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Gary Istok <gistok@umich.edu> writes:
> I hope I didn't offend any 18 year olds with this, it was just a
> generalization. When I was 18 LEGO wasn't even on my mind. I didn't
> start into it again until my 20's. I'm 46 now, and I still don't
> know what I want to be when I grow up!
No offense taken. What you said is (at least partially) true, but 18
year olds can still enjoy LEGO :) (I don't find inspiration or time to
build as much as I'd like to, though...)
--Bram
Bram Lambrecht / o o \ BramL@juno.com
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WWW: http://www.chuh.org/Students/Bram-Lambrecht/
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Message has 1 Reply: | | Re: My Non-LEGO family experiance (Nice Story)
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| Bram, (...) Well, I took my loose bricks down to Columbus, Ohio, when I went to college when I was 17/18. It was one of my only joys of going to college and working full time. I bought a lot of the sets back in 1993 / 1994 when I was down there, (...) (25 years ago, 29-Feb-00, to lugnet.general)
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