Monthly Archives: May 2007

it is not through

a complete lack of motivation that i write this at this indecent hour (3:18 am), but frustration. I have been awake for far too long, the evidence being that my head is beginning to hurt. I consider that to be a rather vital piece of evidence that I should take care of myself and sleep. The paper is not going to be finished tonight.

Kierkegaard and Camus can be such dreary existentialists to write about. Here are two philosophers, one who attempted to transcend the mundane activities of a mortal world into the promises of eternal heaven with a warped view of Christianity, and another who merely comments on the absurdity of living. Camus comments that life is not about trying to understand existence, but to accept it. He says that the big question is not about the meaning behind living, but to ask oneself whether life is really worth living or not. It’s rather dreary and dreadful. One considers himself to look like a kangaroo. The other goes on for ages about suicide and somehow interprets the myth of Sisyphus into a happy event. The birds are chirping. Existentialists are whiny enough. I’m not about to complain any longer.

I think it’s time to sleep on it tonight. Maybe I’ll talk about French politics next time, but I promise…it won’t be an essay by any stretch of the imagination. I have to read up on French government first, and that may take awhile, though most of my packing is already accounted for. If someone wants to write my Aristotle essay on psychological temperance and the “death by broken heart” phenomena as a result of emotional excesses (i.e. loneliness, grief etc.) then be my guest.

On Mother’s Day: Happy belated Mother’s Day to any moms who may be reading this blog. I regret that I was unable to see my mother for this annual occasion, but she was able to visit this past Saturday. My family and I had a decent time (minus the minor counts of bickering). We ate lunch at a local diner, played table tennis, and they helped move some of my packed belongings back home. The walls look bare, but clean. With every end, a fresh start awaits. I wonder what will be in store for me this summer. My boss has to call back first to reassure me that I still have my waitressing summer job (the tips there are excellent on busy days for such a small place).

P.S. I was interviewed for several RA positions that have recently become available. This was several weeks ago. I’ll let you know if anything exciting happens.  I have also begun messing around with Windows Movie Maker 2, although it has also become an annoyance to contend with. I am thinking about purchasing a Mac after the new operating system comes out, but my funds are low and as my responsible boyfriend keeps reminding me, I will have a heap of loans to pay off in another two years (I am currently about $25,000 in debt without interest) along with procuring a car (my sister totaled our shared one), but that is the price one pays for an undergraduate degree these days. I would not trade my experiences at this college though. It was a wise choice to matriculate here.

essays + finals + boyfriend graduating = :(

well, it’s that time of the year again – bees are busy buzzing, allergens float through the air care-free, tissue sales are equivalent to the last flu-bug from winter, and students walk around like zombies with dark circles beneath their eyes, books and packing boxes in each arm.

what am I doing in this humid, hectic week? finals! essays! crying (out of sadness + joy).  my boyfriend is graduating, ladies and gentlemen. do you know what this means? this means that he’s headed off somewhere yonder for a year and i am left…here.

don’t misunderstand me. i am proud of him and happy for him, but the thought of him leaving has become this ruminating nightmare. i can scarcely look at him before the tears start forming.

college students do strange things when hell week hits them. my roommate and i walked around town. we got dunkin’ donuts. we’re going to watch grey’s anatomy now, while sipping aforementioned coffee and eating ice cream.  my first10-page essay will get done sometime tonight. sometime.

as for you, dear readers, hit the ‘interact’ tab on this site. e-mail me with questions, posting ideas, etc. i really want you to talk to me, so i’ll respond to your messages with future posts. thanks! :)

did I do the right thing?

My little sister called me today -  in tears. She was accepted into a four-year-university only to have her dreams shot down. The program she wanted to major in is no longer being offered. Instead, the school wants to place her in a field that is remotely related to her intended academic desires, but completely takes off in a different direction. She would not even get to work with her intended population if she went there. It is a scientific course regimen as well, which makes me think that her and I are actually related at times – we both dislike science and math. She was very disheartened and said, “I don’t even want to go to college anymore, Ray.”

Well, as her big sister, I would hear none of that. I found a community college that will let her study what she wants and luckily enough, she still has time to apply. There is no doubt in my mind against her being admitted into their program. Her major is an elusive one only because the nearby colleges that have it are difficult to get into and are too far away from our hometown. Our parents want her to commute from home. I told her that going to a community college does not mean she isn’t good enough for a 4-year. I suspect that she was feeling a bit low on herself and I don’t want her to think that she has some character flaw. Didn’t she prove herself already by gaining admittance into a 4-year? I told her that perhaps she had lacked in motivation and confidence in herself to apply to colleges outside of our parents’ and her boyfriend’s comfort zones, but it doesn’t mean she should resign herself to a program she has no interest or particular skill in. I want her to succeed in college. She would be happy at this CC. They actually have a well-developed curriculum and I feel that she would be able to transfer into an even better 4-year once she successfully completed the transitory coursework at a junior college first.