Monday, December 5, 2011

Grad school, revisted

So, you know how at the beginning of the semester I was all "I love grad school it's the best."

Well, I still love grad school. But...things between us have changed.

I think these videos more accurately describe my relationship with grad school.



and


Grad school is quickly evolving into the unhealthiest relationship I've ever been in.

But it'll get better. We're just under a lot of stress right now. ok?



Monday, November 28, 2011

Also this

GO HERE.

AND this.



And yes, I am procrastinating.



Brace yourself

paper days are coming.

Paper days are like finals days. Except they happen 1-2 weeks before finals and all the English majors hate their lives.

No sleep. Lots of writing. No good food.

Eventually, all the papers are turned in and you are either asleep for 15 hours or barely cognizant but can't sleep because of the caffeine.

Which leads us to Jenna Marbles.

She is incredibly inappropriate and swears ( F bomb alert!). Don't watch this video if that is a problem for you.

I find her hilarious.

So- here you go. 

What caffeine does. As interpreted by Jenna Marbles.













Monday, November 14, 2011

This is why I do my thinking after the sun goes down

So. I just figured out a line of poetry that's been puzzling me for weeks.

"Would God I were a Sibell to divine / In worthy vearse your lasting happyness: / Then only I should be Characteres"

That last bit- I assumed that "Characteres" was just plural. (BTW-Characteres in this context is a kind of shorthand/cipher/code thing).

NO.

It is a title- Characteress. She wants to be a code writer. yay for non standardized spelling.

but IT FINALLY MAKES SENSE. And it fits in exactly with my argument.

YESSSSSSSS.

And now I feel super smart and awesome.

Here is the song that's been on repeat for the last hour. Its making me feel like a poetry-reading rock star.



That is all. Back to the grindstone. Thank you for listening.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

In which my tonsils try to kill me....again

So- remember a few months ago when I was hospitalized for a peritonsillar abscess? Icky, huh?

Well, these past week, I've been all headachey and fevery (up to 102.5. boo being so sweaty for no good reason) and body achey and fatiguey and swollen tonsiley.

Yeah....it's back. so-off I went to the miraculous feel-better man (aka the dr)

But a shot in the bum was necessary (bum shot? sounds lewd), 4 attempts at drawing blood (one in each elbow, one in the wrist and one on the back of the hand. OUCH) in order to test for Mono (which my dr always tests for "just in case" no matter what my symptoms--because apparently my Dr thinks I get around) and a gag-swab thingy to test for Strep (also "just in case"--although the strep is kinda legit since as a teenager I had it at least once a year).

An hour later, I left the doctor's office with a prescription for some seriously blue pills (antibiotics) and several more sore spots.

THANK GOODNESS for modern medicine (yay penicillin!) and government insurance. Now I'm almost all better.

But- if my tonsils are reading this blog post--

I WILL CUT YOU.



Remember what happened to Allie's tooth? Yeah- I'm gonna do that to you. Except I won't put a happy semi-Stepford Wife face on you when it's done. Because you'll be gone. Dead. 

You just wait until December. You are now my number one mortal enemy. 

On a completely random note. Here is a picture I found on the internet. I can find no explanation for it. 

So here you go- JGL in thigh-highs and garters. 







Friday, October 21, 2011

In the end, I win


Dear incredibly loud and high-pitched road construction going on outside my window,

Tonight I will beat you.

I bought a 4 pack of industrial earplugs. I'm using the whole pack.

My bed is now covered in piles of clothing. Nestled amongst all the fabric, I won't feel the vibrations of whatever you are doing out there.

One word: Nyquil.

Check mate.

with enough disdain to leave you cold in July,

Emily

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Crap

Ok, so pt.2 of the bird incident is coming later this evening. Promise. First, I must share.

So, today I had WIM (Weekly Instructor Meeting). It's like an on-going teacher training thing. Drew, who is the Yoda to my Padawan, warned us about all the germs on the papers we grade. He's all "use hand sanitizer and don't touch your nose or eyes while you grade."

Well, just now, I pulled out the last few papers I have to grade. Plopped then down on my desk, pulled out a portfolio, started reading a paper and almost immediately TOUCHED MY NOSE.

Great. Now I'm going to get ebola AIDS. Of course. As if grad school wasn't hard enough.

Going to Smith's RIGHT NOW to purchase hand sanitizer.

P.S. I'm sorry if you went to that link and you've never been there before. You've effectively said good-bye to any productivity this evening.

Update: Purchased said sanitizer. Used it. I didn't realize I had so many paper cuts :/

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

The Bird pt. 1

The other day I had a non-graduate school related adventure.

There was a bird in my room. A ninja bird.

How did this happen, you say? Well, everyday when I get home, I open up one of the many windows in my room. This particular day, I opened one that was right next to a tree. A tree with a flock of ninja birds. "Oh cool," I thought, "birdsong."

Unbeknownst to me, the screen in that particular window was out. I was open to attack and I didn't even know it.

I went about my "just got home" routine, unpacking my bag, picking up the clothes from that morning's "I have nothing to wear so let's try on 10 outfits only to decide on the first one" ceremony, changing into sweats, popping open my pre-homework DrP. You know, normal stuff.

Then I hear it. CHirrrp tweet. But it wasn't coming from outside.

It was right.behind.me.

I turn, and there it is, bloodlust in its eyes, a ninja bird.


See the bloodlust? SEE IT?!


At the time I didn't know it was a ninja bird. It just looked like an everyday sparrow, small and brown.
No big deal. So, to encourage it to leave on its own, I opened up all the other windows and popped their screens out. Maybe he'll just fly out.

Boy, was I wrong. That bird was out for blood. My blood.  And wasn't leaving until he got it.

To be continued...


Sunday, September 18, 2011

Grad school, thus far

So.  I've been a grad student about 3 weeks and I haven't died yet (emphasis on yet).  I love my 150 students (btdubs I teach freshman writing and my class is so incredibly adorable. and smart. omgoodness are they smart). I love my classes (especially my two seminars--Scottish Enlightenments and Women in the English Renaissance. although I may or may not already be a little behind in the reading. eepp.)

Never been so excited for each day, or so exhausted at the end of each and every one.

There's so.much. to the grad program that I love. 

The carrels--where conversations range from pretentious theory discussions to Blake's use of children (sounds lewd) to who would win if we had grad student death matches (my money is with the MFAs-they're scrappy). 

New friends (and their adorable children, if that applies). SO MANY AWESOME PEOPLE. 

There's also the fact that I'm now part of community that appreciates Dr. Pepper and caffeine in general. The recycle bin is full of cans of caffeinated beverages--and not all of them are mine! Happy day! I have found kindred spirits. 

I'm also not the only who calls professors by their first names anymore. 

Also- FREAKING FREE FOOD. So much free food. these past few weeks, I've gotten *at least* two free meals a week. this week I've had 3. yesssssss

And even when I have to pay for food--I have cool new people to eat it with (there are two set dinner dates every week--on Tuesdays between classes and on  Friday, as a celebration of having lived thru the week).

I love my life. 

These past few weeks have been incredibly validating. This is where I'm supposed to be (whatever that means). And I am definitely going to be applying for PhD programs. This (academia) is really something I want to do. Even if I can't find a job--I want this experience.

I'm sorry I don't have pictures of fun times. My camera is being funny and it needs to be fixed. So here's a picture of Michael Fassbender


You're welcome. 

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Every day I'm shufflin'

I am addicted to my Ipod shuffle. Love love love. Cannot function without it. When I walk, study, prep for class. If I'm not actively engaging with someone, I've got those little earbuds in, possibly damaging my hearing.

Here's a snapshot of what I've got on there today:

Lady Gaga discography (of course)
Carbon Leaf collection (something like 8 albums)
the Biebster
Lil'Jon
Garth Brooks
Les Miserables (20th anniversary London cast)
ABBA
Girl Talk
Beatles' White Album, Sgt Peppers
Cali Swag District
Panic! at the Disco
Queen
Big and Rich
Black Sabbath
Smashmouth
Nicki Minaj
Beirut
Mumford and Sons
ACDC
Ke$ha
Herman's Hermits
LMFAO
several other random (and sometimes unidentifiable) artists and songs

I'm so mainstream. What's the opposite of a hipster? That's what I am. 

Some day, I hope to own headphones with a built-in subwoofer.







Monday, April 18, 2011

Weddings make me cry. every time.

Sooooo. It's finals. I'm up all night writing a paper and I need a break. Not really news.

BUT I went home this weekend for my brother Benn's wedding to Amanda (yay new SIL). It was fab.

The weather was fantastic. 70's and sunny (except for one night when there was a thunderstorm. yes. thunderstorm) perfect. and green green green.

My family was all there! I got to see everybody all at once! And all the kids! YES! AND MY DOG! IT WAS GREAT!

(ps all of those exclamation points are merited. every. single. one. even though now I've used up all the exclamations points for the rest of the year)

So, basically, I spent two and a half days sleeping, eating, playing with dogs and playing with kids and babies. And wedding stuff.

We also went to the Atlanta Temple open house. Cool. So glad my brother Benn was there to explain things a little better than the ushers did.

The result of temple+kids+family+wedding+catching bouquet at said wedding... I really want to get married now. Right now. Marriage, family, babies. Want them. Want them now.

This may be the combined result of stress from finals and being so emotionally pumped these last few days. But maybe not.

Maybe its the realization that I'm 23, and about to graduate BYU unmarried. Which I'm proud of. But I see tons of my friends married, getting married and having babies. Both of the men I seriously considered marrying are now married. Today I found out one of them has a baby. Whoa. I feel like I'm missing out on something here. Something good.

This is strange. For almost two years now (in fact, since I broke up with the guy that now has a baby) I haven't really felt like I should be making marriage a priority. Marriage? Not right now, thanks. I'm going to grad school. I'm too busy.

I feel like I'm having some kind of early-life crisis.

But before any of this can happen, I need to find myself a man. *sigh* Easier said than done.

But first, the last paper of my undergraduate career.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Finals go-round

So....it's that time again. Finals! But this is the last finals week of my undergrad. WOOOHOOOO.

This is also probably one of the more complicated finals yet, and not because of the finals themselves.

Between now and this Friday, I have two 8-page research papers. Two finals. No biggie. Late nights, but it'll all work out.

Then, 8am on Friday, I fly back to GA for my brother's wedding on Saturday.

I get back to Happy Valley late Sunday night.

Monday morning, I have work and a final that afternoon. Tuesday morning, my last final and a writing portfolio.

Wednesday morning, I fly to San Antonio, TX for a lit. conference. I'm presenting on Pride and Prejudice and Zombies early Thursday morning. At some point between now and then, I need to revise that paper... I'll be in Texas until Saturday. I'll miss my own graduation, but the experience is more valuable.

I think I'll travel more in the next two weeks than I have in the last year.

Sometime in there, I have cleaning checks.

THEN I WILL BE DONE!

Sorta.

I still need to find a job for Spring term and I have a ton of research stuff to do before going to London and the Lake District.

*sigh* here I go.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Sunday School: Burdens

So, yesterday in Sunday school we had this random lesson about burdens/trials/etc. The teacher (who, bless his heart, blushed so red he was nearly purple) started out with asking the class why we have burdens.

The class came up with two answers:

1. Burdens are the consequences of sin.

2. God gives you burdens to test you.

These are all well and good, but if all burdens are the result of one of these two, boy are we in trouble.

If all burdens and trials came from sin or from God, then we have no way to account for actual catastrophes.

Let me demonstrate with the expected example: the Holocaust. OK, nobody would ever say that the Holocaust was the consequence of sin. However, saying that God gave that trial to the men, women, and children in the concentration camps and those who only made it as far as the gas chambers, or the ghettos, etc, because He wanted to test them is just as problematic. What kind of God tests people like that? Or the rape of a child (or rape in general)? How is that a test for that child? What kind of God does that to His children?

If you believe in the above reasons for burdens/trials/etc, then you are probably at a loss to explain such things, to come to terms with real catastrophe. And that is exactly my point. Either you hate yourself for bringing it upon you, or you hate God for doing it to you. Neither one helps.

Now, I think we need to add three more possibilities to this list. First, that sometimes burdens are the consequences of other's actions. With this comes the understanding that God values our agency very very highly. So much so that He would rather let bad things happen then interfere. Second, sometimes burdens are simply consequences, of good AND bad decisions. Yes, sometimes good decisions come with trials. And third, that sometimes shit happens. Sometimes you go through a rough time or bad things happen to you (and others) because that's life.

And all of this would be most helpful if it comes with the idea that life isn't about what happens to you, or why it happened, but what you do with it.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Newsletter Sturff: How to Pay Attend in Sacrament Meeting

Oh, sacrament meeting. It supplies both the heights of spiritual revelation and ecstasy as well as the troughs of abject boredom. Unfortunately, it seems like those troughs are endless. The 30-45 minutes of talks just drag on. So, my associates (Chloe and Michelle) and myself thought of something during a particularly heinous (testimony? perhaps) meeting.

We call it:

The Sacrament Drinking Game.

Possible Rules:

Any time someone opens with “I’m so nervous,” take a shot. Nothing builds ethos like admitting inadequacy.

If someone opens their talk with a definition from the dictionary, take another shot. Because I haven’t heard that particular definition for “faith.”

"...and I love my roommates"= take another shot. If person is also crying, take two shots.

Mission story only peripherally related to the topic- another shot. Examples should demonstrate a point, if you please.

If the person giving the talk just stares at their notes the. whole. time., then you get to take another shot. Because apparently they missed the HS science class on sound waves and how they travel in a straight line, meaning you can't really hear them monotonously read their paper verbatim.

"...every fiber of my being" means you get to take a shot! This useless and empty phrase just makes me think of yarn people. Find a new way to say "I felt very strongly about such-and-such."

Any reference to C.S. Lewis, the 13th member of the Quorum of the Twelve, gets a shot.

Also any doctrinal point given from Elder A. General Authority gets a shot. Actually, any unreferenced point of doctrine gets a shot. This means, if the giver of the talk is a particularly sloppy researcher, you may be taking many shots.

The use of the whole "the world does x, so by implication we do not" dichotomy (false dichotomy, I might add) merits a shot. Because the Mormon community is so perfect and the ways of the world are so entirely evil.

Anytime someone gives his or her testimony in his or her mission language, you get to take a shot. I appreciate that the talker went on a mission, learned a language, etc., but a testimony I can’t understand is not going to be terribly enlightening. The point of bearing testimony in public is to strengthen others. Giving it in a foreign language only gratifies your own vanity.

Atonement does not equal "at one ment." That's just a coincidence. So, every time someone says that, or alludes to how useful it is to think of the Atonement that way, you get to take a shot. Go you.

For every talk that goes over time, you get a shot for every 5 minutes over. Because really, when the time is up, the Spirit is gone.

And so on, and so forth. I’m sure you can think of more rules.

The point is to trick yourself into paying attention. As you listen for the ridiculous generic conventions of the standard Mormon talk, you will inevitably pick up those rare gems, the ones that not only cast light on doctrine, but change your perspective on them by coloring them anew. Of course, depending on what you are drinking, you may lose track of the meeting altogether, which may or may not be a bad thing, depending on who is talking.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

When in doubt, eat bacon

So, while some make salads and do their best not to die, I make food that involves bacon.

Lots and lots of bacon.

Take, for example, my dinner for the past two nights. I call it "Heart Attack in a Bowl" (A spin-off of my favorite Heart Attack Sandwich)

All good things start with bacon. So, fry up as many slices of bacon as you feel morally obligated to eat in one sitting.

In the mean time...

Get some mashed potatoes. Put them in a bowl, heat them up. Add butter to taste (Paula Deen style), rosemary and tarragon.

Place bacon on top of mashed potatoes, sprinkle liberally with parmesan cheese.

DONE. ENJOY.

I also want to try this sometime. Oh yeah.

Also- if you are curious, the Heart Attack Sandwich is: two slices of bread, toasted and buttered, plus two eggs, scrambled with lots of cheese and herbs, and as many slices of bacon as you need. Oh yeah. Good for what ails ya.

Basically, Bacon+Carb+Cheese=WIN

Monday, February 7, 2011

Something to post.

I wrote this a few weeks ago for my nonfiction class. Thought I'd share. Its a first draft and kind of long, but I felt like I should put something up. Here you go.

Midnight Trains

There’s something comforting about the sound of a freight train at night. I’m not sure what it is, or if that was a sound I grew up with—honestly, I can’t remember if there’s train tracks within hearing distance of the house I spent the first 18 years of my life. But in Provo, UT, where the nights are calm and thick, hearing the hollow hoot of a distant train whistle always triggers a deep breath, an exhale that isn’t forced that clears enough space for all the worry lines to smooth and straighten. I’m not sure at what point this started, but it seems that trains have always called to me, a friend in the distant dark.

And in the dark is when you need friends the most, especially when it is cold. For some reason the air temperature decides the feel of a night beyond my comfort level. Warm, slightly breezy summer nights are friendly, time to fraternize and bathe in the thickness of the warm starlight. Some of my most remembered times where carefully watched by summer moons, in the humid woods and fields around my parent’s house in Georgia or on the so-clean-you-could-eat-off-them sidewalks in and around BYU. Perhaps it is these associations that open a smile on my face when I enter a night like that, breathing it in like a favorite perfume. Or perhaps it is just the fact that the balminess of such nights enables calf-like cavorting that I love them.

But cold nights are thin, acerbic, like the after smell of vinegar. Those nights slice right through and make me feel very small, despite the layers and layers of clothes that I wear to shield me from the cold. The stars blink less, staring long and hard at my singular figure huddled and shuffling home. The night is cold, not only temperature-wise, but also in as many other ways as I can think. In the same places, back home where me and my family used to lay out on the lawn, looking for shooting stars, or in Provo where I used to roll in the snow like a dog with other snow-deprived Southerners, even where good things happen, the cold nights still stand still, watching in unfriendly silence. So I guess it’s not just that good things happen that I love summer nights, its something else. Something not as foolish as inherency and not as childlike as the boogie man, but something. I can’t quite put my finger on it. Perhaps it is the boogieman.

To this day, a day that finds me all of twenty-three years old, I’m afraid of the dark. What was once the boogieman has morphed into the burglar/rapist/creeper in a dark hoodie (hood up of course). I check and double-check the deadbolt every night. I have to touch it to be sure. Vertical means unlocked, horizontal is safe. If I haven’t checked, I’ll lie in bed unable to sleep. If I do fall asleep, I have dreams inspired by too many episodes of Criminal Minds. If I happen to be alone at night (not often with 5 other roommates), as soon as lights go out, I dash to my bed, entirely under the covers, where I pant between the increasingly warm and stifling sheets. Cause monsters can’t get you if you’re completely under the covers. Back home, where the darkness swallows up light in a tangle of loblolly pine and sweet gum branches, I don’t like walking the dogs at night. It’s always been my younger but certainly not littler brother’s job. If I have to, say a dog is sick, I stick to the front yard, within the reach of the porch light. Then we run back to the house, and I close the door behind me a little too fast and hide the panting in unhooking the leash, in taking off shoes.

It is night now, as I type this, not wearing shoes as I wiggle my toes against the STD-brown couch. I can never quite manage to write anything during the day, at least anything worth keeping. It is if all the best and brightest ideas need the foil of night to sparkle enough that I notice them. They creep from the corners of my mind, enticed by the glow of my laptop and worrisome amounts of caffeine, spurting onto the page. During the day, when there are lectures to attend, readings to read, papers to evaluate, and email to check. At night, when my ever-entertaining friends are gone, and my roommates have responsibly gone to bed, I can sit down and finally be productive. Without all that light taking up all the room, there is finally enough space to think, to breathe.

So, it is nights like these, cold and unfriendly, that I’m up, all alone, typing away, with Justin Bieber on loop and milk in a mason jar next to the ever-present Dr.Pepper. But I’m still up, while most people sleep right through, never knowing that the stars are staring at them, that there is a train in Provo that huff-puffs on its way somewhere else.

Seems strange, doesn’t it, that someone like me, who is still afraid of the dark, would sit up so long and alone in the dark? It is strange. No seeming about it. Just like it is strange that night can have bipolarly opposite personalities based on temperature. I’ve anthropomorphized natural occurrences to explain my own outlook, my own interpretations and worldview—that being warm is inherently good, cold inherently bad and that bad people and good ideas hide in the dark. Worldviews inherently tied up in contradictions that only tell a part of the whole, their convoluted shapes hiding the reality of the situation. Because as unfriendly as a cold winter nights may be, it is on those nights especially that I can best hear midnight trains in the distance.

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Newsletter Sturff.

So, sometimes, I write for my ward's newsletter. Cause I'm a G.

Here's what I wrote for tomorrow:

"The Best Place in the World (and no- it isn’t your mission)

I was going to write something snarky about winter. But winter is dumb and who wants to read about something really dumb. No one. That’s who.

Instead, I’m going to talk about my roommates. Because my roommates are awesome and you know who wants to read about them? You do. That’s who.

And if you don’t want to read about my roommates, well you can just trot over to the Spiritual Thought section. Which will remind you of Jesus and how much Jesus loves my roommates. Like I was saying…

My roommates live in XXXX. Which is convenient because that’s where I live. And here they are:

A. Poli Sci major and dancing machine. She is always in a cardigan and always really nerdy. Always. Which helps make her fantastic.

C. Red-headed English major. She likes jumping off bridges and wrestling with M. Meows. Called many things. But mostly they call her Marvelous C.

K. Bootylicious broadcasting major. Likes penguins. She is also a neat freak. Which is good cause it keeps our apt. clean. She’s wonderful like that.

M. Challenge her to a basketball game. You will lose. Likes to pick on the small ones and read history stuff. M is just splendid.

S. aka “Little Bit,” even though K is technically smaller. She works at the BYU gym thingy place. She likes to text. But once you get her talking she is snarky and that’s just superb.

And then there’s me, E.

Yes, that’s all you’re getting on me. Suckas.

So. We play Monster Pong. We wrestle (actually, just C and M). We play Quarters (also with Monster). Our Quote Board would make a sailor blush—but only cause he’s laughing so hard he can’t breathe. We probably won’t come visit you, but you should come visit us. And you know you need to come watch Criminal Minds with us before you die (M-F, 9-11). Because we rock. Hardcore."

You wish you were in my ward so you could read this and see the awesome pictures that go with it. Yeah.