in high school. The only difference is that it seemed cool when they were 17-18, and they’ve continued right through their 20s into their 30s.

#61

I had a conversation in a bar with a drinking buddy years ago. The guy kept going on about "the one that got away." How perfect she was and their chemistry together, how natural it was, how he hasn't felt that way about any girl since, yadda yadda. He was feeling pretty sorry for himself and uninterested in meeting anyone else because they could never compare. When I asked how long ago it was that she moved away, he said "8th grade." LMFAO

#62

I still see them around our hometown hanging out with the same people. They ask if your coming to whatever reunion is new. One girl i know still goes to all the football games in her cheer uniform.

#63

This may not mirror your experiences, but almost all of the most popular kids at the high schools I attended were genuinely likable, intelligent, and hard-working. They all went on to be at least moderately successful, well-adjusted adults.

The people who peaked in high school were already kind of losers in high school.

#64

Had guy probably in his early 20's show up for band class every day. There would be lawsuits for allowing this nowadays.

#65

Bragging about how attractive the person they slept with recently was, like “sexiest lay” is a competition.

#66

When they get extremely petty and angry over the smallest, mosh insignificant s**t. Karens and Kevins are just older versions of those extremely attractive guys and girls, who never really grew out of "I'm hot so the world's at my feet" mentality.

#67

My reflection

#68

The people that ask you to join those MLM schemes selling body wraps or the like...

Anyone that has a "salt life" decal on their car when they live nowhere near the ocean or even a salt mine.

#69

Social media bios that include these:

"Stay at home momma"
"Momma to Haydenton, Harmegaleigh, etc."
"School of Hard Knocks"

#70

I'm married to a man I met in high school, and I can tell from people's reactions when I say that, that some people assume that means we peaked in high school. But those reactions are split 50/50 with people who think it's super sweet, adorable, like a fairy tale, etc. It's always funny to tell someone new about it and see which side of the line they land on.

For the record, in high school I was painfully socially awkward and being abused by a person I thought was my best friend. And my husband was constantly on the verge of failing out because he didn't find schoolwork interesting/ challenging, but now he's got a great career and a lot of very engaging hobbies. Those were absolutely NOT the best years of our lives. In fact, the only reason I remember high school fondly is that it's where I met him.

#71

* Gets a standing ovation at HS football games

* Pays for waterbed in cash

* Fully loaded 2011 Ford Taurus

* Corner apartment with fountain view.

* No waiting at Beef O'Brady's

Edit:... and is STILL peaking.

#72

What I have learned from this thread is that Americans care a lot about high school and it seems to be a big part of culture there.

Im 30 and I cant even really remember anything about high school at all

#73

Taking rec league softball way too seriously.

#74

Ridiculing the hobbies of others to make yourself look good.

#75

Almost 10 years after highschool a guy asked me if one of my friends "was popular in highschool".

#76

Nurse with the same hairstyle that was popular when she graduated HS.

#77

55 year old women who use filters for their social media posts: You don't look like that anymore, Lauren! We knew you then...jig is up, babe...you fool no one!

Seriously - icannot stress how filters are obvious...and make you look really sad and desperate and no one believes its natural you- NO. ONE!

#78

Not being able to throw the football over them mountains anymore

#79

1. Having anything to do with high-school sports after high school when you don't have kids in high school.
2. Fancy date night at olive garden
3. Salt life sticker from one trip you took 6yrs ago to a motel 6 in the outer banks.
4. hangs out at local dive bar every weekend
5. Joining an MLM

#80

Everyone who posts in r/antiwork

#81

They scored 4 touchdowns in one game for Polk high.

#82

"These are the best years of your life" on repeat.

#83

You sell shoes but all you can talk about was that time in high school when you were that starting quarter back.

#84

Bringing up high school after high school.

#85

They’re pulling me over

#86

I didn't really have much to do with my hometown after graduating high school, but about three years later I saw their football team was doing real good so I was like f**k it I'll go. I ran into a dude I graduated with that was wearing his lettermans jacket....

#87

When they are self aware and make their Reddit name is u/PeakedInHighSkool

#88

Cop uniform

#89

Any amount of participation in a MLM scheme.

#90

Very active on FB and keeping up with their old classmates.


This post first appeared on How Movie Actors Look Without Their Makeup And Costume, please read the originial post: here

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