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ofHanna Lindqvist
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Thousands of students across the country have been disappointed by his canceled student celebrations.
But Jacob Nilsson, 18, does not grieve.
“You can’t walk around feeling sorry for yourself all the time,” says Jacob.
Photo: Private
Jacob Nilsson, unlike many other students, is not too disappointed with a canceled celebration.
In June, Jacob Nilsson, 18, takes the student from the NTI secondary school in Stockholm. Something he hopes for, but doesn’t think is particularly remarkable.
– My basic attitude towards the celebration of the student itself has always been quite negative. I think it’s too commercialized, “says Jacob Nilsson.
Many students mourn this year’s canceled celebrations with the spread of the coronavirus. But Jacob believes it is more of a shame for risk groups and healthcare professionals than it is for students.
– We must put it in proportion to what happens in society. You can’t go around feeling sorry for yourself all the time, because unfortunately life is full of disappointments, he says, adding:
– Of course (the student) happens once in a lifetime, but it is also a crisis and people die, he says.
“People think they are immortal”
Few in Jacob’s class agree with him.
– People think they are immortal, especially maybe they are my age. But you are not. You have to understand somewhere that they don’t bother the student just for the love of God, he says.
Jacob himself has not participated in fundraising collections and the like, but he has several in his class who have spent thousands of crowns.
– Then I understand that it will be a great disappointment. It’s a shame if you don’t get your money back.
Jacob will celebrate his student with his parents, instead of the planned reception with family and friends.
– I am also disappointed that things are canceled, I would have visited a friend in Halmstad, which may mean more to me than the student. It is like the situation.
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