University of Richmond

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Feeling “Georgia on My Mind” in the last weeks of school

Last night, the UR jazz ensemble performed what I think was their end of the semester concert.  They prepared jazz-fused versions of famous hits from the 1930s to the 1980s.  Inspired by the 25th anniversary of Michael Jackson’s “Thriller,” they started with Benny Goodman’s “Sing, Sing, Sing,” passed through Mick Jagger and the Rolling Stones, Jimi Hendrix, Paul McCartney, Earth Wind & Fire and ended with the music video for “Thriller.”  What I most enjoyed, though, was the archive footage of Ray Charles performing, “Georgia On My Mind,” which is possibly one of the greatest songs of all time.  Charles’s voice is like hot melted butter sizzling on my brain.  It’s so smooth, the whole thing plays on a two-second time delay in my mind.  I have to give it enough space to really shock me, which it does every time I hear it.

 Especially now as the semester winds down, I use music to sooth me in the quiet hours moments when I’m not running from one place to another getting something done.  Sometimes in college, you’re so busy working on a thousand different things that when you stop, pause, breathe, you forget to just enjoy the breath and find the next thing to do instead.  You can’t quite bring yourself to embrace the stillness, which is invaluable at college.  Instead of making the seemingly long leap from work chaos to stillness in the space of five moments, I listen to a song that moves me.  Then I stop thinking long enough to hear the universe singing to me.

Lately, or most recently, I’ve been listening to the haunting sounds off the ”Hole in the Paper Sky” soundtrack, which doesn’t have any lyrics.  The short film is something I most likely will never see (because it’s about animal experimentation and I’ve done enough assignments and research on it and seen enough horrific videos that I don’t even take Tylenol anymore unless it’s absolutely necessary) but the music possesses that gentle knowing quality that makes a movie like this sound great.  I’ve also been listening to “Io” by Helen Stellar, which has to be one of the simplest songs after “Funk Soul Brother” by Fat Boy Slim, but is much more intriguing.

It’s odd to think of the things we’ll never do–as in, “I will not watch ‘Hole in the Paper Sky.’  When you’re my age, you don’t question whether you can do something.  We don’t question anything, or, more exactly, we ask, “Why not?”  Sometimes this has disastrous consequences, but it’s also very freeing.  The padded cell of adulthood can’t contain that question–the question is the key to evaluation, revelation, and liberation. When you’ve passed the stage of invulnerability, the question mutates into “Who’s stopping me?” (which leads often to degeneration, as in the case of animal experimentation, adultery, war and a lot of other bad and good things, because you forget to ask whether you should)

Three weeks left, and I have about fifteen papers/articles/scripts/journals to write before I’m done.  But you know, the beauty this semester gave me makes the work I have left look so insignificant.  I will push on and in a few days, I won’t have as much to do.  It’s all a part of the college experience.  You’ll get it everywhere and some of you will listen to “Georgia on my mind” with the lost reflection that you may have made a mistake coming here, but deep down in the part of you that’s really internalizing the music, some of you will know that this is exactly where you should be. 

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Photo courtesy of http://www.yoursearchadvisor.com/blog/category/sem-industry

 Hole in the Paper Sky,

Jordan

Quote of the Week:

“ This time around, x 4

You can be anyone,
This time around,
This love of ours,

This time around, x2

You can be anyone, x4″

- “Io” - Helen Stellar

That’s all it takes to create a great song.


 

Stepping Stones

When is ‘this much’ too much?  College is the stepping stone.  We work here until we work ‘out there’ in the wide world of mortgages, car payments, and taxes.  One stone across a big river, flowing past at a million miles per second, and if you step off, you’ll never get hold of the rocks again.  That’s why, they (who’s they?) say, you have to push on until you get your dream–the job, the car, the prestige.  Curious, isn’t it, that “your dream” has lost its romantic intention by the time you reach twenty.  Then, sometimes you have to place yourself at risk for a heart attack at thirty to maintain that dream.  But it’s better in the long-run, they say. 

Last week, there was a story in the Collegian speaking about a 24-year-old alumnus who died in February.  He had a good life, a happy life, his friends and family said.  He loved music and animals and worked for the Bon Secours Richmond Health System as a reimbursement analyst in Fiscal Services. 

(transition missing - maybe there should be one)

Billy Joel was the one who coined the phrase, “Only the good die young,” back in 1977 and it was a part of a song about a young guy trying to convince a Catholic girl to sleep with him.  I’m not advocating that message and I also don’t believe that only good people die in their twenties.  There are plenty of mean ______ (you can fill the space yourself) that die young.  The point, though, is that some get it right.  Those I ask tell me the balance between play and work helps them feel like they’re living fulfilling lives.  Most of those individuals also do something they admire; they find jobs that are surprisingly enjoyable after years of block education.  We block subjects into subjects for a reason–science, business, English; they are general enough to cover exceptions, fusions, and oddities that fit into no category.  So, for example, while some feel extreme pressure trying to study for and find pleasure attending “Intro to All of Morality” (note: this is not a real class) when they want to specialize in “organized religion and its scandals” (note: also not a class, but that sounds much more interesting), they can look forward to finding a job that is more particular and peculiar and adapts to their tastes.

 I guess if there is a message in this post it would be that if you (the prospective student) are worried about learning around the job you really want, you’ll breach the gap yourself eventually.  And letting go of the pebble will not send you toward wild rapids that separate you irreparably from the “only rock crossing” in the stream.  The creek is full of stones, even if in this economy the water seems to be submerging the stones faster than you can cross.  Use the water to rejuvenate yourself and then find a new rock.  (Optimism is good for you, especially in the darkest, deepest water.)

 Get wet,

Jordan

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Okay, I’m going to share this with you.  This is me, watching the Oscars last Sunday night.  I didn’t know I was being filmed, but it’s the little things that give you pleasure.  Enjoy…you already know I’m odd so at least I warned the rest of you.  hehe.

Quotes of the week:

“Nobody can go back and start a new beginning, but anyone can start today and make a new ending.” - Maria Robinson

“If you realized how powerful your thoughts are, you would never think a negative thought.” - Peace Pilgrim

“Optimist: Day-dreamer more elegantly spelled.” - Mark Twain

Assignments

I cannot speak for everyone, but almost anything can make me happy.  “Almost” refers to rape, molestation, animal cruelty, death, etc.  Everything else probably can and does please me.  Bubbles, good movies, adventures, climbing trees, discovering a new color, traveling, holding a puppy, holding a kitten, seeing a sunrise, watching dolphins as they surf, writing a decent story, writing a decent screenplay, etc.  This week was amazing.  I can safely say that this has been the most enjoyable week of my entire Richmond career and, though I may be biased, I feel a peace now that was not present in my life four months ago.  I am taking four journalism courses, my MCAT prep course, a class on Lincoln, and Basics in Acting.  Every one is more spectacular than the last.  In the course of two acting classes, I recaptured my youth playing childhood games.  In documentary journalism, I watched an amazing documentary called Crimes Against Nature.  In the others, I am learning how to be a journalist–and trying to avoid using adverbs. 

In other news, I am working with the Collegian to post video entries on the Collegian website:  www.thecollegianur.com.  Check it out, keep in touch with UR.  I received my first assignment tonight.  Well, two, actually.  The first will involve the university’s celebration of the football team’s victory at the NCAA national championship; the second, a crossword puzzle.

I have every intention of having an amazing semester and positive thinking should improve my odds.  Optimism willing I will learn and grow exponentially.  New experiences will find me and I will embrace them. 

You’re on the journey with me,

Jordan

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Eerie-eyed deer

manatee.jpg

this might not look like much but it’s the back of a manatee.

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This is an American Alligator…ooohh!

Quote of the week:

“It’s true that we don’t know what we’ve got until we lose it, but it’s also true that we don’t know what we’ve been missing until it arrives. ” - Anonymous

“Flying is learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.” - Douglas Adams