Hm, I had many birds before I ever got a conure, when I lived at home with my parents. One day, my mother had had enough of my birds after living with them for YEARS, and told me they all had to be sold by the end of the week or she would give them away with free signs in the yard, and put a free ad in the paper. My mother was usually not so harsh, but years of living with birds when you are NOT a bird person can make someone do crazy things.
So that said, instead of answering your question, I will give a warning. I know it seems like FOREVER until you live on your own, and I hope that if you do get a bird you will use this forum a lot to get info and support, but please do not bring a companion parrot home until you are not just living on your own, but are SETTLED. Maybe that means married, out of college, on a steady career path, own your own home, whatever, it depends on the person, but the heartbreak of rehoming your parrot because your parents have had enough, because you are going off to college, because your girlfriend or boyfriend hates that bird or because the bird hates them, because you lose your job, your car, your housing, or any of the other MANY life changes that go on between age 12 and age 32 (and sometimes much longer) will not compare to the heartbreak your PARROT feels when for no reason that they can see, they are rejected and sent to live with another family. And what happens when the other family experiences the same thing? I have a pair of conures that were hatched only last year - I am their FIFTH home! In one year! Why? There is nothing wrong with them, they do not bite, scream, pluck, nothing! But life changes and people have not waited to acquire a parrot until they are ready. So tragic for the birds.
Maybe I will tell you what I did right away when I brought my first conure home - I dealt with being bitten all the time. Conures are known for being nippy, and mine had some issues from the way her breeder "socialized" her, and yes, it was a breeder with a STELLAR reputation. A lot of people do this when they first bring their conure home - they get bitten.