Thread:Lilliana:3/@comment-397235-20140912011340/@comment-25409301-20140926161858

the numbers do sound alike now that u mention it. it's hard to explain what the dutch numbers sound like but i guess you could google that or something if you really wanted to know. they sound a lot like german. vier (4) and acht (8) are even exactly the same.

and airforce medic basicly stays at an air base and treats people there. unless there is an emergency, like a pilot in distress, then you go out with a helicopter to get him/her treating her in the helicopter, and further treating her properly back at the camp. ofcourse you're not the one flying. but there is a difference between a corpsman and a military docter. a corpsman goes out to the front line with his/her group and treats people there. that brings allot of risk with them ofcourse. but they are not qualified doctors. they take first aid with them and can give them a temporary solution. i'm going for a doctors degree so when ever i decide to quit the army (if i even get accepted) i can Always continue as a civilian docter.

( by the way, danish?)

flying is statistically the safest way to travel. lesser trafic, no aquaplanning, no roads, etc. but then again it's not 100% riskless. though (statistically) the chance to get in to an accedent on a plane 1 in 800.000 while the chance to get in to a car accident is 1 in 6000. that's 132 times as much that would mean you would have to fly a plane every day for 233600 days. flying is safe ;)

and i live on the 13th floor...wanna come over ;)

and thank you ^^ i like to think i'm still young as well :3

but i'm not smart at all haha :P i've had a lot of time to think about what i want to do. i joined Birmingham university when i was 16 which was my first uni ever. but i went there to study rights and passed but after my first year i was so fed up with it that i decided not to become a lawyer at all. it was just so incredibly boring...

so i started looking at other options.

air force pilot sounded awesome but well...dyslexia...

so i kept on going at Birmingham and after about 7 months i found out about doctors in the air force. and that's when i knew what i wanted to do. so i finished Birmingham university and right after graduation i joined a university back in the Netherlands to become a doctor. so it took me 7 months to figure out what i wanted to do. so yeah....lot of time