2008 and other such reminiscences
Wednesday December 31, 2008
I suppose this is the obligatory “year in review” post. I never really write these accurately. They always turn into much longer, ramblier reminiscences.
I find myself thinking about the past year usually around my birthday in November, simply because the birthday milestone always strikes me more deeply than the new year’s milestone. (Their relative proximity helps.) I usually can’t remember to write the new year’s date until past April, anyway. I’m usually good throughout January but into February and March I have a last year’s date relapse until in April I start writing the correct year automatically. Then I find sometimes in September I’ll accidentally write “2007″ or “2002″ or whatever the case happens to be and I’ll stare at the paper, say, “It’s September, for goodness’ sake!” and then giggle at the date.
It’s flurrying presently and with the windchill it feels about 20 degrees Fahrenheit which both adds to the new year’s flavor and makes me very happy that Bryan and I are not the sort to want to go to Times Square to watch the ball drop this evening. I haven’t yet met any person who lives in New York City who has any desire to actually go do that. (Especially in rain or snow.) Additionally I haven’t met any residents who live/work in Manhattan who like being around tourists. For the most part the tourists walk slowly, gawk, and get in the way of New Yorkers attempting to go about their daily routines, and if you know anything about the New Yorker stereotype you know we’re all impatient, ornery, and loud-mouthed. (It doesn’t take more than a month or two of residence or employment here to develop at least one of those traits. Even my very even-tempered friends feel the New Yorker temperament pulling at them.)
But back to the “year in review” part. (See? I’m bad at staying on-topic.) 2008 was busy. Busy and full of change, but looking back, nearly every year I’ve ever had has been both busy and full of changes. If I look back and call a year “slow and boring and all the same” I will cry. That’s not living life well, to my mind.
2009 will, in all likelihood, be busier than 2008. In 2009 there will be an epically historic presidential inauguration, my bridal shower, our wedding, our annual ski trip to Utah, our honeymoon to the Caribbean, two Pennsylvania receptions in May for the March wedding, and then a move from our current studio apartment once this lease is up at the start of the summer. I can’t wait to move to a bigger place. After the move, who knows what will happen in 2009. Hopefully the economy will be back up (or getting up), things won’t seem nearly as bleak in general when we look out at the future.
2008 started with us as we were at the end of 2007. Bryan was working as an investment banker, gone most of the week and when he was home he was either exhausted or too wired, mostly glued to his computer while I was glued to mine. We watched a lot of television; I did a lot of stuff alone, like eat dinners and listen to music and pretend to work out on our home’s elliptical. Over the summer, things got weird and interesting. Bryan got pounded by his bosses. He pulled all-nighters and had no time to breathe. He got to the point where he could not countenance working there any longer and took a leave of absence in July. During the leave he called up a contact and arranged an interview — and found himself another job. He formally quit and moved jobs in August and then we found ourselves in a strange place. We were finally able to set a date for the wedding, now that Bryan’s job wasn’t going to be able to keep him from attending it (as might have been the case with banking). Bryan was working normal business hours (9 to 5 or 6) instead of banker’s hours (9 to 12 or 2am) and we had so much more time together. We had to rearrange the studio apartment to give us some peace and some more space to work; we started eating meals and enjoying the city together. Things settled back to normal for the fall and in November I threw myself into NaNoWriMo with gusto, ultimately winning. December burred by in activity associated with the wedding and now it’s finally at the end of the year.
This year I read a lot of books, though I feel as if I read more at the end of 2007 than I did for most of 2008. Even so I encountered a lot of new authors. I accomplished a lot with my books and my worlds, though I wasn’t as consistent a worker as I could have or should have been. I look forward to 2009 as I look forward to every new day: I know I can be better than I have been and I’ll keep striving for that.
Now at the end of 2008 I’ve been tremendously busy with wedding planning stuff and in early 2009 I imagine it’ll only get worse and more hectic. Only a few people are coming to this wedding and it’s taking up so much of my energy to plan it. I can’t even imagine having a wedding involving hundreds of guests. (I can barely imagine the cost, either.) But 2009 will bring that wedding and it’ll happen regardless of whether or not it goes off perfectly or with a few hitches. I’m confident things will work out and I’m trying somewhat desperately to not be a nitpicker, perfectionist, or obsessive control freak about every detail. I’m trying to be calm and relaxed about it all. We’ll see how it all ends up.
What else happened in 2008?
It was the first full year of my life I didn’t attend any school, as I can recall. (I started nursery school full-time in September of the year I turned 3 that November, with pre-school the year after that. I started Kindergarten at 4.)
I look back and marvel at how fast all of it went by. What happened in 2008? The seasons changed, the layout of the apartment changed, we explored more of Manhattan than we ever have… we got older. And it’s done already. I remember thinking, back in the late 1990s, that 2010 was so far away. But as of tomorrow, 2010 will be next year. I’m… flabbergasted. I still remember when that year seemed something futuristic, unreal.
I think sometimes that the years I spent in high school were the longest years of my life and every year that leads me further from that time makes that sentiment all the more real. These years beyond that have gone by fast — speed-of-light quickly, a few of them. Like the college years. I was having too much fun for time of have lingered pleasantly around those years. “Time flies when you’re having fun” and all of that? Why is it so true? I didn’t have a lot of fun in high school and the days seemed to hang on me. For a lot of it, I was miserably focused on work, reading, and writing, not really looking up and staring at the world beyond a vague wish/prayer for it to be over as soon as could be arranged. Perhaps most of my elementary and secondary schooling years were that long. Fifth grade seemed to take an eternity. Eighth grade was a good year, I think; that one went fast.
I guess I’m glad 2008 is over. 2007 being over was much more somber because it meant so many things were real. 2008 ending is just a year ending. I’m looking forward to too many things in 2009 to be forlorn about this year’s end.
So happy new year, everyone. I hope your 2009 is exciting.
Christmas Eve
Wednesday December 24, 2008
This year marks an interesting change in my usual Christmas Eve experience. It’s the first time I’ve ever spent it without my parents. Not only that but Bryan and I aren’t really doing anything very special. We’re planning to make some baked brie (using some pizza crust that comes in a can?!) and some interesting spinach-y pinwheel things, inspired by some spinach puffs made by a pizza place we enjoy. Otherwise we’ll be watching TV and hanging out in front of our computers for a while.
I mean, should we be doing something more for Christmas Eve? I have fond memories of going to Christmas Eve church services but in recent years the service at my old church near my parents’ has been uncomfortable, mostly due to the new pastor who is a little weird. I don’t know any churches, really, in our neighborhood, nor would Bryan probably be amenable or excited by the prospect of going to church tonight. He was raised Jewish and as such doesn’t really feel comfortable being in a church, even for a service as festive and unusual as the Christmas Eve service.
It all leaves me with this strange displaced feeling. Christmas time really is here but it doesn’t really feel like it yet. Maybe I can blame it on the fact that retailers have said it’s been Christmas since Halloween, so it’s gone on so long it feels strange. To add to that, we don’t have any overtly Christmas-y things in the apartment. We really don’t have a tree (or room for a tree, though we have a tiny potted evergreen bush/tree); I put up some LED lights and I have a bunch of holly-scented candles and some fun red garland and a few ornaments decorating the apartment, but it feels a little anti-climactic. I think what I need is for something really fun and Christmas-y to be on TV tonight, or maybe I need to blast some of Josh Groban or Kristin Chenoweth’s Christmas albums (or Hanson’s…don’t judge me!) and get in the mood for tomorrow. Tomorrow will feel more “normal” Christmas — going to my parents for Christmas dinner and presents and dessert. I’m really looking forward to that.
Happy Holidays, Merry Christmas, and Happy 4th night of Hanukkah, everyone!
(Which reminds me — note to self: buy a menorah so you have it for next year…)
Musings on Carnegie Mellon
Thursday December 13, 2007
If you know me personally then you know that I graduated from Carnegie Mellon last May. I’ve written about it a bunch of times (click the tag down there on the right that says “Carnegie Mellon” and you’ll see what I mean) and naturally it’s responsible in a large way for who I am. I was thinking earlier today about how unusual CMU is; it’s really a unique place. People say that about Carnegie Mellon all of the time — students, administrators, professors, alumni — but it’s true. CMU is unusual. This goes beyond Buggy and Carnival and the traditions that make Carnegie Mellon an unusual place; it’s the people who make it fascinating and different from any other experience I’ve ever had or likely will ever have.
The main reason CMU is unusual is because every student — and the faculty and oddly a large portion of the staff — are all passionately obsessed about something. Typically these people, being in a research university environment, tend to study that something either as their main course of study or as a minor or in a single class or in some capacity — in something intramural, extracurricular, something. Sometimes those obsessions run completely parallel or perpindicular to what people actually study; you find all sorts of types playing CMU’s Varsity sports teams and even more sorts playing everything else. Even more interesting are the humanities or art people who are obsessed with video games or Star Trek; the psychology majors who are entranced by metaphysical principles, the computer programmers or future doctors who love to write or paint or build wooden structures in the shapes of crazy things like Death Stars. CMU is full of people who defy the stereotypes of every conceivable major — they even defy the stereotypes of college students, period. CMU lets you be a professional, amateur, or wanna-be nerd — in a good way. Randy Pausch is just one of the most famous examples of incredibly talented people who just happen to be fanatically obsessed about a lot of different things but through the medium of Carnegie Mellon find a way to put everything together (or heck, keep them separate) and be completely themselves in the process. Being at Carnegie Mellon enabled me to be consistently surrounded by people who fascinated, challenged, intrigued, or generally surprised me in every way possible.
When I was accepted to CMU in March of 2003 for the Fall 2003 class, I was accepted into the Science and Humanities Scholars program — called SHS — because I had cited on my application my interest in (first) Biology, (second) English, and (third) History.
(In actuality, I had cited these three in that order because of several reasons, all of which I feel completely guiltless about divulging now that I have my B.A.: first biology because at the time of applications in Fall 2002 I had already gotten a 5 (out of 5) on that AP exam and done really well on the biology regents and all of my grades demonstrated a mastery of science in general but especially biology; second, I thought I’d have a better chance of getting into college if I went with science as my primary subject of study while really knowing that I wanted to pursue English and writing as the ultimate goal. I put history because I had gotten a 5 on the AP US History exam and I was good at it; I’ve always had that Jeopardy brain for remembering that the French Revolution was in 1789, the British abolished slavery in 1799, the Louisiana Purchase was 1803… etc. I was good at it. And for me, psychologically, I needed to put my best foot forward with my applications because getting admitted was the most important factor — I could always change majors later on. By the way, to a high school student, “majoring” definitely seems a foreign concept — how many people (1) know what they want to do with their life or (2) like any one subject enough to want to commit more years of study to that subject? I only had a career path — novelist — but no definite plan of how to get there. Admittedly I somewhat got around that by applying to colleges that had creative writing programs, majors, or minors but that was all secondary — I figured I could always switch over to CW later on.)
So when I was accepted to Carnegie Mellon’s SHS program I felt a little odd; the wording of the acceptance praised my academic prowess in subjects all across the academic spectrum — I’d imagined them reading my application and saying, “Good in math, science, English, history, and SHE EVEN PLAYS SPORTS (three at the time) — what more of an eclectic person could we want?!” — and felt a little odd about that. Like, my master scheme of getting into college by putting my academic foot first… worked? Wow. That feels weird. (Not to mention that it hadn’t worked at several colleges — I am an Ivy League reject and proud of it, all these years later.) I was especially weirded out by the fact that I was accepted into such a selective program because I’d done it without really anyone’s strategic input. I’d never sat down with anyone and said, “Here is my grand collegiate scheme! What do you think?” and gotten a response. I simply walked up to my parents, my teachers, my guidance counselor (ha; more on my high school’s system at another time) and said, “This is where I am applying. I need you to fill out this form for me. [Smile.] Thank you.” [Walk away.]
Admittedly, I was a pretentious little twit during my senior year and I was seriously desperate — desperate – to get the hell out so I wasn’t very nice to people. (I held the belief that I’d rather be rude, pretentious, or arrogant than pretend emotions I don’t legitimately feel because I didn’t want to be “fake.” I’ve since learned that pretending emotions you don’t generally feel in certain situations is called “tact.” I have also since learned that being able to preserve a certain self-image or someone else’s emotional frame of mind by being tactful in certain situations can be a very crucial skill to possess.)
But back to getting into CMU — I hadn’t been totally decided on CMU publicly until sometime in late April but I was mentally set on it the moment I opened the acceptance envelope. I felt so warm – never mind that it was my first major college acceptance — I was ready to sign the paperwork immediately. But for everyone’s sake (including the sake of the little doubting voice in my head more concerned with my happiness than the fact that Pittsburgh was 400 miles from home) I decided to actually visit Carnegie Mellon. I’d applied without having visited — my parents had only been keen to take me to the big places and the ones within easy distance and I hadn’t been keen on going to anywhere less than an Ivy for a long, long while (remember that I was a pretentious twit?) so I’d never bothered going to visit CMU before my acceptance. But they had this funny thing called a “Sleeping Bag Weekend” that would occur in early April from Sunday to Monday where I’d get a chance to sleep over with a current student and actually visit the campus sans-parentals and I was there. By April of my senior year I was so mentally messed up by the driving, almost depressing desperation I had to rush me to August 2003 that I nearly cried with relief at the thought of actually going to college like a real college student, even for only a day.
I took the abominably long Greyhound trip to Pittsburgh — was it 7, 9, 11 hours? Who really knows anymore? And when I got there it was cold and going to rain. Brilliantly I hadn’t checked Pittsburgh’s forecast before leaving and I’d packed for New York appropriate spring weather. At the time — and for about 6 months afterward — I was convinced Pittsburgh was in the US’s midwest. They have since educated me that Pittsburgh is the gateway to the midwest but sure as hell clings to its north-eastern pretend status. (Additionally, regarding the weather, native Pittsburghers will brag that Pittsburgh has fewer sunny days / more cloudy days than some places in the Pacific Northwest like Seattle or Tacoma but I haven’t found the statistics to back that up — despite agreeing with them that statistically that has to be true given my own experiences, ha ha.) So my first view of the campus was under thick gray cloud cover. It didn’t start to rain until Monday. The grass was so green despite the clouds — the Cut, the large grassy space dividing the main area of campus was just brilliantly, inconceivably green — and I was stunned that people were walking around with umbrellas swinging from backpacks and having a grand old time. The people I met that day and the next were so smart, but not in a very conscious way. They all seemed to know a lot and were intensely, crazily giddy about their passions — including Carnival and Buggy, which I got a taste of — but they weren’t pretentious. It was amazing to find such proud… well, nerds. I had no word for someone proud to be brilliantly well-informed about really specific subjects but nerd. But that was me, too — me, exactly.
I’d go into profuse detail about my freshman year but that’s another story. This whole story will probably find its way into either a semi-fictitious account or a memoir — though I have a rule I’ve imposed about memoirs: I’m only going to write them or at least publish them only when certain unspeakable-in-a-blog conditions are met. They haven’t been yet met.
Basically the whole reason for this CMU period of reminiscing is because it’s been about 7 months since graduation and all of my December graduate friends are graduating and I feel both way too old and way too young at the same time. Damn it. Though admittedly having Bryan at this stage in my life prevents the romantic me from falling into the senioritis depression of high school but sometimes I feel like I’m getting there. I have these bursts of lack-of-productivity-shame that remind me of being in high school senior year… I’m so close to doing what I want to be doing but I can’t get myself there. The only problem at this point is my own willpower is the only thing stopping me. Not my age, no the natural progression of things like time and high school and whatnot. I am 22. My life is not over. But I know that so I keep dawdling. I need deadlines, I need timelines. Bryan and I need to work on developing those. In the meanwhile I need to find a way to be frickin’ productive without it being (a) dark outside and (b) it being the last moment. As I always say to you religious readers, I will be more productive. Sigh. The thing about being a judgmental procrastinating perfectionist is your best, your most productive, is never probably as good or as productive as you will ever want.
Randy Pausch & Carnegie Mellon
Friday October 12, 2007
I’ve been thinking a lot about Professor Randy Pausch lately, one of the bazillion professors at CMU I never had during my 4 years there as a student. (One of the reasons I’m sad I graduated; but then again…) Essentially, here’s the rundown on who he is and what he’s done lately to be newsworthy. He’s a terrific man. His last lecture was incredible. (Too bad I wasn’t on campus or I would have forced myself into McConomy.) We discovered this a few days after the lecture; Good Morning America was doing a piece showing clips and Bryan said, “Hey, that looks a lot like McConomy Auditorium,” the biggest auditorium on campus, used for big events like lectures and movies. It houses about 500. And sure enough it was. The press Dr. Pausch has been receiving is incredible but also incredibly well-deserved. He’s a great guy and doesn’t have much time left. I’m glad people are getting a chance to get to know him — and by extension, CMU! It makes me really proud to know that a lot of people might be considering CMU a little more seriously because of him — or perhaps they’ve been introduced to it for the first time. He even says on his website that people should consider Carnegie Mellon as a place to send their kids. How cool. I wonder what the Office of Admissions has thought of all of this press.
Anyway his lecture, “Lessons to Live By,” is terrific. I highly recommend watching it.
Edit: On a side note, I received an actual application for admissions to Carnegie Mellon in the mail today. They send all the material they send to prospective students to the CMAC members (Carnegie Mellon Admission Council) and I have to say that I am phenomenally glad I don’t have to apply to college again — not for any other reason than to have to relive high school again. I’d gladly relive college (sometimes I wish I could, parts of it) but I’d never, ever want to relive high school. Standardized tests, social awkwardness… never. Don’t get me wrong: I’d do things differently. I’m much wiser now. But how can I know that if I did those things the person I am today would be that same person? I don’t think I would be. If I did better on the SATs (one of those things I’d change) I might have gotten into different colleges, and I might never have discovered how wonderful Carnegie Mellon is. If I’d done things differently… I can’t say. We are who we have made ourselves. I’ve made myself who I am and I can’t want to change the person I am now… too much.
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