>>2536874>>2536879>>2536882Running away from home doesn't mean running into the wilderness. I did it in suburbia and you can too. I left home at 16 when I was still in school but had friends 2 years above me who moved out and got a shitty rental property when they turned 18, and I slept on their couch. I had a ~$500 car and a learners permit before leaving, and drove a friend's drunk dad around on beer runs to clock up the hours to get my provisional (driving alone) license. I kept going to school to stop my parents reporting me missing but applied for a warehouse job online and stopped going when I heard I got it. I didn't pay any rent and relied on those friends generosity (and the drunk dad's fuel money) to get by for 2ish months, but as soon as I started working we lived like kings on cheap beer and frozen food with the rent split 3 ways. That's my experience as a lower-middle-class white kid in a first world country anyway. Talk to your friends about living options before running off into the bush. Especially your older friends if you're Underage B& because 18yo's seem old and scary when you're 15-16 and still in school, but you'd be surprised who will help you out in a crisis if you ask
>>2536893>>2537642>>2543571>Gloating about Neets being above WageslavesNah. Part of being an independent adult involves understanding that goods/services/labor are exchanged for currency and you have to consider your options as a teenager with no experience: Do I deliver pizzas? Do I flip burgers? Do I do data entry? Sorry to sound like a boomer, but a roof over your head + bed/food/internet/clothes shouldn't come for free and it feels worse when they DO come for free. FFffffffuu anons just get out there and apply yourselves even at minimal effort and watch your lives improve for the better