University of Richmond

Archive for September, 2008

Round 1 of Tests, nearly complete.

As the title suggests, I am almost finished with my first round of tests.  I received my first test back as well and I did pretty well on that. 

Otherwise (hey, I had to call this post something, right?), life is plodding along this week.  Saw a couple of movies this weekend that were pretty great and my circle of friends is doing pretty well too.

Now to the meat (ick) of this blog piece.  On Thursday, I got a very strong craving to be creative.  It happens occasionally and it’s dangerously persistent–the urge is almost how I imagine a crack addict craves his next hit.  Yes, before you ask (or wonder), I’m addicted to creativity (but there are worse things to be addicted to–see crack above–so I don’t think it’s dramatic or bad).  Just every once in a while I need to sit down and paint, draw, write, play my guitar, free talk, dream, something until the feeling leaves me.  Because it’s a purging of sorts, what comes out is usually garbage.  Luckily, though, I’ve developed my skill for pulling out the one priceless antique stranded among the decaying mass. 

So, er, back to my story.  On Thursday, the urge struck me while I was watching a bizarre movie called Ghost World starring Thora Birch (American Beauty), Steve Buscemi (Reservoir Dogs, Armageddon), and Scarlett Johansson (Match Point).  You have to be in a particular mood to watch the movie, but overall I liked its message.  And who doesn’t like Steve Buscemi–in anything?  Anyway, I digress again, I took out my journal (the paper-hardcover variety) and drew a strange creation that reminds me, abstractly, of myself and how I feel.  Though I still need to color parts of it, the overall effect is great.  So I decided to share.

me_drawn_sept_25_2008.jpg

 This concludes my wayward post and I hope you see now that the down-time in college is best filled with quirky constructive activities–at least I can share these with my friends too.

Create–anything,

Jordan

Quotes of the week:

“Thank goodness I was never sent to school; it would have rubbed off some of the originality.” - Beatrix Potter

“It is better to have enough ideas for some of them to be wrong, than to be always right by having no ideas at all.” - Edward de Bono

“Creativity is the sudden cessation of stupidity.” - Edwin Land

“Human salvation lies in the hands of the creatively maladjusted.” - Martin Luther King Jr.

“The life of the creative man is lead, directed and controlled by boredom. Avoiding boredom is one of our most important purposes.” - Saul Steinberg

The in-betweens

Class and college go hand in hand–and usually they’re fun.  Usually.  You get up (maybe some time mid-morning if you’re like most of my friends), get some food, go to rooms where lectures are spoken (as if they were trying to teach you something–who would’ve thought?), and then you find yourself in the in-betweens.  The in-betweens are exactly what they sound like–they’re the time you have when you’re done with your responsibilities for the day. 

What does the college student do with this excess time?  Homework (they do it but no), study (they do this too but not quite what I’m after), party (well, sure), work to make their dreams come true (yeah, if they have them).  Then there are the friends–the good ones, the real ones, the ones who smile when you’re embarrassed because they love the quality that embarrasses you.  Friends are the beat of a college day.  If classes are the heart of this educational experience, then friends are the beat, the energy, the power and support behind each moment of stress, fatigue, helplessness, forgetfulness and general disenchantment.  Your dedication, focus, commitment, and ambition come in handy too, but so do the people that get you through a long day of lectures, labs, and exams.  Gathering around that wobbly table in d-hall for a good meal and great laughs is just as important as making your eight-fifteen with a smile on your face.  And–the best part–they give you a little perspective.  All the drama we emphasize and exagerate is wiped away with a single telling grin, and the important things are met with sincere empathy.  A hug, a complement, a night eating Ben & Jerry’s ice cream in the Cellar, a dry joke–yeah, they make all the difference.

I’m writing now because this weekend is all about studying–I have two exams next week–and hangin’ out with friends.  I got plans, friends, to take over the world–somehow.  Hehe.  I’ll see you in the next in-between.

Be open people,

Jordan

key_through_window.jpg

Picture provided by Simon Pais Thomas

Quotes of the week:

“Its not easy being a man you know. I had to get dressed today… and there are other pressures.” - Dylan Moran

“The quickest way to a man’s heart is through his chest.” - Roseanne Barr

“Friendship is like peeing on yourself: everyone can see it, but only you get the warm feeling that it brings.” - Unknown

Reinvention

Can I give all of the prospective students+everybody else some healthy advice?  Don’t reinvent yourself when you start college.  Or, if you feel you must, then pick two or three big life-changing things to change and stick to those–but don’t even change those through reinvention.  Create a new existence for the self that already exists. 

My orientation week in first year was pretty regrettable.  Some of the girls in my orientation group (and even some of the guys) were trying so hard to make themselves seem like other people.  The problem–that’s too much work and not worth it.  In the end their little cliques broke up–some girls didn’t speak to each other again–and I was grateful that I had been my boring, strange self and survived the last eighteen years spiritually and emotionally and physically intact.  I’ve had a lot of experience being picked on, you see.   It wasn’t just poking fun–it was the insecure witch hunt of people who didn’t like that I was me and saw no reason to change to meet their expectations.  It was the permeating dislike that fell around the bubble that protects my Self in shards.  It was targeting everything they saw I’d cultivated for myself–to make my life better, if not more socially accepted.  So when I got to college, I was prepared to be ignored or roughly spoken about–especially since this isn’t the biggest campus (and gossip, unfortunately, does travel fast around here–but who cares that much to exchange insignificant information that way anyway?). 

I’ll admit there was some immediate separation–and by separation I mean between me and other people and probably some of that is my fault for being guarded.  Yet here I am three years later, well-adjusted, healthier than ever, with great friends (the bad ones have fallen away in due time), and looking forward to every day of my life because I don’t do anything that I know isn’t good for myself and my Self and won’t make me happier. 

One true pursuit in life is the pursuit of personal happiness (and if you think that’s a selfish way to spend your life just think about this–who is more likely to do something good and nice for someone else–the grouchy or the inwardly peaceful person?).  College is a time for creating yourself, so if you want to create a new happier self–one that better develops (but doesn’t replace) what is already You, then you’ll find your time in college well-spent and a great teacher.   

College is not, however, a time of reinvention.  Reinvention always seems so derived, so structured.  It is creation within an already defined system–a system which may or may not be conducive to true individual growth and expression.  It’s like saying, “Hey, I’ll rewrite my masterpiece because you say it’s crap.  I don’t know you, but if I rewrite it maybe you’ll want to know me.”  Wrong.  Just.Say.No.  You’ll never get along with everybody, but personality-clashing is a beautiful thing.  It’s not something to fear.  It’s something to put away and save for that moment in time when multiple perspectives will be useful and necessary for enlightenment.  You can, however, treat everyone well, wish them luck on their own journeys and go about yours.  Interaction will come and go, but if you don’t like who you’re alone with, then it’s really all for nothing, right?

Journey on,

Jordan

p.s. I saw two comedians perform on campus this weekend, both of whom were on Comedy Central:  Ted Alexandro and Louis C.K.

Ted Alexandro

Picture taken in association with Mike McIntyre, Cleveland.com

Louis C.K.

Louis CK

Picture courtesy of Just for Laughs.

Quotes of the week:

 ”You never change something by fighting the existing reality.  To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.” -Buckminster Fuller

“Your current safe boundaries were once unknown frontiers.” - Unknown

“The greatest revolution of our generation is the discovery that human beings, by changing the inner attitudes of their minds, can change the outer aspects of their lives.” - William James

“Creativity can solve almost any problem.  The creative act, the defeat of habit by originality, overcomes everything.” - George Lois

“Dare to be naive.” - Buckminster Fuller