Saturday, November 03, 2012

I'm a Writer, Shouldn't I Be Writing?

So, I really need to start writing again. I'm running out of excuses. I mean, I wrote this (and 5+ other typewritten pages) in my notebook between dials at work. I have the time, especially since I have such inconsistent hours at work. One thing I've been thinking about when it comes to a possible return to blogging is that if I am to be a blogger again I should really try to be a part of the larger “Blogosphere.” I mean, I know quite a few people with blogs and I think that maybe blogging should happen in community, reading each other's work. That's pretty much the complete opposite of what I used to do, writing in a vacuum and expecting readership to pull in from the gravity of my charisma and awesome writing. I've never made the effort to really read someone else's blog. I mean, come on, blogs are boring! So, I guess I'll try to do better this time. Yeah, see that “Fellow Chroniclers” section on the lower right (you may need to scroll down) I think I'm going to try to be friends with them.

 Part of why I'm hopeful that I'll make time to write is my nifty new Excel sheet. At church last week  Major Ditmer spoke about tithing. This is always a tricky subject but one I usually tune out for the most part. But this week as I spaced out I started thinking not about tithing money, but time. Now, that is where I struggle. Giving up money is easy. I mean, I spend it all the time. Easy come, easy go. But my time, ah yes, with that I am a total scrooge. Once time is spent you can't get it back. There's no ATM for time and I can't go to work to earn more of it. Time is the currency I spend at work to get money. It's the most valuable resource I have!

So how do I generally prefer to spend that most valuable resource? Well, I love video games. Coming from a guy who just explained how precious and fleeting time is this may make no philosophical sense. But hey, this isn't about philosophy. This is about fun and the epic Steam game library I've built over the years waiting for the day when I would an epic computer equal to the task of running them all with the visual glory God intended when he invented video games on the eighth day. Today is that day. Now I am finding it most difficult to pull myself away from my glorious new gaming experience into the mundane-ness of most of real life.

The point is that I recognize that I balance my time budget like the US government balances their money budget and before I end up with a 16 trillion hour time debt I realize I'd better get a handle on things. So Jenny, my Excel smart wife, helped me make an excel sheet that would split my 168 weekly hours into percentages:

10% God time (Time tithing!)
10% Chris time (Video games! Woohoo!)
20% Jenny time (She's my wife, of course she gets twice as much of my time as I do. Plus, time with her is almost always better than my games anyway)
30% Work time (Not only does this include bringing home the bacon, but also things like blogging like I am now. Basically a collection of things which, though they may be good or enjoyable, I probably wouldn't choose them over video games even though I should.)
30% Sleep time (Sleep takes up a depressing amount of my time. It's like income tax for my time! After living with these percentages for a week I think I'm going to have to rearrange it because for my last night I only have 3 hours of sleep left in the budget...)

Now that I've set up my time as a trackable and spendable commodity I've been way better at time management. Raptr, a gaming service, sent me my weekly gameplay report and told me I had played about 50% less than I usually do. That's probably a good thing, as much as I hate it. I mean, my natural hoarding instinct is finally a HUGE help as I focus on working to hoard up gaming time for binges.

So, there it is! I have realistic plans to help me ensure I blog more. Now lets see me do it. I hope you're looking forward to it, because I am.

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

The Library Gang

Hey.


Currently the apartment Jenny and I share is depressingly devoid of internet. To me this often feels like living on a planet that is devoid of all life. To combat my cabin fever I have been spending a considerable amount of my time at the Portland Public Library. To be more precise, I have been spending a considerable amount of time using the library's Wifi. I need my Facebook fix, man.

During my internet binges I have become familiar with "the regulars," those people who spend their days haunting the library and doing whatever middle-aged men do on laptops in libraries. It's quite an interesting group of people so I decided I would write about them and, by extension, share them with you. Allow me to introduce you to the "library gang."

First up there there's felt-fez guy. Felt-fez guy makes noises whenever he feels emotions. Sometimes he makes noises because of computer problems and will get tech support from silver ponytail guy. Silver ponytail guy just sits and stares at his computer. I never even see him type anything or move his mouse. I have no idea what he's doing. Then there's bald-goatee guy. Today he didn't even have a computer. He just sat there.

There is also The Incredible Orb. You see, The IO isn't one of the cool kds. He's not really part of the gang; he just orbits. While we chill in fiction The IO sits next to the DVDs and music, right where you can look through the shelves and see the Somalis yelling at each other in the teen section. When looking at The IO he doesn't strike you as fat, just incomprehensibly round. An incredible orb.

I see The IO more consistently than I see any of the others. He's always there, always in the same spot. When I told Jenny about him she said "Maybe he works online? Like stock exchange stuff." Today as I walked past him he was very clearly on Neopets. Of course this made me wonder how my own abandoned Neopets account is doing.

Then of course there's that one weirdo, leather jacket-comb guy, who's actually here to read. All the time. He reads the paper. A lot. Like, maybe he's a workaholic newspaper editor and just has to read it that fourth time to be really sure. Today I saw him with a book. He reads with the book or paper in his right hand and a plastic comb in his left. Occasionally the situation on the top of his head will get just a bit too raucous for his liking and he'll use the comb to settle everyone down.

Lately the library has been missing the first member of the gang I ever saw. I call him Mister Pornography, or Mr. P. for short. I met Mr. P. on my first day in the library. I had just become the proud bearer of a key-chain sized library card and was prepared to begin borrowing. I headed over to the graphic novel section and, while flipping through Batman comics, I noticed him.

He sat facing the window at the long desk adjacent to the graphic novel shelves, his back, and the bright screen of his netbook, facing anybody who walked within twenty feet. His paling hair hung in kinked waves nearly reaching his shoulders and, over those shoulders, the content of his screen was very clearly in violation of the library's rules as well as what many would call "common decency."

Mr. P. sat reclined like he was on his couch at home, the angle of his body doing nothing to obscure the screen. He flipped from image to image with the utmost swagger, as if he were the head librarian of the pornography section, master of the Dewey "Blow Me" Decimal system.

Today I watched a new guy get kicked out for looking at porn. I think that's probably what happened to Mr. P. This new guy was nothing like Mr. P., though. I felt bad for him. He looked so ashamed as the security guard made him pack up his stuff. He could tell that the entirety of the gang, as well as myself, were watching and listening to everything being said.

And that, friend-o, is my life.

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Jobs anyone?

Well, a sticky note on my desktop tells me I have 18 jobs I should apply for tomorrow. After filling out four applications today I guess I'm ready to tackle some more tomorrow. That's right, three months out of college and I'm still unemployed. It's frustrating to be sure, but I'm nowhere near hopeless yet. Well, I guess nowhere near hopelessness is a little bit extreme. I'm still like a month from hopelessness. That's more accurate.

You see, I'm writing this blog post because I'm feeling more hopeful than I have since last week when Jenny and I were turned down for a job we had been really hoping for. But of course life is never just that easy.

But now I have some things to be excited about! Yesterday I passed my driving exam (on my fourth try) and got my license! I was just fed up with failing so I just went in and did everything perfect. I hit a grand total of zero babies and scraped zero cars and parallel parked like Mr. P. A. Rallel himself. It was wonderful. I do think I freaked out the tester by thanking him so emphatically for passing me, though. I don't they usually have people try to kiss them on the job.

And the other excitement? Tomorrow I am going to use my fancy shmancy new job to drive my beautiful wife, Jenny, to a job interview that I believe she is wholly qualified for. So one of us might be employed tomorrow!

Yet the fact remains. I need a job too. In the past three months Jenny and I first honeymooned, then house-sat, and now we have been in repose at her parents house until such a time as we have somewhere else to go. To be honest I am exceedingly excited to move out and start our life in earnest. Also, once we have jobs I can get a new computer. That Dell XPS 8500 looks mouthwateringly sexy from where I'm sitting.

So, aside from the three applications I am dropping off tomorrow I am also willing to just have you hire me. That's right, YOU! I LOVE YOU! Like, seriously, whoever you are, my resume is a thing of beauty and eligibility and my e-mail is always hoping for job offers. I'm multitalented, very talented, and buckets of fun to work with. I would especially welcome offers to work as a video game writer, rock star, facial hair model, or general nice guy (every office needs one). Trust me, you want to hire me.

Anyway, that's enough for one post. I'd love to hear from you in the comments or an e-mail. Until next time, this is Chris, you're friendly neighborhood rambler, asking that you keep in touch.

Sunday, July 01, 2012

Married Spirituality is Weird


Okay, it's more than that. Marriage is weird. But marriage in general is two big for one post, so let's focus here.

I've been trying to figure our how to articulate this for a while and it took an episode of Modern Family and, as usual, pulling out my notebook and writing during church. I remember reading somewhere that Brian Jacques came up with part of Redwall in church. It's a good place to get the writing juices flowing. Even if it makes you look terribly un-devout.

The episode of Modern Family, Punkin Chunkin (Which iscurrently available for free on Hulu), had a nice little food for thought moment at the end. You know how sitcoms do that sometimes; They're like "well, that certainly was a silly episode but we've managed to squeeze a moral in here too. You can thank us later for BLOWING YOUR MIND WITH PROFUNDITY!!" Yeah, just like that. Anyway, the moral of this story is that there are two types of people in the world: dreamers and realists. You would think dreamers would marry dreamers and realists would marry realists but that's often not how it happens. In fact, in Jenny and my marriage that's not how it happened.

Jenny is a dreamer. She went to church today in a tie-dyed dress. I wore a black t-shirt with a black button up shirt over it. Yes, black on black. I'm that bad of a realist. Meh, gift and a curse. Jenny and I view the world in very different ways and plan in very different ways. For example, neither of us know where we're going with our future. I've been looking at apartments and found quite a nice and affordable one in Schenectady. The other day Jenny said, "After we're done in Fillmore why don't we just move to Schenectady and see what happens?" I am a realist (or pessimist) so I think we'd be better of applying to every McDonald's on the East Coast and moving wherever they're hiring. We're under-qualified, inexperienced fresh college grads. No one wants us.

But, my realism aside, we do need to do something. That's where being different is good. Jenny gives me something more than McDonald's to dream about, and I try to make her dreams work.

But didn't I start out by saying marriage is weird? Yeah, I did. Though it is good it's also just bizarre. To be joined together with, be one entity with, another person who thinks so utterly differently (and often what I would consider illogically) than I do is at times just downright uncomfortable. Differences that compliment each other are good; but differences are still differences. It's a big adjustment.

Now, the title of this post mentions spirituality with, up to this point, I haven't talked about. As I mentioned earlier I wrote a lot of this in my notebook at church so I have to talk about spirituality, at least a little, or else God may smite me for letting writing distract me during church.

Jenny is "non-denominational." All the cool kids are these days, at least at Houghton. I'm the loser who stuck with my denomination because I feel at home, and called, here. Nothing against non-denominational people, it just is, and has been, an adjustment to be marrying one.

Today during church Jenny took communion. For any non-Salvationists reading this you're probably thinking, "well, duh, that's what Christians do at church, right?" Well, not Salvationists. Not me. The Salvation Army isn't against communion, it's just not a tradition we practice for a multitude of reasons I don't have the space to go into here.

So, what do I do during communion? It depends. Sometimes I pray. Other times I pull out the Bible and read. Still other times, like today, I write. But I just sit there. Whether it's a "pass around" communion where the body and blood come past us or a "come and get it" communion where everybody lines up (this is where I am most noticeable in my non-participation) I do my own thing and people often notice. It's not bad or a problem, it's just a little awkward. To not be partaking in a ritual that's happening all around you is a strange experience. What makes it a step stranger is that my wife does participate.

Jenny and I spent hours and hours in the early stages of our relationship discussing our faith. We both know what the other believes and respect each other in the areas where we differ. Every time we are in a church and there is communion Jenny offers not to take communion if it makes me more comfortable and every time I answer in complete honesty that I don't mind if she does and that it's between her and God, not between her and I. This in my mind would be like if I was reading in 2 Corinthians and Jenny said that made her feel uncomfortable and would prefer I read in 1 Corinthians. Both books are good, and it's between God and I where I read. In the same way though it's a little awkward communion is between Jenny and God, and I don't think I should have say. Just because communion is a tradition I don't practice or because it has a significance to Jenny that I don't fully comprehend is no reason to make her miss out.

So Jenny usually takes communion.

What's weird to me is that as a married unit we have become one. We pray together. We read the Bible together. We sleep together. We are one, yet fundamentally different. Inherently different in some areas. We are two different people in one marriage entity--yet still two.

To some people this might be a bigger deal. To me it's about as disturbing as the fact that she prefers to play Soul Caliber II on my X-Box (that's what's been keeping her occupied while I write this) while I stick to Blacklight: Retribution on my laptop (even if this four year old machine means I have to run the game on minimum everything). It's just strange to be discovering new ways in which we are unified every day and at the same time finding new ways in which we are different.

Not bad, just--different.

Anyway, that's my rambling for today. It feels good to be blogging again. If you, my dear reader, know of any job opportunities please, please, please let me know. I am quite unemployed.

Looking forward to writing again soon. Comments are always welcome!

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Married!

Photo Credit: Jodi Renshaw--Studio 36
June 9th, 2012 (like two weeks ago) I got married to Jenny, my lady of four years. Man, I am happy. In May I graduated from college, and now I am moving onward and upward with my wife. Man, if that doesn't feel weird--calling her wife--I don't know what does.

Well, now that I am married and graduated I (once again) feel that I should take up blogging again. I graduated with majors in psychology and writing and I can't really practice psychology right now but at least I can write. Remember the days when I would publish a post, or more, a day? Remember when my blog was a unashamed and uncensored stream of consciousness mess? No one does. That was four years ago. Before college.

Well, I'm hoping to recapture the raw joy of writing that I had before college. I learned a lot in my writing major, including that people are actually reading this and that many of them are thinking I look quite stupid. Basically I became a much better but much more fearful writer. But the only way to get back into my groove from four years ago is to just do it. So here I go.

Jenny and I are super lucky. We are, without a doubt, having the best honeymoon it is possible to have. I say 'having' because our honeymoon is still going on. Why? Well, because our honeymoon is a month and a half long. I know, I know. That sounds too good to be true, right? But it's not! Jenny and I spent the first week of our honeymoon in Searsport, Maine and loved it.

The 'Sea Breeze Cottage' in Searsport
Our first two nights were spent at the Carriage House Inn which was a lovely bed and breakfast just perfect for lounging around and going for walks by the beach. Also, the Carriage House Inn is well documented as being haunted (See pictures 6-8)! Supposedly there's at least two spirits there, but we didn't notice anything. The innkeeper was very nice though and we enjoyed our conversations with her during breakfast.

After leaving the Inn we spent the rest of the week in the Sea Breeze Cottage, a privately owned cottage that, due to early June technically still being off season in Maine, was both gorgeous and affordable. Pictured on the right is Jenny walking up to our cottage. As I took the picture I was standing on the steps leading to our very own private beach! We had everything we could ever want! The cottage was beautiful and located close to downtown Searsport. We could walk to the grocery store and restaurants downtown and enjoy exploring the small, but interesting town.

Jenny was excited to eat the meal I cooked for her!

Speaking of walking to the grocery store, one of the nicest things about having our own private cottage was being able to cook food for each other. Both Jenny and I enjoy cooking and are pretty good at it. We cooked all sorts of tasty food while we relaxed and enjoyed the cottage.

One of the most exciting things we did during our honeymoon in Searsport was rent a couple of kayaks and kayak four miles out to Sears Island. We landed next to a jetty where we ate our lunch before walking inland for a while. At this point I need to pause and point out one of the many reasons why I married Jenny: while we walked inland we discussed time travel in depth and argued several different theories of time travel. It was invigorating and awesome. Yeah, I kind of like my wife.

Jenny standing on the jetty on Sears Island
Jenny and I really enjoy kayaking and, though eight miles was a lot (four there, four back) we really enjoyed ourselves. I had only been kayaking once before, and that was on a lake, not the ocean. The waves made things more exciting, by which I mean I was freaking out for the first couple minutes thinking Jenny and I were going to die. Once I got into it I really started enjoying myself, though. I have always loved riding my bike, and kayaking is like biking on water. It's fast, it's fun. Man, I want a kayak.

Anyway, I never did explain how Jenny and I are having a month long honeymoon. I am writing this from my new man cave/laundry room where I set up my computer in Fillmore, New York where Jenny and I are house sitting until late July. As two unemployed newlyweds this house sitting is essentially just more honeymoon. I must confess I am quite happy about that. Well, my wife awaits so I must be going now. Thank you for reading and hopefully I'll write more soon!

Monday, February 13, 2012

Death, Grades, and Callous Frustrations

I'm finding it hard to focus today. Not only do I have to write out an article for the Star, Houghton's student newspaper, I also have to write a relatively long and boring paper for experimental methods. Both of these are due tomorrow and I'm just not in the mood for writing either of them. I'm nervous and distracted.

My grandmother was hospitalized the other day with some unexplained internal bleeding. It goes without saying that this isn't exactly an ideal situation. My grandmother is quite old, in her 80s, and my grandfather died about two years ago. Basically, it's just not something I want to go through again right now.

Here's the biggest problem. I'm pretty sure this is the kind of thing that pisses people off and alienates family but I'm just going to say it. I am extremely callous about death. I take a very Kurt Vonnegut, Slaughterhouse-Five , approach to death. So it goes. Death happens. Get over it. From a fairly young age most people realize they are mortal and, to me, I don't understand how death doesn't become an acceptable part of life at that point. I haven't had an unusually large amount of death in my life, yet I've always been very accepting of it. It's not even a faith thing with me. I don't accept death because it's "going to be with God" or being "promoted to glory." I'm okay with death because this is what happens. This is what has happened for all time and this is what will happen to myself and every single person I ever meet, know, or love. I don't fear or mourn death because it can't be avoided. Death is an intrinsically natural part of life.

"So," you might say, "why is this a bad thing? This gives you an advantage when a family member dies. Death holds no sting for you, you lucky punk." That is true to an extent. I like the fact that I'm okay with death. I like the fact that I can accept something that is so natural, yet so devastating to most people. But it is a problem when everybody around me is different. Nobody else is callous about death, and I can't understand why. It's just outside the realm of my experience.

When my grandfather died I didn't want to go to the funeral. It was inconvenient. The funeral was taking place during finals week in the spring of my sophomore year. Also, I personally felt no need to mourn, or "say goodbye," or anything like that. But my dad wanted me to be there and, though death doesn't make sense to me, I love my Dad and if my presence could help him it was worth the sacrifice (Though it was a sacrifice. I ended up with a 2.0 that semester because I nearly failed all my finals). Jenny, my fiance, came with me. That helped. I needed her to be there to remind me to act sad and be caring and attempt to be sympathetic. Also, I kept falling asleep during the funeral and Jenny dutifully woke me up every time so that my cousins, several of whom were crying, would not notice.

So, I guess that's why I'm nervous and having trouble focusing. It's hard to focus on academia knowing that tomorrow I might receive a phone call saying that my grandmother is dead and I am expected, needed, to drop everything and do some sort of duty. Especially after the academic debacle that was the result of the last grandparent death I'm really not looking forward to dealing with this again. Terrible, callous, inhuman jerk that I am I would just like the dying to be put off until it can be made convenient for me. Not now. Not during my final semester as I am finishing up two majors. I do not have the time. I do not have the energy. I do not have the skill or the knowledge to deal with a family coming to terms with loss, especially when I came to terms with the loss years before it happened.

That's my predicament. I will now spend the rest of the night, possibly pulling an all-nighter (though I would rather not. My right eyebrow is twitching as I write this. That's not healthy), writing and being miserable and nervous about what the future holds. Awesome.

Well, there you go. Whining ago. I should change the name of my blog to "The Whinings of Chris" to more accurately reflect the content. Despite the fact that I may be offending people, particularly my family (I'm going for the family black sheep/outcast position. Can you tell?), by admitting that I fell asleep during my grandfather's funeral and that I don't personally care or feel disturbed about the possible upcoming death of my grandmother it feels good to get it out there. I don't understand why death upsets people, but I do understand how my not caring about something they do care about could upset them. So, I guess I apologize if I hurt or offended anyone.

Anyway, I should probably stop rambling now. I have nothing more to say. Ramble, ramble, ramble...done.

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Winter is Senioritis Season

It's been well over two weeks since I've blogged.

Life drags on in college. I have a schedule written out in Google Calender which, despite playing fast and loose with some parts, is still extraordinarily repetitive. Maybe this is what some would call "senioritis" but I am just so tired of it all. I have a paper due on Tuesday just like I have had papers due on Tuesdays for almost four years now. I know that it is three months to graduation, three months until I never have to spend a day in academia again, but the whole "just hold on, it will be worth it in the end" argument is so desperately unfulfilling. Possibly the most unfulfilling aspect of that particular argument is the uncertainty of the future. Yes, I am struggling through four years of college and graduating with two degrees--both writing, my passion, and psychology, my hobby and "practical," job potential creating degree--for my future. The problem is that, though my college education is for my future, there is no promise of this education actually being worthwhile for anyone other than myself.

I am happy for the things I have learned in my time at Houghton. I love the way my writing has been challenged and improved. I am fascinated by what I have learned in psychology. But, on June 9th I get married and no amount of skilled writing or fascination with psychology will feed my wife. Well, it would if my writing could sell or somebody was interested in hiring someone without a masters in psychology. I guess it's just hard to go on doing schoolwork that makes me miserable when the only good I see coming out of it is a piece of paper.

So why am I writing yet another whiny blog post? Well, I'm a whiny person. Also, I was watching House today and episode 15 in season 6 ("Private Lives") is about a blogger who, like I used to, blogs about everything. I used to blog about every thought and every feeling. All my thoughts and concerns were public and out there and just not bottled up in my mind. It's a weird thing to do, but it helped me a lot. So I guess I, once again, have decided that blogging is good for me and I should make it a part of my life again.

To top it all off I just don't like winter. This is a terrible time of year. I can't walk to class without my skin stinging. I rarely see the sun. Seeing Jenny becomes an ordeal. I can't open my windows. I can't smell grass, or dirt, or trees, or anything. In the spring everything is green and brown and strongly scented with the smell of life. In the summer everything is warm and bright and you move until you lie down to let the sweat dry. In the fall the air is nippy and crisp and there is a rich decaying smell in the leaves. Winter is death. There is a layer of scentless, lifeless snow covering hard ground. And that's it. It's all dead. I'm sick of it. I'm sick of death. Sick of emptiness.

So, that, in essence, is why I don't want to write my paper. If only writing whiny blog posts could convince professors to let me off the hook. I'm going to go cook myself some lunch now and try to be productive.

Friday, January 27, 2012

Driving Me Crazy

Hi, I'm a 22 year old man without my driver's license. I know, I know. Shocking, right? What kind of man am I, what kind of human even, to not have gone through the essential rite of passage like the rest of the world? That seems to be the attitude in America at least. Throughout high-school I lived in Estonia so I couldn't really get an American license and it would have been a huge pain to get an Estonian one. For the first two years of college my parents still lived in Estonia so, despite being in America, what state would I get my license in? Plus, Houghton is in the middle of nowhere so it's not like I can just hitch a ride to the local DMV. But now I am months away from graduation and marriage and, unfortunately in my eyes, I must get my license. Jenny, my fiance, doesn't have her license either and one of us has to do the driving to get to the honeymoon.

All that to say I got my permit and I've been practicing. Ideally I'll be getting my license in April so I need to get used to driving now. It's not that I don't know how to drive, I just need the hours to make it second nature. The biggest problem facing me right now is that driving terrifies me. My heart races the second I go over 45 MPH or I see the headlights of another car coming towards me. I know that I am most likely pretty safe. I mean, I am a very cautious driver, and I assume the other drivers on the road don't want to die either. I just can't drive without a huge adrenaline rush. Yes, it's a thrill. I do enjoy the adrenaline rush. But it's also scary.

I think there's a reason why it's a good idea for people to get their license when they're 16. When you're a teenager you're rash and stupid and believe you're invincible. When you're 16 you're unafraid. Now I am 22 and I have a fiance and a lot of future to live for. Ugh. I guess I'm just a scared old man now. Oh well.

I would apologize again for not blogging consistently but I know if I do that every time I don't blog consistently I'll probably have a long, annoying apology every post. That said, sorry. I just blogged.

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Back Again

Well, I haven't blogged since last Thursday. I'm doing pretty badly at this whole "every day" thing. My personal word count for the day is already nearly at 5000 just from homework and I still have to write an article for The Star, Houghton's student newspaper. Basically I've been too whiny and busy to write.

But that is no excuse! I really want to get back to writing on here. Ugh. I have things to blog about and I will get back to this.

Just to throw something out there I can tell you a little bit of what I've been busy with. I am a supervisor at Phonathon. The Houghton Phonathon is, aside from the best job ever, a job where students call alumni, family, and friends of Houghton to raise support for student scholarships. Not only is this clearly a cause I can believe in, but has also been my job here at Houghton since, according to my blog, September 3rd of my first semester. That's almost four years! This past year I have been working as both a caller and a shift supervisor which has been one of the most enjoyable experiences of my life. I love working with the other callers and I love being a leader, at least in that setting. It's hard to explain, but I really enjoy my job. I'm good friends with my boss, Heather, and I like most of my coworkers. That's why I've been working extra lately. Phonathon just recruited nine new callers and they all need to be trained up and put to work. So I've been helping out with that. Other than classes  and homework regular work has been the big thing going on in my life lately.

So, lamest blog post ever. This reminds me why I stopped blogging in the first place. Life in college is so dreadfully mundane. It's a series of routines and boring school things. Ugh. I'll find something interesting to blog about for next time. But for now I must go. I have class at 6.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

My Badass Memoir? If You've Got to Write, Write Cocky

 
And that is how you make your own pretentious book cover! I actually turned that in as the cover of a 40 page memoir piece that I wrote for my Extended Narrative class last spring. That piece was surprisingly received quite well and, more importantly than that, was one of the most exhilarating and enjoyable writing experiences of my life. I mean, come on. I'm writing about the most interesting person I know--Me!

Not only did I write that memoir piece along with this very precocious cover but I also got my start as a writer right here on my Blog. Clearly I just love writing about myself. It's where I have the most experience, the most material, and what interests me most. I guess the reason I most enjoy writing about myself is that I don't understand myself at all. I am the most interesting character to write about merely because I would like to get to know that character.

Due to this insatiable desire to write my own story I have set out upon an ambitious senior writing workshop project: a 200 page memoir that, in my loftiest dreams, I could begin the process of attempting to publish straight out of college. Now, 200 pages may sound a little excessive for one course in one undergraduate semester but, well, I've always cocky. Why stop now? Plus, I mapped it all out. I already have 40 pages (though they are in need of loving revision) and I just need to write 40 pages every 3 weeks and I'll have it done 2 weeks before the end of the semester, the last 2 weeks of which will be spent on revision and polish and saying "OH MY GOD I JUST WROTE A LOT!"

The thing I like about the senior writing workshop is that we're not really being taught anything. Basically we're being told, "we spent 3 and half years teaching you to write--now do it!" We barely talked all of the two hour class today, but I did write 4 pages!This is what I needed. Just a chance to write my own thing. I'm really excited about my results. Just think, you, my loyal reader (I'm sure someone is there, otherwise who am I talking to? Myself?) could someday say you were reading the writings of the famous Chris Clark before he was even famous!