Get Ready For Adulthood With These Hilarious Graduation Comics
by The GoComics TeamHappy graduation! All of your studying has paid off and you're finally crossing a literal and metaphorical stage on your way to your dream job and/or evermore education.
So celebrate! Your crushing student loan debt, hilariously out-of-whack work/life balance, punishingly banal routine and the farcical society that sold it to you can all wait until tomorrow. Or even the next day!
Get set to toss that mortarboard skyward with these all-too-relatable graduation comics.
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Sarah's Scribbles By Sarah Andersen Jan 10, 2014
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Pearls Before Swine By Stephan Pastis April 17, 2011
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Off the Mark By Mark Parisi May 14, 2011
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The Flying McCoys By Glenn McCoy and Gary McCoy Aug 19, 2015
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Sarah's Scribbles By Sarah Andersen May 11, 2016
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Non Sequitur By Wiley Miller May 30, 1997
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Close to Home By John McPherson Mar 22, 2008
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The Awkward Yeti By Nick Seluk Mar1, 2015
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Moderately Confused By Jeff Stahler May 8, 2010Â
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Sarah's Scribbles By Sarah Andersen May 17, 2014Â
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BiggerNate91 almost 8 years ago
It’s nice to know there’s so much in life to look forward to.
BaltimoreJack Premium Member almost 8 years ago
I guess I am too old because I do remember a brighter future after college.
Striped Cat almost 8 years ago
I have read that for baby boomers, companies sent recruiters on campus and graduating students had to make the hard decision on which of their many job offers to pick from. Did it really work that way? Did people actually graduate with job offers, no student loans and do stuff like buy houses based on their first paycheck?
annldj almost 8 years ago
Totally disagree with above-both my kids graduated with good job offers-which they took-daughter graduated in 2015 business/ marketing/ psychology and son in 2017 engineer. And most of their friends got jobs in their fields too-even an art history major. And they are managing their student debt well. Key seems to be to do internships in your field while in college -after sophomore year, devote summers to that-or work during school year. Many colleges and universities realize this and now help students get internships. Also apply for as many scholarships as possible and always fill out the FAFSA-I am amazed that more families just assume they don’t qualify for financial aid. Yes we paid a lot of money and made sacrifices (no travel, kept old cars, did without stuff-even newer clothes) for our kids to go to college but worth every penny.