Sleepy Time

So tired.

Sorry I haven’t blogged lately. School distracts me.

I think I’m becoming nocturnal. I sleep more during the day than at night. Usually I’m up writing for school. Other times, my friends are awake, so we study together or watch movies. I knew a kid who went to Japan and turned nocturnal. He dropped out of school for a while. I hope that doesn’t happen to me because I like my education and I don’t want to drop out because of bat-like sleeping hours.

My high school orchestra arrives on Friday! Hooray! I missed them.

Tattoo Girl was mediocre. They performed the contemporary dialogue classically, so it clashed. A talented writer produced it, though. You can tell.

I also attended the 10 Minute Play Festival. I wanted to submit a play, but I didn’t know how or when, so it didn’t happen. I thought the most powerful play was the last one, Little Lion Man, which centered on a suicidal lesbian and her imaginary lion-friend. You could tell someone talented wrote that one, too. Becky (who has black and red hair) liked the one about an abused daughter. I liked it.

Right now, writing class takes priority. I just wrote six pages of reviews for my classmates. I hope they appreciate because I usually don’t give detailed feedback when people give me work to read. Of course, it’s for a writing class, so I need to for a good grade, but they should still appreciate it because I really read their work and made the best comments possible.

I’m tired. Can you tell? I didn’t sleep last night.

I have class in an hour. I don’t want to go. I want to nap. You know, I used to hate napping. Now I can’t seem to stop. Modest Mouse background music isn’t helping. It’s soft and rhythmic, putting me to sleep…

The Disjointed, Random-ish Post

This semester, I’m getting a 4.0. I don’t care what you say or think. I want a freaking 4.0. I have side projects, twelve semester hours, five jobs and the motivation of a trucker in the desert, keeping his wits about him as air pressure and heat pound down upon his forty-ton, steel road machine. I’ve got the eye of the tiger, and this is the final countdown, and I don’t care who tells me no or don’t bother or why because I’m taking home a freaking 4.0.

Yeah.

On a different note, fifteen minutes ago, I stepped in something gross in the stairwell, and I don’t know what it is, nor do I want to look, so I’m pretending like it never happened.

I still need to return my rhetoric teacher’s book. I think I’ll stop by tomorrow. It’s called Deep Survival, and it’s about human evolution’s role in modern day society. The writing’s good—a little dry in some parts—but generally solid, and I’d recommend it to anyone who likes science because it’s factual and somewhat entertaining.

I’m stuck in a creative drought. Writing feels like starting an old engine because sometimes it runs, but most of the time it stutters and drops dead, but you can always replace an engine, and you can’t replace a brain. Maybe a muse needs to inspire me. I just read about them for Classical Mythology, and they always pop round to give a heads up or hello, so maybe they’ll visit soon. I don’t know, things are odd right now, and I think it’s because of the new semester, and everyone’s falling into place and getting used to the old environment.

This post will be random because I can’t think of any stories right now except for the brownie-thing I ate at breakfast today. Every time I eat this fudge-brownie-blondie thing, my stomach grows a little queasy, but I eat it anyway because it tastes good. Maybe it symbolizes my life, or maybe I just get nauseous easily, like the way I get with Papa John’s pizza. I mean, it’s not that I don’t like Papa John’s—I love them—it’s just that my friend, Eliana, and I ate Papa John’s as we watched Paprika, which nauseated me, so now every time I eat Papa John’s, I feel nauseous.

“I’m a horrible person,” she said (she isn’t. How could anyone who wants to host a Jewish girls segment on the radio with me be a horrible person?). “I scarred you for life.”

“No you didn’t.” She laughed. “I just feel queasy when I eat Papa John’s pizza now. It’s not your fault.”

“It’s all because of Paprika.”

“It’s just the colors and the motion.” I ate, but then set the pizza down because the thought of this freakish robot in the film made me sick.

“What’s Paprika about?” asked Molly (a journalist who wins every writing contest).

“It’s about this detective who enters other people’s dreams with this technological device, and then the device gets stolen, and the line between reality and dreams blurs.” Eliana glanced at the pizza “Do you want the last slice?”

“No, you can’t have it,” I said.

“I feel bad taking all your pizza.”

“Don’t. I feel queasy.”

“Do you want it, Molly?”

“No,” she said. Libby (who works at Hillcrest and got an awesome hair cut over break—short in back, long in front, brown) also denied the slice, so we gave it to Kelsey (who has fake candles that smell like pumpkin pie).

I’m also hungry because I didn’t have time to eat much today. I went downtown with Alyse (funny and wears large, rainbow-framed glasses) because I lost my textbook and had to buy a new one (I believe the old one was klepto’d), and I purchased tickets for Tattoo Girl (a play).

Yeah, that was pretty much my day. I also scored full marks on my quiz and wrote an essay and a play. Tomorrow, I have class, which will keep me fairly preoccupied, and then I have work on Thursday, Friday and Saturday.

Hoorah!

Iowa City Part II (Spring Semester)

I really hope my father doesn’t kill us.

Now that I have your attention, you’d be interested to know I’m heading to Iowa City to commence second-semester fun. This semester features a playwriting, creative writing, non-fiction writing and classical mythology class, and two of them actually take place outside of the dorm, which means I only have to leave the dorm twice a week. I can hibernate all winter long!

Hooray!

However, I may not make it to second semester because my father (the restless, driver) insists on taking us down a 70 mph road when he’s running on low energy from playing Call of Duty—I mean, working.

The road to Iowa City is long and dreary with many dead fields and run-down farmhouses. It’s nicer in summer and spring, when the fields are green and alive and whatnot, but right now it just looks dead. Don’t get me wrong, I love fields and crops and wide, open spaces, but the trees are bare and the roads are empty, and the sky is gray and dull like the pages of My Life is Average.

In the front seat, my mother quizzes my sister on her lines in the play Sleeping Beauty as my father switches between opening the window, playing the radio and different seating positions. As it stands, I’d rather not be in the car right now because I fear for my safety as well as that of my mother and sister, but (although he occasionally snaps when my mother offers to take the wheel) I trust his judgment. He’s still my dad, and he did a great job with raising me and my sister, right?

I don’t think we’ll die.

Returning to Iowa City feels kind of weird because Iowa City reminds me of those teenage clothing stores, and everything looks pretty and cool, but the quality of the fabric rips and tears easily. It’s like the city was made for college kids by college kids, and even though things look awesome, the quality is a little weird. Maybe it’s because I’m returning from the church capital of the world and you know what to expect around every corner (a church), but I’ve always felt this way about Iowa City. Things are odd and different, and I don’t know if it’s because of my hometown or the environment.

I can’t wait to start the radio again, though. For those who don’t know, Zach and I co-host the KRUI show Fresh Meat (Sun. 12-1pm), which gives musicians and writers the chance to perform/read their work on-air and interview afterward. So far, we’ve tried to work the station about four times, but I’m confident this coming weekend, we’ll have an EPIC premiere. Additionally, I can’t wait to return to music and IT staff because I met Kate Nash through music (she said hi to me) and developed the station’s technology on IT (over break, I straightened pictures!).

My mother attempts to convince my father to let her drive, and my sister repeats the lines of her social studies homework as I type and Doris (my father’s GPS) orders him to turn. I think we’re closer now, and I can’t wait to see the people and things I’ve missed the past four weeks, and I’m confident this semester will rock its predecessor. I mean, I don’t know what’ll happen the next couple months, but it beats hearing:

Father: You have a dull, boring voice.

Mother: I was a thespian!

Father: I’m not turning over.

At least in college, no one has cars. Therefore, no one can criticize their friend’s driving.

We’ve just crossed the Mississippi River, and it looks as icy and gray as the land around it, but I think it’s better than the developments we’ve passed. If there’s one thing I can’t stand, it’s developments. All the houses look the same and you can’t put some things on your lawn, and where’s the originality? Sometimes, I don’t like dorms because they all look identical, and you wonder how your room is different than anyone else’s, but I lucked out with Currier because all the rooms are sort of different. In Currier, a single on the first floor doesn’t resemble a single on the second, and some rooms have sea-foam walls and others have egg-white.

“I’m in charge of the car.” My father takes my sister’s notes.

“We’re pulling over at the next stop,” my mother says.

“No.”

“You’re annoying.”

“No, you’re annoying…Can’t listen to the radio, can’t sing…”

We pulled over at the rest stop and my father said to my mother, “You’re always grumpy when we travel.”

“Can you guess what song is stuck in my head?” My mother faced my sister and I.

“Vacation personality,” we said (a jingle we created for when we travel). My sister and mother broke into song.

My mother guided us to the vending machines and selected a Milky Way for the road. “I’m going to put some stuff in the car.”

My father browsed the vending machine with my sister. Glancing out the window, I saw my mother running toward the car. My sister said, “Can you believe how many vanilla cookies I can get for one dollar?”

“That is a lot of cookies,” I said.

“That’s way too many for one person.” My father watched me retrieve my Three Musketeers from the machine. “You too.”

“Hey, do I put the dollar in this way?” my sister asked. “Or do I put it in this way?”

We left the vending machines, and as we approached the vehicle, my father threw a snowball at my sister and I. He missed, and saw my mother in the driver’s seat. He slid into the car and said, “You can’t drive.”

My mother didn’t care, and neither did I, but my sister gave him some vanilla cookies and my mother praised my efforts during my first college semester, and everything felt better. We talked about high school and middle school and elementary school and indulged in nostalgia, and everyone was kind of happy and things were good.

Some of you probably wonder why I didn’t offer taking the wheel. Well, to put it simply, driving freaks me out. It’s the most dangerous activity I do on a daily basis, and even scarier than high-speed driving with a restless father is high-speed driving with a teenager girl who doesn’t even like to light the Bunsen burner in chemistry. I’m not saying I’m terrified of every semi-dangerous activity—just most of them. I prefer a life of education and beautiful surroundings, like sitting in a library or playing Brain Age by Niagara Falls. Driving about a mile-per-minute on a stretch of tar doesn’t fit the standards of this existence, and I also don’t want to crash, burn and die.

Anyway, that’s about it. I can’t wait to start next semester (as a sophomore!) and I think we’re approaching the city soon, so I should probably save and close. Have an awesome next semester, friends, students and teachers.

Dear Campus, I Miss You

(Alas, my tablet and I are separated by miles. Sad face.)

I miss college and I’m not lying. I miss having food besides cereal and also quiet because there’s a firefight in the living room thanks to Call of Duty. I want to study Dinosaurs and write my speech about voting. Also my cat has a limp, which is annoying because I feel bad shoving her off my keyboard and books when I need to work. She kind of hobbles away and I think, man, I didn’t have these problems in college. When I wanted my friends to get off my computer and books, they just left. They also didn’t make me feel bad because their legs weren’t broken.

Anyway, my sister seems kind of irritated about that opening paragraph, which is upsetting because my college audience would probably laugh at it (or maybe they would think I’m a horrible person. I don’t know).

“We don’t know that Stacey’s leg is broken,” she said. “And also, the only reason you have cereal all the time is because you don’t eat anything else in the fridge.”

Not my fault, though I am hungry for some Burge food. Maybe it’s because I grew up in a household where no one cooked, but I enjoy the cafeteria menu. I eat real food there, not the stuff you pour water in and microwave for thirty seconds. It’s a nice change for someone who grew up on canned dinners and take-out.

I kind of wish my Dad would turn down Call of Duty. I mean, at the dorms, I could just knock on someone’s wall when I wanted them to lower their volume. Instead, I must go all the way downstairs just to say, “Dad.”

“Eh.”

“Dad, can you turn down the volume?”

Then the little volume bar would inch its way back a notch or two.

“Thank you.”

In fact, I’m done listening to men dying in battle and gunshots. I’m going to enact that conversation right now.

Well, that went nicely. We had a chat about the amount of work I needed to complete, which includes my speech about voting and studying. I’m happy with the flashcards I made for Dinosaurs, which I created on a flashcard website (The Flashcard Machine). The site turns all your flashcard terms and definitions into a multiple-choice quiz and it’s helpful for studying for the real thing.

I wish I weren’t so afraid of homework. Maybe I would get it done faster if I didn’t feel like it were a hassle. I bet if I look at it as a challenge, I’ll feel differently, but I’m reserving that for later because I want to finish this blog post.

Zach says I should write more about the campus. He seems to think I give too much experience and not enough Iowa, so here’s a brief campus walk-through:

The University is pretty. In autumn, the leaves change to a lovely set of browns and golds and everything looks pretty wonderful, especially at sunset, when the sunshine makes everything heavenly. Sometimes it gets weird at night because people have haunted rooms and you remember their stories and suddenly every creak and whistle becomes another ghost out to get you. This feeling mostly follows horror movies, though, so try not to watch them in the windy seasons, like autumn and winter, because it gets dark early and the wind howls like crazy.

The river flows by the main dorms, separating the east from the west, and everyone says it’s beautiful, but I haven’t had the time to gander. Sometimes I think about heading out there to write since everyone else does, but then I remember work and stay inside. It’s warmer there anyway.

The people are a nice, well-tempered crowd with their faults and flaws like any group of people. Occasionally conflicts arise and people get angry, but it’s not so much their fault—it’s more the fact that they all live together. Other times, competition finds the worst of people and tensions rise, but I wouldn’t say it comes from the experience. It’s mostly because we’re teenagers and we walk in believing we’re the best. However, I wouldn’t blame anyone for it because we’re still lovely people.

The classes are alright—I prefer smaller groups to lectures, but with Gen-Eds, you can’t do much else. If you do your work and show up on time, people tend to like and notice you, but if you fall behind, there are ways of making up work. Sometimes, you need to stay up all night and obliterate your homework like The Elite Four in Pokémon Red, but it’s usually well worth it.

That said, if you finish your work before it’s due and you’re a god of smarts, you’re well ahead.

…And there’s a ton more, but I should really write my speech.

I miss you, Iowa. Much love.

Friday Night

Zelda usually wins. Unfair.

This evening, I’m seated with four amazing, computer-savvy students. I’m supposed to design logos right now, actually, but I’m taking a break as I made six logos and my hand’s cramped. The girl next to me is yawning into her hand and the man who went to the wedding reception last week doesn’t know what to name his server. The other man by the guitar is staring intently into his computer screen. Now that I think about it, I probably am too because I’m trying to think of more logo designs. I should also ask about the resolution Fred (crew-cut haired supervisor) wants for the designs, so I’ll do that now:

“Hey, I have a question: what size and resolution should I make the designs?”

“When in doubt, go 300 DPI. It’s a big file, but you’ll be fine.”

“Thanks.”

Last night, I went to a poetry slam. The two speakers were a man whose hair consumed his face and a man who didn’t have much hair at all. They poked fun at Zach the whole night, which he accepted because there are worst compliments than comparison to Justin Bieber.

Speaking of Zach, I no longer have confidence in my gaming abilities because of his epic power with Zelda. I kind of wish he weren’t so awesome so I could be awesome too (and Damon, who plays as the Ice Climbers, and Dylan, who plays as Captain Falcon—they also deserve awesomeness). Alas, he destroys us all with his shining, pinkish orbs of light (except me because I play as Ness, so the shiny orbs heal me when they hit, but then he kicks my character and I die). It’s quite tragic. :<

My coworkers are throwing around technology gobbledygook. VX2000? RAW file types? Yeah, I’ve heard of them, but I’ve never actually used them or played with them (except RAW, maybe, ONCE, but it was a really long time ago and I don’t actually remember what I did).

It’s a little intimidating, but then again, I’m the one with the drawing tablet and the skill(z), so maybe I’m on equal standing with my coworkers. I mean, despite the fact I’m a freshman, I’m just as experienced (with Photoshop, anyway). Right now they’re discussing Macs (something I know about! Whoop!), but I prefer PCs, so anything I would contribute to the conversation would probably end in a horrific battle of the brands.

I’m not kidding.

Well, yes, I am. Mostly.

This morning, I went over my classes for next semester with my advisor. I’m taking a break from memorization and moving to writing classes, like creative writing and playwriting, and reading classes, like classical mythology. That way, my cumulative GPA will explode with amazing-ness. Hooray for strategy!

As far as homework goes, things are steady. I have three essays and two speeches to write. I have to check my lab with someone. I have to study for art history and dinosaurs (I’m making flashcards!) and write some AWESOME fiction (that’s for fun, but it’s still on the agenda). Life’s a little stressful, but that’s okay because I perform better under (eu)stress and it makes the work top-notch.

So yeah, that’s pretty much my life right now. Things are good. I hope you have a splendiferous day!

Masquerade!

This is my yarn octopus, Tungeptson (isn't he cute?).

Working for KRUI is a complex, highly time-consuming task totally worth the effort. Memorizing thousands of little buttons and their meanings seems daunting, but it leads to the kind of celebrity found only in broadcasting. Knowing someone out there listens to you seems kind of intimidating, but after a while, you learn to own it. As long as you stay on top of your game, censor yourself and make sure you’re speaking to the best of your ability, you have nothing to worry about.

My supervisors, Bret and Emily, pushed me to speak on the radio last week, but I was reluctant and stuck to a weather report. After which, I said, “I owned that weather report, you guys. I told that weather like it was nobody’s business.”

They laughed. They’re pushing me to participate in Tuesday’s interview and political discussion. I kind of hope I don’t sound like an idiot because I’ve never conducted an interview before, and I don’t want to sound like some political moron, but since I’m pretty much on top of the news, there shouldn’t be a problem.

Zach was scared for his job at Informavores (internet news show). He doesn’t really keep up with politics, so I helped him out. I’m thinking of making flashcards for him so he can learn the governors and their stances. Sometimes, that’s useful if you’re panicky and about to speak on-air, but I don’t know if he’d appreciate that (probably not because I don’t think he’s a flashcard fan). Either way, he should learn them before his show. I think that’s pretty rational.

I attended Drag Ball with these people. : )

I went to drag ball with a bunch of people. Damon (who admires Oscar Wilde and watches movies with which I’m unfamiliar) rocked it. He danced and lip-synced to Shakira. He also blew away the audience by looking super-cool in his outfit and impressively dancing like a pop star (I can’t :<). After he performed, we ate fruit and drank water, both of which were refreshing after cheering on performers for extended periods of time.

Stare-down between Damon (right) and I (left).

I also went to a KRUI productions meeting yesterday. The staff taught me about cameras and affiliation with websites to make money, which was of great interest to me because I like to earn money through writing (big surprise). I’m working with Amanda (who takes cool pictures and has a larger version of my laptop) and Rory and Fred (bearded and has glasses respectively). They’re super-mega-awesome-fancy people and I like working with them because we design station merchandise and talk about webcomics.

The AIHS (honors-student-hosted) masquerade was fun. We made our masks (mine was red-orange, Zach’s was purple and Damon’s was blue) and did the time warp, which I also did at the Bijou Theater’s Rocky Horror production (Damon won a Charlie Brown doll). I learned it’s fun to dance to popular songs because you know the lyrics and it’s fun to act out the things happening in the song, like when Lady Gaga sings, “Tonight, I’m not takin’ no calls/‘cause I be dancin’” and you simulate talking on a telephone and then break into dance.

Zach had trouble keeping up with “The Cha Cha Slide” even though the dance steps were in the song. He crashed into me and I asked, “Zach, are you having trouble with this? The instructions are in the song.”

“It’s difficult.” We slid to the left. He bumped into me again.

“Left, Zach.”

“I can’t tell my left from my right!”

We laughed. He bumped into a couple more people. The song ended. It was funny.

My three exams this week went well. I’m satisfied with my grades, but I’m learning I don’t have to cloister myself to have good scores. I can leave my room and have occasional fun, which is cool. I’m still pretty stressed about upcoming essays and exams, though, which seems stupid considering they’re not coming for several weeks. Still, work outside of school makes me feel like I always have something to do, which I technically do, but it’s not meant to feel stressful.

Oh well.

Tonight I have F.A.S.T (Free Associate Student Theater), for which I wrote a play. Basically, they’re going to review my submission and tell me its flaws, which I’ll fix and then it’ll be perfect. Then, the group will select my piece if it’s good enough and student actors will perform it, which seems pretty awesome. I hope people like it because I really put heart into that thing. Right now, I just want people to like (maybe love) my play.

Tomorrow night, I have a meeting for KRUI News and on Tuesday, I have another meeting for KRUI music. I don’t know if it’s wise to work for four departments, but I think if I focus on the ones of main interest, I should be okay. It’s kind of a lot, but I’ll be fine.

Anyway, I have to take notes on a book about food ethics. Have a lovely day, my dears. <3

Damon (left), Zach (right) and I (center). Courtesy of Alyx. :3

The Insect Conundrum

Maybe they're mites. I don't know.

I think I’m in love with grade curves.

Instead of freaking out about a test I can’t retake, I can accept my grade and eat my sweet onion potato chips in peace. I can gallivant about Iowa City without a bad grade’s haunting. I can watch Sparticus without cringing at the thought of another exam in a month (except I can’t really watch Sparticus because it’s too violent for me. Zach and James were kind of annoyed because I hid behind a pillow the whole time, but whatever—it’s my choice if I want to watch manslaughter).

I also lost my prox card—a little white card that allows access to the building—and will most likely replace it, which is $20-30 to the Ubill, but it’s fine. I needed a new one anyway (the old one looked kind of gross—it was torn and the duct tape Zach used to attach it to the key chain stained it gray).

I’m also exiled from my room (temporarily) because of an infestation. In fact, I’m typing this on Alyssa and Becky’s new shag rug because I’m too frightened to sit at my desk. Evidently, plants don’t crumple and brown when they’re left alone for long periods of time. Bugs need homes too, and a dead plant is the perfect place to settle down.

“This would be cool if it weren’t so disturbing.” Zach looked at the cobwebs on the orchid. He pulled away and then moved closer to the dead flower. “OH MY GOD, YOU HAVE AN INFESTATION.”

“I don’t want to deal with it!” I moved from the plant. “I DON’T WANT TO DEAL WITH IT.”

“THEY’RE LIKE WEIRD SPIDERS OR SOMETHING.”

“I DON’T CARE.”

“You have an infestation!” He couldn’t stop laughing. I pulled him away from the infested plants. “You have to look at it!”

“I don’t want to deal with it!”

“You have to deal with it!”

“YOU DEAL WITH IT.”

“NO.”

Zach proceeded to tell Jaime (girl with long brown hair who writes plot-driven stories about deities) and Autumn (girl with curly reddish hair who writes short poems about virgins) about the weird red spider-things residing in my plants.

“You need to fill out a maintenance request,” said Autumn.

“How long does it take them to get back to you?”

“Maybe later today or early tomorrow,” said Jaime.

“Will it smell when they’re done?”

“No.”

“Leave the windows open,” said Zach. “They’re going to nuke your room.”

I don’t think he knew I was glaring at him, but I was.

Anyway, I’m forced out of my room, and you know what? Being a nomad isn’t as fun as it seems. Some people like to go where the wind takes them. Some people—not me. I want my non-infested room with my non-infested plants and my non-infested telephone. I didn’t invite these guests, so I want them out. Now.

I don’t understand why my room is horribly infested with spider-things. I don’t mean to sound like angsty teen, but spider-things are NOT my thing. Alyssa wants to quote Ron Weasley, and express her disdain for eight-legged creatures of EVIL, and I can’t help but agree.

The Line-Jumping Rant and Studying

Attack the food from the front, not the side.

Line-jumping (the act of moving ahead of someone in the lunch line) is not illegal. It’s not forbidden or, as Zach puts it, “cheating”. If I want one item from the array of food and there’s a line of twenty people, believe me, I will skip ahead to get it. It’s not morally wrong. It’s not taboo. It’s survival of the fittest. I’m perfectly content with moving ahead of others, and they should be too.

In fact, I propose a new food-gathering strategy. Instead of attacking food from the side, we should attack it from the front. That way, we won’t have to stand in twenty-person lines to pick up our food—we can just walk up to it, scoop it up and go.

Unfortunately, some people don’t approve of this approach.

“Excuse me,” I said to the girl in front of me. “I’m just going to get some mashed potatoes.”

“Well, honey, I’ve been in this line—”

I kind of tuned her out and scooped up my mashed potatoes.

“Would you like some?” I asked.

“No.”

I shrugged and walked away.

Ugh.

Maybe next time I won’t get so lucky. Maybe a giant food fight will initiate because of my line-jumping tendencies and the mashed potatoes will end up in my hair and then I’ll throw food back and other people will join in and it’ll be like one of those scenes from the Disney Channel movies where the whole cafeteria gets involved. Unfortunately, as fun as it would be, I don’t want to waste food like that because the signs around the stations say not to and I’d hate washing marshmallow surprise out of my hair.

Other stuff includes my latest novel endeavor (which I may workshop with the rest of the Writer’s floor), final projects for my first-year seminar and general studying (exciting, right?).

Studying kind of feels like psychic pressure. There’s not really any work, but you feel pressure anyway. Maybe it’s because the syllabus is like your warning sign and as dates approach, it’s like, “Hey…Hey…HEY. YOU HAVE A TEST.”

That would explain the stress, I guess.

Sometimes, kids don’t realize they have tests and essays because they don’t check the syllabus, like when James had to write his essay in twelve hours. He and Zach and I were chatting when he glanced at his syllabus to ensure everything was fine for tomorrow’s class.

It was like a surprise boss level in a videogame.

“Oh [expletive],” he said.

He didn’t really sleep that night. He spent it in the ITC writing like a chicken with its head cut off, and the next afternoon when I stopped by to tutor Zach in chemistry, he was still asleep.

“James,” I said. “James, you have to get up.”

“What time is it?”

“It’s 6:00 (-ish, maybe? It’s hard to remember).”

There was a muffled response and James rolled out of bed.

He was exhausted, but at least his paper was finished. For that, I commend him. Commendations, James.

Post-Midterm

Post-Midterm

Despite the surrounding birthday balloons and birthday mail, I feel sad. I blame my midterms, which threw me into a funk because I studied for them every day since receiving the material, but didn’t get the desired grades. When I took my midterms, I felt pretty confident and knew most of the answers, but my grades suggest otherwise.

I guess I should study more. Once my first year seminar ends, science and art history will dominate my life. Did I mention I have to make a giant comic book for my first year seminar? It’s not difficult or anything. It’s just work and I think that’s behind most A’s in college: diligence. You need to focus on schoolwork all the time and you can’t think about or do anything else because it’ll distract you from the task at hand. Maybe that’s why so many kids take unprescribed Ritalin—maybe they don’t have the discipline to sit and study for a couple hours.

I don’t really know, but I do know I tutored Zach in chemistry for the better half of last week. It was more difficult than I expected, seeing as he’d never taken a chemistry class before and I barely remembered the material from two years ago, but I scored well in the course and wanted to help him.

Sometimes we worked in circles, going over the material several times before moving to a different task. The worst was valence electrons because I didn’t remember it and he didn’t understand it. We spent three-ish days on it, and by the end, we had enough of electronegativity.

In the middle of our studying, he would roll around on the floor and ask, “Can we take a break?

“Like lunch or something?”

“Yeah.”

“Okay.” I’d gather my things. “And we’ll study when we get back?”

“Yeah.”

We never studied when we came back. We usually watched Glee or read bad fan fiction or something. Sometimes we’d take another break and then study again. It was a good routine, but I felt like we didn’t do much those days. Maybe it’s because I’m used to intense studying, so breaks throw me off, but maybe we could have done more if I’d pushed. Maybe not. Who knows?

Earning grades is a little tougher than I expected, but I think I’ll pull through. I study every day, and I know it didn’t earn me A’s from the get-go, but I’ll study harder and then everything will improve. The most intimidating classes are science and art history because there’s a heap of material to memorize and it’s not as much understanding as it is recitation, but I’ll be okay.

Another thing: my birthday landed on my art history midterm. Isn’t that lovely? When I should have been celebrating my 18th, I was identifying ancient coins and corbelled architecture. Maybe I’m being harsh, but it was my 18th birthday and who wants to take a midterm during their initiation to adulthood? I hope it went well. A poor grade would make a terrible birthday present. :<

In response to the snail comment, name your sluggish little pet whatever you want. Gary would be creative (even though I’m not a huge Spongebob fan) and it’d be nostalgic. If I had a snail, I’d name it something lame like Shelly or Goo. Isn’t that lame? I wish I were as good at naming snails as you. Please tell me if/when you buy it and what you decided to call the darling little molluscan.

Anyway, I’m going to study dinosaurs until someone comes along to talk. Right now, we’re learning about ceratopsians. They have bones on their upper jaw that don’t connect to their nose. Hooray!

Ill

I guess Zach came through for me because he gave me soda and pizza and watched an episode of Glee with me.

According to my laptop’s reflection, I rolled out of bed, threw on an Iowa t-shirt and forgot to sleep last night. This is almost accurate because I did roll out of bed and throw on an Iowa t-shirt, but I didn’t forget to sleep last night. I would have forgotten except I had just spoken with my rhetoric teacher about my sleeping patterns (or lack thereof) and remembered at 1:22 in the morning that most people sleep and I should too.

Consequently, I woke with the feeling of a thousand dwarves pick-axing the interior of my esophagus and a heavy weight beneath my forehead. Alyssa just gave me hot chocolate because she pities my current state, in which my larynx cannot endure anything greater than chicken noodle soup broth, which is bad because I really want a cookie right now.

That said, I recommend sleep. Sleep speeds the metabolism, preserves memory and information and strengthens the immune system. I forgot the importance of sleep because of my forthcoming science midterm, which will (hopefully not) obliterate me. Sadly, I don’t believe will ever look at the anatomy of extinct beings as “cool” again, and will instead associate them with ailment and sleep deprivation.

Although you could argue this whole predicament is my doing (I was the one who stayed up studying), I feel physically ill and I want someone to blame even if it’s not their fault. I suppose I’ll blame Zach because he promised he’d help me study for my midterm and instead we saw Exit Through the Gift Shop, leaving me to study in the “wee hours of the morning” without assistance.

I mean, he could have brought me soup. James brought me potato soup. I guess Zach was too exhausted from the blood drive or something. It would have been nice, though. I would have brought him soup, but oh well. We’ll probably watch Glee later and that’ll make up for the lack of soup-giving.

Well, I’m going to nap. Good night.