Tight deadlines, strict professors, wild parties, sleepless nights — if there's one thing they all have in common, it's the one hell of a ride we call college. After all, students’ daily routines are some of the most ridiculous out there. They might be buzzing with life one day, and feel their sanity being pushed to the brink the next.
Today, we want to allow them to blow off some steam or help them simply laugh at their misery. That's why this post is all about hilarious images and jokes that capture the essence of school life. Thanks to these two Instagram accounts, University Memes and University Life, students all over the world can share a laugh or two and find a way to deal with their collective crises.
Whether you're about to head out for class or just want to remember the good old days, take a look at some comical posts these accounts had to offer. Upvote the ones you could relate to all too well and share your own school stories in the comments!
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To find out more about the project and why students never get bored of seeing hilarious memes online, we reached out to the creator of University Life. They told Bored Panda they got the inspiration to start the project in 2019. "At first, the account acted as a way for me to share memes and things I found funny about university life, as I am also a student studying in Birmingham, UK, at the moment."
The founder revealed that ever since they started the account, it grew very quickly. You see, thousands of people find their content to be hilariously accurate and utterly entertaining. "So it acted as a small side project/hustle and a way to help students have a bit of a laugh at life at university," they said.
No wonder why so many of them repeatedly turn to the online meme culture. When you have the annoying group assignments, irrational class schedules, challenges of remote learning (all while trying to find your true interests and passion in life), there are plenty of things to discuss. "I think students enjoy the memes because they can relate to them, and this means they can see how they are funny," the creator added. "It also allows them to see the humorous side of university life that can sometimes be quite stressful and scary."
Turns out, it was probably a cooking class, and everyone else forgot about it!
"Most content, I find myself on the internet," they mentioned. "I give credit where I can, such as with the reels that are on my account. I am always open for students to submit memes to me and I will post them," the founder encouraged their followers to share the hilarious jokes and memes they find or create.
They revealed the account is hard to manage sometimes. "But as I have been doing this for a while, I am used to it and know the best methods." There are always the occasional small blips and bumps in managing the account but having so many great followers who appreciate their content makes it all worthwhile.
Since they created the account, it has amassed more than 78.6K devoted fans who sometimes see memes as the best emotional support and a way to connect with one another by talking about their daily struggles. "They are active and engage with the content that I post. They also engage with me. It’s nice to have a community like that," the creator said.
Oh yeah. Definitely. Things just keep happening and I am still processing the bad thing that happened four years ago.
According to them, looking at hilarious pictures and jokes helps people unwind and find laughter in things they relate to or find stressful. And results from a 2021 study published in the Psychology of Popular Media journal prove it. Research revealed that memes can improve our mood, our general wellbeing, and help us to better cope with stress during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Researchers surveyed 748 people online to see whether viewing different comical photos influenced emotions, information processing, and the way they’re coping with the pandemic anxiety. The participants looked at a variety of memes and had to rate the cuteness, humor, their emotional response, and to answer if these jokes made them think about COVID-19.
LMAO my chem professor said the exact same thing, "Y'all can't sit still for four minutes less than my four yo toddler!"
The findings showed that looking at funny images on social media provided a quick boost of positive emotions. "Memes, particularly those that relate to a highly stressful context, may help support efforts to cope with the stressor," the researchers wrote. So it seems that scrolling through our social media feeds and spending time on the web is not always a waste of time as some people believe.
U STOP THIS ATTACK RIGHT NOW I'M SO DRAINED OF ENERGY FIGHTING YOU
This is the same fro writing! I'll work on my book at night and be like "oh this is good". Then I wake up and reread it and go "how did a chicken get hold of my computer"
The University Life Instagram account is a great example of that. Full of hilariously accurate memes, it offers refreshing content that helps us turn down the volume on the noise around us, and tackle our everyday troubles with laughter. The creator also advised you, dear readers, to always take your own path in life, "no matter what other people think. Even if you don’t think it’s the right choice but it's what you want, then it will work out. Stay passionate and strong in what you believe in."
I once slept in for work when my shift started at 5pm. Alcohol may have been involved
Nah, this isn’t just uni. Being sleep deprived, depressed, and not getting anything done is high school too. Can’t wait for uni when I have to work so I can pay for tuition and pay for my own bills 😭
A a middle school student I can say it's not just high school and uni. I got home 4 hours ago and I'm still working on homework. I should grab some coffee and mentally prepare for the all nighter thats ahead. I am burnt out to a crisp and my teachers dont care. It's either pass the class or pass away smh. And Mrs. B***h isnt helping either. Shes mean asf and tried to hit one of my friends once for no reason. And she doesnt even update grades so everyone has an F in her class. Seriously they should just fire her. Umbridge 2.0. Anyways it's been 6 minutes which is 5 minutes longer than I'm supposed to be on break so time to get back to it 😭
Load More Replies...Im in 7th grade right now and am kinda lookin forward to uni. I think I’m gonna regret it.
nah, it's great. Most important thing is to ignore the people who bully you about jobs and employment and choose subjects you ACTUALLY care about. unfortunately school doesn't teach many subjects universities do, so, you end up not knowing what they're about before you get there, and then they pressurise you with co-requisite courses (e.g. have to do math to do physics, etc.). SO my recommendation is look at your most likely university - whichever you think you might get into - and the courses they offer - then google those topics and see which you care about. Studying stuff you care about makes you excel without effort.
Load More Replies...I was depressed in my first half of 7th grade, I felt these soo much 🥲
I'm in middle and I'm not depressed but let me tell you burnout is the closest feeling to death that isnt death
Load More Replies...Welp, much of this applies to 8th grade too. Can’t wait till uni 😃 And on a slightly unrelated note, I just planned out my hs courses and even though I’m still not really supposed to know what to do with my life yet it still stresses me that I have 0 inkling of what I might wanna do.
These sound to me like kids who took topics that were too hard or too boring. Choose the topic you are interested in. Work relevance is totally not important. Your passion can be monetised if you are really passionate about it and can see the way to monetise it. I don't mean cynically, I mean actually doing the job you love. I've been lucky in that respect. Managed to always find work that was OK to good, based directly on my skillset and qualifications, and skillset/qualifications based on what I actually cared about.
The story about you can't find work after college is really about finding something that will support you AND that only comes from networking. You rarely find a matching job and get the job after 1 interview as a first job. While you are at uni and are being supported (hopefully!!) you must do as much as you can to network with high power people. Make yourself useful. Learn side skills. Volunteer. Do charity work and do intern work for free. Really it's fine. As long as someone is covering your food bills. If you can stay with your folks try to do so. Don't go to a far away uni unless you have to (eg parents are abusive).
Load More Replies...I've got a fair few qualifications from a few different unis, but between the years of 1983-1994. Exams are monstrous. I never liked them, but my extreme good fortune is that I have a phenomenal memory, which meant I could just read and memorize enough before an exam to do fine. But I get the impression that nowadays, uni is just exam-level pressure all the time. It sounds like you get a lecture where someone spits out information for an hour or two, and then assigns you to inhale hundreds more pages of info and then assigns you multiple projects to prove that you did indeed absorb the information. It's so transactional. So much of our learning was in-lecture discussions and in-depth seminars to think and share ideas. It was less about spouting out info and more about applying it, expressing your own ideas, and I was a language student. Seems like education has just sunk into a trap of selling information to people who can't actually afford it.
hmm it depends on the course and the lecturer. I never did this to my groups and I taught recently (couple years ago)... I was interested in concepts and application, not memorisation.
Load More Replies...Wow, what is with all these people having so much trouble doing uni? If it’s too difficult, just drop out (or better yet, don’t start). Not everyone is capable of getting a uni degree and that’s fine. This seems like whiny little kids that want everything handed to them without putting the effort in. The only legitimate complaints are about the cost and student debt in the US, because that’s ridiculous,
I can empathize with alot of these. But would it be cruel to point out that adulting is much worse?
Load More Replies...Nah, this isn’t just uni. Being sleep deprived, depressed, and not getting anything done is high school too. Can’t wait for uni when I have to work so I can pay for tuition and pay for my own bills 😭
A a middle school student I can say it's not just high school and uni. I got home 4 hours ago and I'm still working on homework. I should grab some coffee and mentally prepare for the all nighter thats ahead. I am burnt out to a crisp and my teachers dont care. It's either pass the class or pass away smh. And Mrs. B***h isnt helping either. Shes mean asf and tried to hit one of my friends once for no reason. And she doesnt even update grades so everyone has an F in her class. Seriously they should just fire her. Umbridge 2.0. Anyways it's been 6 minutes which is 5 minutes longer than I'm supposed to be on break so time to get back to it 😭
Load More Replies...Im in 7th grade right now and am kinda lookin forward to uni. I think I’m gonna regret it.
nah, it's great. Most important thing is to ignore the people who bully you about jobs and employment and choose subjects you ACTUALLY care about. unfortunately school doesn't teach many subjects universities do, so, you end up not knowing what they're about before you get there, and then they pressurise you with co-requisite courses (e.g. have to do math to do physics, etc.). SO my recommendation is look at your most likely university - whichever you think you might get into - and the courses they offer - then google those topics and see which you care about. Studying stuff you care about makes you excel without effort.
Load More Replies...I was depressed in my first half of 7th grade, I felt these soo much 🥲
I'm in middle and I'm not depressed but let me tell you burnout is the closest feeling to death that isnt death
Load More Replies...Welp, much of this applies to 8th grade too. Can’t wait till uni 😃 And on a slightly unrelated note, I just planned out my hs courses and even though I’m still not really supposed to know what to do with my life yet it still stresses me that I have 0 inkling of what I might wanna do.
These sound to me like kids who took topics that were too hard or too boring. Choose the topic you are interested in. Work relevance is totally not important. Your passion can be monetised if you are really passionate about it and can see the way to monetise it. I don't mean cynically, I mean actually doing the job you love. I've been lucky in that respect. Managed to always find work that was OK to good, based directly on my skillset and qualifications, and skillset/qualifications based on what I actually cared about.
The story about you can't find work after college is really about finding something that will support you AND that only comes from networking. You rarely find a matching job and get the job after 1 interview as a first job. While you are at uni and are being supported (hopefully!!) you must do as much as you can to network with high power people. Make yourself useful. Learn side skills. Volunteer. Do charity work and do intern work for free. Really it's fine. As long as someone is covering your food bills. If you can stay with your folks try to do so. Don't go to a far away uni unless you have to (eg parents are abusive).
Load More Replies...I've got a fair few qualifications from a few different unis, but between the years of 1983-1994. Exams are monstrous. I never liked them, but my extreme good fortune is that I have a phenomenal memory, which meant I could just read and memorize enough before an exam to do fine. But I get the impression that nowadays, uni is just exam-level pressure all the time. It sounds like you get a lecture where someone spits out information for an hour or two, and then assigns you to inhale hundreds more pages of info and then assigns you multiple projects to prove that you did indeed absorb the information. It's so transactional. So much of our learning was in-lecture discussions and in-depth seminars to think and share ideas. It was less about spouting out info and more about applying it, expressing your own ideas, and I was a language student. Seems like education has just sunk into a trap of selling information to people who can't actually afford it.
hmm it depends on the course and the lecturer. I never did this to my groups and I taught recently (couple years ago)... I was interested in concepts and application, not memorisation.
Load More Replies...Wow, what is with all these people having so much trouble doing uni? If it’s too difficult, just drop out (or better yet, don’t start). Not everyone is capable of getting a uni degree and that’s fine. This seems like whiny little kids that want everything handed to them without putting the effort in. The only legitimate complaints are about the cost and student debt in the US, because that’s ridiculous,
I can empathize with alot of these. But would it be cruel to point out that adulting is much worse?
Load More Replies...