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September 26, 2004
Day Sixty-Eight
Four days until I go home, and even though I hate where I am now, I'm almost dreading it. I have too many expectations on me and not enough time. I've already committed most of my time to my friends. And I do want to spend that time with them. But I also really need some quality time with my parents. I'm afraid that I'll be leaving and won't have reconnected the way I feel I need to.

I was choked up a couple times today. What set it off was thinking about going apple-picking with my folks. I was thinking about whether I could squeeze it in on Saturday before I go out with the guys, and I realized that I would never get to casually do all of those little annual things I love to do with my folks. This, coupled with a fucking devastating turn in House of Sand and Fog, set me back into that despairing spiral. I tried calling my parents before dinner, no one was home. I choked my way through a turkey sub, then hit the woods behind Gracie's. I had an entirely too wasteful 24-minute conversation with them. Many comforting things were said; I wish I could remember them now.

I came back almost hopeful, but then my roommate's music drilled itself into my brain; even in the background my brain directly focused in on it. I eventually drowned it out with Fox News, and then waited around for someone to pop up online. I talked to Matt from high school, but he was pre-occupied, and that just cemented the isolation. Finally Darren came online and I'm talking to him now and I just can't remember exactly why I'm so down and why what my parents said helped, but I know it's really big and I'll have to sort it out in the morning.

  posted by Adam at 03:01 | 0 comments

September 25, 2004
Day Sixty-Seven
If it gives you an idea of how shitty my day has ended up, ResNet won't even let me online right now, so I'm typing this in Notepad. Positive thinking (along with a labeling project) got me through the night. I went to the mall today to finally get Clerks X on DVD, and seeing the food court there - the place of my last family meal - set off my homesickness big time. One unescapable thought dominated my thinking: Even at my best moments and times here, I still would rather be at home. The impossibility of this threw me right into that pit of despair again. On the way over to the library to get some more reading done, I'd convinced myself that I needed to call the 'rents even thought I'd just talked to them Wednesday. I was planning on calling them on the way back. But something about reading in that quiet section of the library was relaxing and calming. The book also noted something about regret which made me change my outlook. So I headed back to the room, scanned today's aquisitions (L to R: a letter from my mommy, one of the two packs of empty slim cases, the cover of Clerks X unopened, a pamphlet for the shuttle to the mall) and then set to work sorting through the CDs now that I had blank cases to put things into. Finding that I didn't have the thin Sharpie I use for the slimcase spine labeling, I computerized the whole process. That took me up until a few minutes ago, when I checked my email and discovered I was expected at the earliest time I'd given (10 am) for Red Brick's coverage of the RIT Players' 24-hour show and so wasn't even going to get to sleep in as I planned. So, yeah, today sucked. But I'll be home in five days and change.[NOTE: Listed time an approximated guess one day later]
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  posted by Adam at 01:53 | 0 comments

September 24, 2004
Days Sixty-Five and Sixty-Six
I was just walking to the door of the Kate Gleason building a few minutes ago when I realized that I was at a state of contentment I hadn't truly reached since I'd gotten here. The kind I used to get after a night on the town with Alex and Darren, or Maia, or the others. Considering how shitty I felt after I got back from Best Buy, this is a considerable thing.

After math class, one of my workshop group members was driving my roommate to the mall to pick up a game. Still naively thinking that I could pick up Clerks X, I shoehorned my way into the arrangement. After stopping at my room so that the height of my bed could be critiqued, we hit the other kid's floor and picked up a forth member. After a stroll to "B" lot, we took of on a wild and turbulent ride and ended up at Best Buy. This made me happy; surely Best Buy of all places would carry Clerks X! Alas, it was not to be. I hit Target two stores down, but they too didn't carry it. It was on the walk back from "B" lot that I got irritated. They took to calling me "Ivan the Terrible" which I would have thought was above a college student mentality. I could have probably taken it with a better sense of humor, but after a Calc class that while probably my best yet (first 5/5!) I was in no mood to put up with any bullshit, even what may have been good-natured ribbing. Sometimes you just don't gel. Desperate to get away from the people and situations I associated with my least favorite part of the day, I hit the dorm.

As luck would have it, the two Mikes were just getting through with a Chem test and hadn't eaten. I met up with one while the other (the one I bike with) dealt with having his computer checked out by ResNet. After a little while, we took off and he called to say he'd meet us there. After a really good dinner of a real cheeseburger, curly fries, and a 32 oz. pink lemonade plus a near square block of Rice Krispie Treat and a healthy download of my emotional stress to others, I was feeling much better about things. We agreed to meet at 8:15; they were going to play raquetball, I'd do my biking, and we'd meet up for hot tub at nine.

I ended up running late, and they had forgotten I was coming. So it was that I played catch-up from Sol straight to the hypotonuse path to the Field House. Through sheer chance, I passed my Orientation Advisor on the way. She couldn't find anyone to go see the CAB showing of The Exorcist at ten and would I be interested? I'd avoided the film because it always seemed too much of a mind fuck for me. But that was an invitation that I was not going to pass up.

I got in twenty minutes on the bike while flipping between the audio for O'Reilly Factor (the TV for that was behind the bikes), Will & Grace, and a show about the Making of The O.C. Afterwards, I scoured the raquetball courts (which I hadn't know existed) and the biking Mike and I hit the hot tub, talked with Toley from Shaker's Blends, until they kicked us out about ten minutes earlier than they should have. By the time I was dry and dressed, it was 9:35. I hit the SAU directly, and met up with my O.A. and another kid from my orientation group. We managed to scrounge two chairs up, and in spite my protests, they switched off halfway for who got chair and who got floor.

It didn't terrify me like I thought it would, but I had to admire its craftsmanship. Really well done. The build-up to Merrin is great. The subliminal imagery effective. So I had a hell of a time watching that with two familiar faces, and then when at that moment at the door of the dorm I realized I had felt at home for a couple hours, finally. Thank God, with one week to go before the real thing.

Yesterday, the big things were no Calc, two tests, Smallville premiere, and the room to myself. No Calc means that my day ends at four, which is just spectacularly freeing. My Comp. Sci. class was half lecture, half quiz. I'm relatively confident that I did well. Won't really know until Monday. The entirety of my Cultural Anthropology class was the test; 30 multiple choice questions and an essay. I was the fifth or sixth last to finish out of a lecture hall. It felt easy to me, but I won't really know until I have the test back to really understand what she looks for in an essay.

Jumping back to today, I got my Writing and Lit. paper back. A-, which is above par from the sound of things. I also like the way he grades; his criticisms are very pointed and specific and address the problems in a very informative fashion. The professor, whatever else he may be, had a much firmer grasp of the English language than I've ever experienced directly before.

Nothing against my roommate, but sometimes it's great just to have the room to yourself. Last night was one such night. He left for a club right before the premiere of Smallville, so I was able to close the door, turn out the lights and just get totally absorbed. And it was an awesome premiere, too. Possibly the best episode of the series. Couldn't have come at a better time for me.

Now I'm going to ride this blissfully persistent wave of contentment through teeth brushing and then bed. No classes tomorrow! Yay. A week from this very moment I should be home.

  posted by Adam at 00:51 | 0 comments

September 21, 2004
Day Sixty-Four
I had another episode of homesickness today. It started in caulk lab when I got back two not-so-hot grades, a 7.5/10 on a homework I thought I'd aced and a 7/10 on a quiz (which I'd expected.) Even a kid who doesn't show up for all of class did better on the homework. Considering how much I hate the class already, my confidence was already shaken. My first instinct was to just get myself away from the Calculus scene, but two of the members of my workshop group invited me to dinner with them at Crossroads, and still on the lookout for possible friends, I obliged. Bad idea; I ended up with less food than I would have liked due to the $ cap on non-gracious meal options, more of my food debit shot to cover the balance, and an extra twenty minutes with people who I didn't really click with and who reminded me of the worst part of my day. I ate as fast as I could and fled, rather rudely I suppose, with the intention of hitting the library and getting some studying done for the two tests I have tomorrow. It wasn't until I reached my favorite studying spot on the third floor that I realized the books I need were in yesterday's pile. Having had enough and feeling serious doubts (which remain) about pursuing a career which involves what I hate so much, I called home hoping my folks would be there to give me a little comfort. Mom was still at work but Dad answered and we talked for just under 15 minutes about life in general and my future career plans and didn't really resolve anything but it was nice to just get it out to someone who was willing to listen. That helped some, and I hit my room again and began to read my Java book as I waited for Outing Club at 9. Despite attempts to drown out my depression with music, I found myself skimming the book and finding most of what I read I'd already picked up in class. The problem was that by this point my self-confidence was shaken to the point where I couldn't believe that I was at least a little prepared.

Realizing I didn't know where the Outing Club meeting was being held and needing an excuse to get away from my thoughts, I hit the tunnels looking for one of the multitude of Outing Club flyers that had been posted everywhere as early as this morning. Alas, none were to be found as I headed towards Gracie's. A thorough browsing of all the flyers in the Grace Watson lobby turned up nothing. And it was at this point that the homesickness reached its peak. For when I reached the one end, I saw the housing office, and peeking in I saw the same waiting area setup and desk I had sat in with my Dad on a college visit/mini-vacation we'd made when I was still in the deciding phase. Thinking of such an awesome time from such a safe place in my life when I was now at such a low point made me hurt so much I practically wanted to scream. I wished more than anything that I could walk in that office and my Dad would be there, and after a quick tour of the dorms we'd be able to leave and go back home. After a minute of standing there feeling the loneliest I'd felt since those first two weeks here, I headed back up to the dorms realizing I still had to set the windup to record Scrubs.

I can't remember if it was during this brief stop or during the studying phase, but at some point I hit studentsreview.com and analyzed my transfer options, as I always do when rites looking particularly shitty. One thing I noticed was that while RIT has the lowest satisfaction rating (though not by as much as I'd previously thought), it's current job satisfaction rating among alumni was one of the higher ones. Thinking that if RIT sucked at least my working life would be a step up provided small comfort. Even if I do end up with a job I hate, at least I'll be able to come home to a place that's distinctly mine with stuff arranged as I want it with the considerations of another human being sharing the same space. At least I'll be able to leave my shit in the bathroom then, and take a nice warm bath and soak with a book when I need to. And if a job sucks bad enough I can quit and move on to something else. Likewise, unlike here where every test determines the rest of my future prospects, the worst that can happen at a job is that I get fired and have to move on to something perhaps less satisfactory. Future problems are bumps in the road.

I didn't really lift out of my funk until Outing Club, however. Setting the recording timer for an hour and fifteen minutes at 8:58, I realized I still didn't know where outing club is. On a whim, I hit the tunnels and ventured in the other direction, and found one of the flyers still handing up. Naturally the meeting was in building after all the searching about, and so I arrived on the scene at 9:02 (according to my cell phone). It was packed, standing room only, and the Mike I go biking with was there. I hit the back of the room and listened. It turns out that this was the biggest turn out they'd gotten since the current presidents have been in the club. They have a trip planned for the weekend I'm going home, but I guess I'll be missing that;). That's okay though, because they're planning another trip for the weekend of the sixteenth, either a canoeing day trip or an overnight/two night camping trip at Stony Brook down by Long Island. Either one sounds interesting, and just the prospect of having something to look forward to when I came back from my trip home did a good deal to lift my spirits. The rest of the meeting went well and was very interactive, so I knew there was a genuine interest among the people who showed up. When they were asking about potential places to check out, one guy mentioned the Clarksville Caves (!), noting that he had access to a cabin we could stay at. I guess our little area is more popular that we thought. After the formal meeting, Mike and I talked to one of the Co-Presidents. It was a nice discussion about different trip options, different trips we'd each made, and various club organizational things. He was quite knowledgeable about outdoor trips, and you could tell he had a lot of experience with it. One of the trips he wants to do is a winter camping trip, in the deep cold. It was nice to hear some genuine enthusiasm about something other than video games. If my car's ready I'm strongly thinking about bringing it up and just hitting different local hiking spots for day trips on the weekends and getting the word out there in case two or three other people want to come too. I also volunteered my services for bringing their website back up-to-date. I left feeling more contented than I had all day.

When I got back my roommate was gone to God knows where, which will probably irk my single-child nature if when he's still up and I'm ready for bed. But for now it gave me a much needed chance to unwind. I set my computer to encoding raw video of the Scrubs episodes I'd recorded into SVCD video after watching it commercials and all. While that was encoding, I sorted through my Massive Laundry Pile™, straightening the shirts that were inside-out and sorting between stained (into laundry bag) and unstained (rewear pile). Recalling this, I notice to my disgust and amusement that I didn't distinguish between "unstained but ripe" and "unstained and unsmelly". If it didn't look dirty, I plan on getting another wear. And that's where I am now. I plan on finishing my Java review for the Comp. Sci. quiz before I go to bed, now that I'm feeling calm and hopeful again. I'm more confident about Cultural Anthropology, so I'm going to use my four hour break to do the study guide questions, catch lunch, and then review the topics in the essay question again.

If you asked me before Outing Club what I would do if I fall below expectations on the two quizzes and the English paper we're getting back Thursday, I would have probably said I'd be giving up. Now I realize that these first grades are simply a gauge to know how much harder I need to work in some classes and which classes I'm overdoing it for. In my funks, I can see only closed doors. For the moment, anyway I see hard-won possibilities.

  posted by Adam at 23:45 | 0 comments

Day Sixty-Three
If there's anything that today has taught me, it's that you've got to keep on top of your work or else it will overwhelm you. In order to watch the Emmys last night, I put off the last four problems of my Calc homework. A seemingly easy proposition, considering that I had a four hour break between Comp. Sci. and Cultural Anthropology. But a combination of a forgotten First Year Enrichment mandatory counseling session and the fact that one of those Calc problems had nine sub-sections and the others had atleast six, I had both more work and less time than I'd expected. I ended up capping off the math while eating my turkey sandwich on white in a twenty-minute span and then knocking off my Cultural Anthropology reading in the ten minutes before class - a total skim job. By the time I got out of the absolutely brutal two hour Calc lecture session I was already beaten down by the day. And then I remembered that I had my Red Brick Network at 7:00 and English reading, while Everwood comes on at 9:00. So I hit a quick dinner of a slice of garlic pizza, a slice of cheese pizza, and a bowl of Smacks with the two Mikes, then ran off to the meeting, calling my Grandma on the walk over. It was a very worthwhile 4 minute 26 second call. Whoops.

Calculus was unbearable (a few kids walked out halfway through) as usual, but the rest of my day while more pressured than I'd have liked, actually turned out decent. I hooked my laptop to my person by feeding the cable lock through one of my belt loops and brought it to the Red Brick Meeting to show my interludes. The commercial people had brought their work on a memory stick, so I was able to play that as well. We finally had some momentum and it was exciting. When I got back, I popped on the middle ten minutes of the season premiere of Still Standing. Despite the newfound potential hotness of Renee Olstead in years to come, the show wasn't nearly as good as I remember. Then Maia called and we had a nice long chat about nothing in particular. When I'd called she'd been in a big old rush, so it was nice to just shoot the shit. She's made an absolutely miserable senior year schedule for herself. No free periods. Everwood, while far from its height, was very decent tonight. I enjoyed the way the cast is integrated this year as opposed to last year, but dislike the looseness of characterization for the supporting characters. Afterwards I'd planned on watching last night's Jack & Bobby but by the time I'd finished acquiring it, it was too late to bother with. I guess that's why you watch live. While I'd been waiting, I fired off an e-mail to my Dad. I'm planning on going to bed after this. I've got to breeze through my English reading in the two hour gap between Comp. Sci. and English. I'm not even heading back to the dorms between, I'll just hit the library. That reminds me; I need to put my book in tonight. I'll take lunch between English and Calc. I have Outing Club tomorrow at 9, and I've got tests in Cultural Anthropology and Comp. Sci. on Wednesday that I'll need to be studying for. So my one bit of laziness has meant a rough two days. I'm trying to catch up so I'll have Wednesday free for the [i]Smallville[/i] premiere. I know basing my life on television is pathetic, but its one of the few small pleasures I have anymore.

  posted by Adam at 00:30 | 0 comments

September 20, 2004
Days Sixty-One and Sixty-Two
Yesterday began very at the very early time of 7:10 am. I got dressed and got out, where I hung in the hallway. I was surprised how many people decided to go. After a pitiful breakfast at the Field House that consisted of glazed and powdered donut holes, shitty coffee, and shitty juice. It was at this point that they gave us our free shirts, which I quite liked, it being damned near freezing and I being in shorts and a T-shirt. Two T-shirts layered is much more insulating. Then they announced that our group (the only floor that got together for it!) would be painting a hallway at a learning facility for the mentally and physically challenged. Naturally, I was scared as all hell that I would ruin my brand new shirt without even making it through a day.

Still, the experience itself was very rewarding. Being in an active setting with a task at hand forces people to socialize in a manner that you just don't get day-to-day. I managed to keep my shirt clean, we got the whole hallway painted (and with art students you can be sure of first-rate work or else) and I had some fun with people I [i]didn't[/i] go to high school with. When we got back, they had shitty ass Domino's pizza and several varieties of soft drink that I didn't eat. That left me mildly pissed knowing that I had one more meal option than possible opportunities to use them. Still, it was a beautiful day, and I found the perfect spot to take a picture of the pool from.

The rest of the afternoon I spent on the computer doing the first half of my website update. Then I wrote letters in response to all of the cards I received. I was through the second to the last one when I realized that it was seven and Gracie's had closed. Now I was very pissed, and continued writing until a little after 7:30. Then on a whim, I checked the RIT food service website and discovered that the Commons (on the other side of the tunnels from my dorm) was open until eight on Saturdays. I hightailed it down there, and as I was in line who should show up behind me but Mike. I hear his voice behind me: "You missed Gracie's too?" or some such. After a cheesburger, 30 oz. cup of Brisk Pink Lemonade, and a bag of Wise potato chips (which was quite possibly my best meal on campus so far) he went to work out with the other Mike from my high school at RIT, and I went back to the room to finish the last two letters. Despite a thorough search of the room, I couldn't find the cards, stamps, and envelopes my mother had assured me she'd packed. At nine, I began the walk to the Field House with all the stuff necessary for a night in the hot tub. The two Mikes still had three or four minutes left on their forty-five minutes so I did a hard core up hill 4 minute bike session. Then after a quick shower I hit the leisure pool with them. Alternating between the pool itself (having just discovered how little you have to move to float with the Noodles), the hot tub, and the high and low dives, it ended up being a hell of a night. In the hot tub at the end of the night, we met this deaf kid Dave. He was raised in the oralist tradition, so we could have a fairly normal conversation with him. It was quite fascinating, and he was first first one I've been able to have a conversation with. A girl bumped me in the head with a noodle and it took a good three minutes of confused gesturing between us before I could understand the simple idea that she had thought I was someone else.

Today I slept until 11:30. I surfed the web for a while and then hit Brunch at Gracie's determined to not waste any more meal options. I got three quarters of the way through the Belgian waffle I'd made with the waffle iron. I finished up with a bowl of Rice Krispies with four sugar packets on it. They just made a deal with Kellogg's which means no more General Mills cereal.

I filled the rest of my afternoon with finishing the site updates and dropping off the letters (having found all the stuff I'd search so long for in a drawer of my desk). Then I took the emergency stairs to the locked off hallway to do my math homework in peace. Turns out it's not as locked off as I'd thought and came back to find myself with the room to myself. Oh yeah, my parents called earlier in the afternoon too. Anyway, having the room to myself I managed to breeze through the majority of the math homework. What little I have left can be taken care of during the break between Comp Sci. and Cultural Anthropology. I was in a bit of a funk through dinner, little bout of homesickness, but knowing I had most of my homework done helped. Then I spent the night watching the Emmys and was rewarded when Arrested Development picked up 3 Emmys, including Best Comedy Series! Yes! Then I talked to Darren online for a while before coming online and writing this. Now I go to bed.

  posted by Adam at 00:28 | 0 comments

September 18, 2004
Day Sixty
Boy, I do love round even numbers. It's been a fairly long day, but it's ending far more satisfactory than I'd thought it would. Right now, West Side Story is on the "America" sequence in iTunes. Adobe Premiere is rendering a very cool video into QuickTime format. My roommate is plugging away at "Doom 3."

Today started for me at roughly ten this morning, when my roommate came back from his Comp. Sci. lab. I got up, twiddled around a bit on the computer and then his Gracie's for breakfast. After a worthwhile combination of a bowl of Kix and a bowl of Special K spruced up with eight packets of Domino sugar. Then it was back to the room, with another of those glorious fifty-cent machine-brewed hot chocolate at 170 degrees farenheit. I dicked around trying to get Frontpage 2002 to work, as it was the only one that was compatible with my server's front page extensions. I kept trying right until 2:28, but it was no go. Somewhere in there was a lengthy shower with soap and the whole deal.

But at 2:30, I had to go sit the Red Brick Network's table at Club Day. The club leader was there, and I talked with her a bit and then read the school magazine while she ran into Gracie's for a takeout meal. I high-tailed it around a quarter after three and returned to my room. After a further struggle, I gave up and switched back to Frontpage 2003 and just configured for FTP. That done, I added a photo I'd found of Logan O'Brien and Adam Baldwin to the gallery at Serenity Cortex and made headway at updating the news archive.

The next few hours are a blur, until 5:08 when my cellphone vibrated in my right pocket. Mike wondered whether I'd like to synchronize dinner. I would. And so we hit Gracie's after I made a pit stop to piss. We had about eight plates each, and I plowed through a plate of Ziti while he explained how to use a takeout box to smuggle ice cream. We agreed to meet at the sun dial at 6:30 to do some working out and then hot tub. I spent the intervening half hour wrestling with Frontpage, and then I went out into the rain.

He had an umbrella. I chose the open sky. This time I came prepared; I wore my shiny black Nike shorts and a badly stained white CS department shirt and kept today's clothes in my backpack to change into. After 45 minutes on the sitdown bike where I alternated between watching King of the Hill and CNN Headline News via headphones and talking with him, we hit the hot tub.

I've got to say, that one thing RIT skools every other school with is their grade A leisure pool facility. We spent close to an hour switching between the hot tub and the recreational pool at differing intervals, and I managed to get in a dive. (though I overshot it and landed nearly on my back) When all was said and done it was only around 8:30. His roommates had joined a frat, so he had the room to himself. After about twenty minutes of switching gears here I headed back over, and three elevator car loads and a packed ride up while the elevator warned of overload, I hit his room. The plan had been to acquire a movie and watch it, but we ended up surfing the Hub for funny stuff. "That's why Mommy left us" and "Special Fred" by Steven Lynch came up in the process. The highlight were the videos from RIT itself, like the riot coverage, some dudes torching an old Mac computer and a Reno 911-style show only with Campus Safety called Reno's Finest. The highlight was a Real Media video which is what Premiere is busy converting as I type. It's called "RIT cinder block" with the title of "bombs away." I'll leave it at that. I ended heading back here around eleven, finding myself lucky enough to have two decent nights in a row. Who woulda thunk it?

  posted by Adam at 00:30 | 0 comments

September 17, 2004
Days Fifty-Eight and Fifty-Nine
Good morning! Good morning!
Nothing to do; to save his life call his wife in
Nothing to say, but what a day! How's your boy been?
Nothing to do; it's up to you.
I've got nothing to say but it's O.K.

Good morning, good morning...
As we begin Day Sixty, I have more energy and outright happiness than I've had since leaving home. I just got back from A Clockwork Orange, a film disturbing perhaps the most due to how well I and the audience played into it. Still, it was fucking alive. I haven't been in contact with something so alive since leaving home. Walking home on my blistered and bloodied right foot, I was floating on air. I missed the elevator so I danced my way up the stairs in a way I haven't perhaps ever.

Calculus was as unbearable as ever, English was quiet enjoyable, and Comp. Sci. lab was frustrating if only because I have only two questions left to finish. I'll have to drop by at some point tomorrow. And now, as I type, "When I'm Sixty-Four" is waltzing across the headphones. My roommate is talking on the phone, and Alex is spouting political retoric across the IM window. And I feel that it may perhaps be a perfect span of moments.

Yesterday I didn't post about my day because I was too busy posting about Tuesday's. It was nice; my roommate has Electronic Gaming Club, so I have the room to myself to unwind. I rewatched the season premiere of "Everwood" and found I liked it alot better once I'd gotten over the extensive changes. That's really all I remember; another remarkable day lost to the selective nature of a less remarkable memory.

Today I also got a card from Granny, Maia's grandmother. It was a really nice gesture, considering. Another person to add to the less of people I need to write to. I finally called Morrie about his website. His reaction to my reaction to their condom card was perfect. I talked to Maia, but she was preoccupied, and for the first time in a while, I had the security of self to understand that. In all, I'm learning just how remarkable even the most mundane day can be. It's a rather profound experience to be actually happy far from home. And then there's the fact that'll if all goes well I'll be in my own home two weeks from this very moment.

Well, my roommate just turned out the lights and hit the sack, and I'm beat so I think I'll follow suit. No classes tomorrow!

  posted by Adam at 01:04 | 0 comments

September 15, 2004
Day Fifty-Seven
I fucking absolutely hate iTunes and XP Service Pack 2. I think they actually included shit in Service Pack 2 to make absolute fucking sure that iTunes would crash my computer when open. I never had a problem with Service Pack 1. This is the third time I've started this entry, and let me tell you, the first two times were a hell of a lot more pleasant and a hell of a lot more articulate.

The thing that made me bother to post this entry at all after running out of time last night was something that happened in my Writing and Literature class. Having just finished examining the origins of the tragic novel and House of Sang and Fog's place in it, the professor was addressing questions about the essay due Thursday. Something jogged "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" into his head and that was it's own tangent and when "Across the Universe" came up in iTunes earlier it made me think of it and smile, and then then second time I wrote this it was "America" by Simon and Garfunkel but now it's nothing because my roommate has his music turned up so fucking loud and Geez I can't fucking do this three times in a row.

Sorry, whoever's reading this. You missed out on a great entry with some great, postive things to say. Blame Microsoft and Apple.

Whew. That feels better. I just acquired the complete album of "Sgt. Pepper..." As I type this, "Good Morning Good Morning" is blasting through the headphones and I feel fine. Anyway, the thing that made me sit up and take notice yesterday was at the end of class. The mention of "Sgt. Pepper" has led to a whole mini-lecture about art and how it's ultimate importance was defined almost solely by its social context rather than by any sort of social merit. But then at the very end he just sings a few verses from the title track to himself, right in front of the whole class. It was one of the few moments since I've come to RIT where I could honestly say there's no place I'd rather have been. The power of catchy tune over a person is a special and magical thing, and any magic is to be appreciated in a place like this.

Though I have yet to get a perfect score on anything yet in Calc, atleast all of my grades thus far have been in the A range. Still I have apprehensions about my ability to succeed as the course grows increasingly more complex. I spoke more about this the second time, but one of the benefits of the clarity that comes from a third try is realizing that anything else on the topic is rather irrelevant. For the thing that gave me the most trouble last night, the thing that shook my confidence to it's core, was the English essay.

I went from expecting to pop it out in twenty minutes in the quiet peaceful library to staring frustratedly at the impentrable, overly-verbose mess glaring back at my from the word processing window while a pair of deaf students in the background punctuated their signing with loud, odd guttural noises while another student with full sensory perception felt the need to punctuate her point that something's "not fucking funny" by repeating it word for word atleast twenty times. I made a second go at finishing it at the much quiet but virtually unventilated and stifling hot forth floor. After twenty minutes of that, I gave up altogether. Uploading what I had to the network as a last resort, I flopped into a padded chair on one of the intermediate floors and skimmed through my reading until a quarter after nine, at which point I headed back to the dorms to watch "Scrubs" at 9:30. It would be almost midnight before I'd try the essay again. Head filled with the music of ages, the words again flowed like water. I'm not sure what I've got so far will be any better received than my first attempt. But atleast I like it.

Oh, and check out "Jack and Bobby" if you get a chance. It was a pretty friggin' awesome pilot, employing all the tenets of "Everwood" during it's first, best season.

  posted by Adam at 11:18 | 0 comments

September 14, 2004
Day Fifty-Six
Today is another image-intensive post, and the only reason I'm up this late taking care of it with a nine-o'clock class tomorrow is because my roommate's friend is over and I wouldn't be getting much sleep if I tried. Today was my second purely lecture Calculus class, and it reminded me in an utterly excruciating fashion just how much I should appreciate workshop days. I had a meeting for the Red Brick Network tonight, and I volunteered to do the lead in and lead out spots as well as sit the booth on Friday for a half hour during Club Day. The idea didn't really thrill me, but I figured I'd might as well get involved with something.

So I came back to the room and worked on that in Photoshop for about a half hour. Then the season premiere of "Everwood" came on, and like last season only to a much greater extent I find myself unable to get settled in like I did throughout the first season. Watching the pilot on the DVD, I was struck by how different (and IMO better) the show was back then. Compare the slow sweeping shot over the mountain with Cat Stevens in the background to the hyperfast slick new credit sequence set to the ultra-pop version of Blake Neeley's theme song. Still, new "Everwood" is good "Everwood."

As for the three images: Something my roommate said on the phone made me think to check my mail. The card featured came from Maia's parents, and pretty much made my day. They have a unique sense of humor, to say the least.

The notebook page represents the last painful page of many from today's calculus class. The devolved state of the notes says all it needs to.

And finally, last and greatest, is a screenshot of my first-ever program. I forgot my notes in the room and I wasn't walking back without having done anything, so I pieced things back together and made a program called MyVariablesTest in Java which outputs:

The fish weighed
32
pounds.
A modest beginning, to be sure, but I can say I'm proud of it. In the mean time, I'm going to brush my teeth and make an effort at clearing out my room.
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  posted by Adam at 01:40 | 0 comments

September 13, 2004
Day Fifty-Five
What a difference a few hours makes. I remember looking down at my cellphone on the walk back from the library and noting the time as 9:20. I'd just finished a couple hours of Calculus homework, I had a massive headache from baking under the flourescent lamp of the library desk. I had serious questions about my chosen major, college, and future. I got back to find my roommate playing some game which an infuriating bass line pounding into my brain. Rushing through the final homework checks and clicking "Print" on my FYE paper, I took off to the field house with only my headphones. (Someone threw what I can only believe was a bag of piss at me) It was about twenty minutes before they closed, and I got in fifteen minutes on the bike while flipping between the audio for CNN Headline News and a repeat of "The Practice."

This did a good deal to calm me, and talking with Darren on AIM did a good deal more. Halfway through, I made a run down to the tunnels to wrangle a fifty cent hot chocolate out of the expresso machine. I had a friendly conversation with a complete stranger, and the fact that there are friendly strangers here (in the non-creepy way) did a good deal more. Meanwhile, my roommate had switched from the hard-pounding bass to the Lord of the Rings soundtrack. By the end of the conversation, it was fifteen minutes into the new day but less than three hours later. But by this point, I felt calm, comfortable, at home, and at peace. The evenings at RIT may suck, but nine times out of ten, the late nights can't be beat.

  posted by Adam at 00:34 | 0 comments

September 12, 2004
Day Fifty-Four
Today began for me not all that much before noon. When I finally dragged my ass up, I hit the showers and got my hair sweat free for the first time in a couple days. From there, I got dressed in a pair of shorts and a still-damp T-shirt from the lights load. It was a little after one-thirty when I strolled into Gracie's for Breakfast/Lunch. By sheer coincidence, I ran into Mike and we talked while he ate what he ate and I worked through two bowls of Lucky Charms and a tuna sandwich. I had brought my copy of House of Sand and Fog with the intention of finding a quiet place to work through Tuesday's requirement. On a whim, we decided to try to find the Genesee River by going across campus and beyond. We walked a good distance, trespassed probably twice, and glimpsed the river several times. At no point did we discover the quiet shaded riverside park we'd imagined, or even any public access. This despite almost every street sign having "River" in the name. Mike has pictures.

On the way back from that interesting but ultimately disappointing sojourn, Mike decided he wanted to hit a water fountain. Remembering there were some by the bathrooms in the Science Building from Thursday's mad rush to Calc, we stopped in and eventually settled in the first floor lounge to get the reading done. He did his American Politics reading then slept while I worked through about thirty pages of ...Sand and Fog. The novel is a depressing novel, and so I was rather downbeat when he woke up and his grogginess didn't help. But during the walk back to the dorms, his roommate called wondering whether he wanted to go to Wal*Mart with them in search of a table. He had a strong desire to either nap or work out, but I decided to go for the hell of it. The opportunity to go off campus is rare enough, and something from last night made me want to pick up the Clerks X DVD.

These are the events that led to my sitting in the back of a '86 Chevy Astro that shoots water at you when you pop the hood and makes five of the seven noises my own car makes back home. Because the three others in the car, driver included, were from New York City, the rules of driving are both faster and looser than I am accustomed to. We made it to Wal*Mart in record pace, however, and I split off early to hit the Electronics section. To my dismay, due to Wal*Mart's family friendly policy, they would not carry the Clerks X DVD. Instead I picked up the complete first season of "Everwood" in open defiance of any contempt my roommate might have for a WB teen soap. Making sure it was safely concealed in the small blue Wal*Mart bag, I tracked down the others who were at this point preoccupied with the matter of choosing better computer chairs for their respective dorms. Angel, who lives across from me and one floor down, grabbed the last undamaged leather chair. Josh, our intrepid driver, ended up taking the only other one of the same model; its box was quite busted but we placated him with what would prove to be false promises of markdowns. Then I went off with Josh looking for a plain white T-shirt while the other two did God knows what. Checking out all of the shit, not the least of which two large computer chairs, was its own adventure. Then we all piled back into the scary-ass old maroon Astro and blasted off towards our next stop: Wegman's.

We came to Wegman's, a grocery store chain I don't have back home, looking quite inexplicably for a card table that could be used for poker. Josh and I joined the Wegman's buyers club at Angel's urging, and the others bought several things of which I can only remember a case of Coke and a toothbrush.

Josh dropped Angel and I off outside Gleason at four minutes of seven, which meant my chances of hitting Gracie's were effectively shot in the ass. I helped Angel carry his other shit so he could carry the chair, dropped it off in his room, and then I headed up the stairs a floor to my room. I stopped in only to drop off the "Everwood" DVD and then took off again for Sol's, the only eatery that I understood to be open past seven.

Now I'm not a big wrap man, and to be honest Sandella's inside Sol's didn't do much to change that for me. But on the plus side, it was the first shake I'd had since I waved goodbye to my parents and it gave me a chance to touch bases with Darren when I was stuffing my mouth. Always in the rush, I had to take off much sooner than I'd like to catch the comedian at eight.

I caught up with Mike only to find out he didn't want to go, so I went solo. It was at the Ingle Auditorium, and it cost a buck. The comedian was Marc Theobald, who apparently was on Comedy Central at some point. He had a really long routine, at least an hour and a half, and so naturally there were a couple lulls and when he brought in politics I was turned off. But all in all, it was a pretty hilarious set and I had a great time.

I capped off the night by watching the pilot for "Everwood" first without and then with the commentary. Then I watched the special features on the last disc. Feeling guilty for a wasted day, I hit the Comp. Sci. I site and looked into the lab. The third activity I was able to do, but for the last one I think I need to use a UNIX workstation, so I'm going to have to hold off until tomorrow. And of course, I closed my night with this journal entry, which has proven to be far more exhaustive but far less meaningful than many. It was an action-packed, generally satisfying day.

  posted by Adam at 01:58 | 0 comments

September 11, 2004
Days Fifty-Two and Fifty-Three
I was going to post last night, but there were two images I wanted to post (now added to today's post along with a third) and posting images was too time-consuming for yesterday's late night state of mind. I went to get the mail and was surprised to find not only the phone card I'd been expecting but another card as well; apparently there was a backlog somewhere in the mail system. Each card had a lengthy note with it. That was cool enough, but then when I checked my mail this moring as an excuse to see how busy the laundry room was, I had a package slip in my mailbox. Lo and behold, my momma had sent me a whole box of oatmeal cookies. There was a note in this box as well. So the last two days have had a good deal of mail and from the way my mother talked on the phone call from Up North, I should expect another package soon. Getting mail is very exciting.

The main reason I didn't post last night, however, was because I was taking in some serious hot tub time. If there's one thing RIT has that's awesome, it's an indoor pool facility. I worked for my town's Parks and Recreation pool complex, which was outdoors and sprawling, and I can tell you that it doesn't come close to how cool the Field House complex is. There a pool with diving boards and lap lanes on one side and a leisure pool with a lazy river and twenty-person hot tub. I went with the Colonel and the 'Berg, both fellow BC grads, and we had a blast. Prior to hitting the water, however, the Colonel and I did ten miles/km each on the sit-down exercise bikes. He talked with his mother on his cellphone while I watched CNN via closed captions on the TV right in front of the bikes.

Perhaps Thursday was most notable for my being late for two out of my three classes, and one spectacularly so. The other days of the week, I have atleast a two hour break between my first and second class. I assumed this was the case for Thursday as well, and went right ahead to lunch. Halfway through my second plateful, I realized that I hadn't seen my roommate when I'd dropped off my bag because he was in the English class that I was also in. So it was that I slipped into class forty minutes late, and did my best to fade into the scenery.

Jumping to the present, I on the way back from the shitter just investigated the pugent smell that seems to have permeated the entire hall over the course of this present recollection of events. There's a big old gathering taking place one room over. I mingled for a minute or so, and realized that my mingling skills lean a bit too much to the standing-stiffly-in-the-doorway tactic at the moment.

Tonight after I talked to my grandma and the folks over my room phone and added my phone card (as well as thirty bonus minutes I scoped out online), I headed over to the Field House with Mike. The Second City Improv Troupe out of Chicago was performing so we checked it out. There was some pretty ballsy humor, but the liberal skew on one recurring sketch left something to be desired. Afterwards there was free donuts, water and coffee. I worked through a plate of donuts while Mike filled up a cup with about six of them for the road. On the way out, we both grabbed a free tub of popcorn.

One other present side note: The reason so many are hanging out in one place is because the vast majority of my floor skipped town for back home. Yay for me for being all manly and sticking it out.

Today was a pretty decent day over all. I got my laundry done (though the dryer for my whites load sucked absolute cock in the most offensive possible connotation). I spent alot of time hanging out in my room, but on the plus side I got the majority of my Cultural Anthropology homework done. The one thing that pisses me off most about yesterday was that I only got a 4.5/5 on my Calc workshop when the rest of my group got a 5 when they made a similiar mistake and she marked it.

How's all of that for incoherent? Anyway, here's the pics. The first two came on Thursday, while the last one came about fifteen or so hours ago.
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  posted by Adam at 02:32 | 0 comments

September 09, 2004
Day Fifty-One
This e-mail (some names have been removed to protect the innocent) to my Dad pretty much sums it up:

Hey Dad

I just got back from biking either 10 km or 10 miles while watching CNN in closed captions. Earlier I talked with Alex on the room phone for about a half hour. Then I read the reading for English, and the book actually held my interest. For some reason I'm depressed from the period right after classes until I've tackled a bit of my homework. Things are much better after that. I actually feel great right now, and I may make the biking machine (it's like those sitdown bikes only with support beams instead of wheels) part of my routine. It helps just getting out and doing something. The people may suck here, but it sure is a great campus.

Alex has Yom Kippur on the weekend of the 26th, when I was planning on coming home. Right now I feel like I can make it to the weekend after, easy. I signed up for this community service thing with my floor for next weekend, so the first weekend in October is probably the earliest I can make it unless things get so bad that I absolutely need to come home. My roommate's been out all night, and having the room to myself for a night has given my a little time to get accustomed to it as "home." The phone card didn't come yet, and when Mike called tonight about dinner my minutes dipped below 100, so I'm gonna hold off calling unless I have another panic attack.

I've been looking into transfer options just to keep that door open in case I need to. But for the first time in a long time, I feel like there's light at the end of the tunnel. Will I be depressed tomorrow after a grueling calc session? Probably. But I think this will change as I go from fearing whether or not I'll be able to have fun once I get back to the room to taking comfort in the knowledge that I'll be able to have fun once I get back to the room.

One thing I've realized about RIT is you've got to work to make your own fun. I'm thinking about checking to gauge interest in a movie-watching club, and talk to the administration about getting access to a classroom with a TV and DVD player.

The one thing that sucks is that when I am having a shitty day, I don't have you guys to turn to for a little face to face. Today I talked with Alex over the phone and Gretchen and ******* online and that helped me a good deal. Sometimes hearing the same shit from friends does things that hearing from your parents cannot.

All in all, I'm still not sure this is the right place for me or whether it's taking me where I want to go. But I've come to the point where I'm not ready to throw away all the work I've put in to get to this point just because I'm having some adjustment issue.

So if I don't talk to you tomorrow, pass on the message to Mom that I love you guys. I'll call up North come Friday or Saturday.

Adam

  posted by Adam at 01:31 | 0 comments

September 07, 2004
Day Fifty
I've just come back from the first long, hot, refreshing shower since I left home. As I type this I feel calm and once again on top of things. I wouldn't have even felt this possible around eight when I, after plowing through the first fifteen pages of my Cultural Anthology textbook in a noiser-than-expected library, decided I couldn't take it anymore. I found a nice relatively quiet place and despite an earlier pledge to myself to wait it out a day, called my mom and declared just how much I hate this place. She gave me what support she could, but no, I'd had enough; I plowed through all the optimism and laid out exactly how bad of a jam I was in and that no, I couldn't transfer out of this school before the end of the year and yes, I was definitely going to hate it. It was more articulate than that, and my reasoning was better founded than I'd like to admit, but when reduced to the bare essentials I find it reveals just how self-limiting I truly am. I ended up plowing all the way to the Field House in the rain just to discover that the leisure pool was closed. So I left there without finding fufillment from the fitness center but finding the basic comfort that comes with strolling through the rain.

In closing on this fiftieth day of this little self-expository adventure, I've come to realize that, yes, Calc is going to be unbearable, and, yes, the gigantic blister on my right foot's going to cause me alot more trouble before it goes away. But I've also come to realize that my days here, my life here, is precisely what I make of it. If things go wrong at every turn, than I either cave and let that limit me, or continue striving for something better around the next turn. Even if it's in vain, it makes me feel a hell of a lot better. Now my roommate's trying to sleep, and I should too so Good Night.

  posted by Adam at 23:40 | 0 comments

September 06, 2004
Day Forty-Nine
Today actually turned out pretty decent. It was the first day of classes, and they were intense. Throughout the day, I've been trying to take a shower, as I'm a bit ripe. But alas, despite my best efforts, I didn't get a chance. I hope to after posting this. I also picked up my books. I'd estimate that we took 15+ pages of notes in Calculus today. Having classes to six takes some getting used to.

After talking to my parents for twenty minutes tonight, I was down in the dumpers again. I think having that potent of a reminder of home is what did it. Right after, I went to the first meeting of the Red Brick Network. These three girls are trying to create a block of new, student-crafted programming on the Student Government network. We have virtually no resources, but there were a lot of great ideas thrown about. I was still depressed through this, but my interest was peaked even through the rainy cloud of my depression, and that's not nothing.

My depression, ironically, broke when I discovered how high the percentage of RIT students who posted on studentsreview.com was that would not choose RIT could they go back. It made me realize that I'm going to have to work at creating my own happiness here. It also made me realize that I can't look at college as a really long vacation, or I'm going to be miserable. For the time being, this IS home. Meanwhile, I was talking to Mike and Alex's brother. The latter gave me allot of great advice, while the former told me about how a bunch of people from his dorm were playing with a twenty or so foot long rubber band. I ditched the computer and headed over. I didn't realize that the staircase to Sol dorm lead to the lobby rather than up the floors. I ended up locked out, and had an absolutely great time begging my way up to his floor. When I got there, he wasn't in which gave me a chance to talk with his roommate. I then proceeded to knock over his water bottle and spill it on the floor. In the process of finding a paper product to clean it up with, I met a bunch of people from his floor. (I walked in on one of them who was taking a piss in my search for toilet paper. We agreed that the bathrooms needed urinals.) As it turns out, I missed the actual twang-ack of the massive rubber band. Mike had video of it, however, and it was indeed awesome. As an added bonus I got an email I'd been waiting for all weekend which gave me access to a video I'd been looking for. Now I'm typing this journal entry, ultimately content with my day for the second time running. I plan on logging off, taking a quick shower, and hitting the sack.

  posted by Adam at 23:50 | 0 comments

Day Forty-Eight
I haven't been writing because I was dwelling in a very dark place. Now I think I'm finally through it, maybe. Here's the reasons why, quoted:
Adam: you no how nuerotic I am?
Darren: Duh.
Adam: well, I was talking to my mother on the phone
Adam: about doing the meet-up on the weekend of the 26th
Adam: and she mentioned that it would be tough to pick me up on thursday because my dad would have to take time off work
Adam: and then I realized I'd be spending my entire Friday during the day alone
*** You have been disconnected. Sun Sep 05 22:33:52 2004.
*** Darren signed on at Sun Sep 05 22:33:57 2004.
Adam: and so that sent me into a severe depression for about two hours
Adam: now I feel fine

...

Darren: I mean, I had it good at home. I should have felt something by now.
Adam: maybe you're just made of solider stuff than me
Darren: I don't think so.
Darren: I just think all that worrying I did paid off.
Adam: ah
Adam: see, I didn't worry at all
Adam: I was nothing but excited
Adam: and then I got here and it sucked
Darren: That may have been your undoing.
Adam: yup, seems like it
Adam: the problem with me is that I dwell
Adam: when I have a problem, I can't think of anything else

...

Adam: it's all about flushing things out properly
Adam: you know what, I think I picked the wrong major
Adam: and for once that doesn't depress me
Adam: I figure, I'll give this year a shot
Darren: So many people change.
Adam: and if it sucks, I'll try something else
Adam: exactly
Adam: I feel so free
Adam: Freer than I've felt in a long, long time
Adam: the anger is gone
Darren: That's good.
Adam: And in case I became depressed and verbally abusive again, I just want to let you know that you've been a really fantastic friend to me these last seven or so years
Adam: And I really, really appreciate it
Darren: Same to you, man. It's been great.
Adam: it's not only been great
Adam: it will continue to be great
Adam: even if we're hundreds of miles away
Adam: IMing is a glorious thing
Adam: I was really worried when you said you were moving to California after college
Adam: but not any more
Adam: because I realize that we'll still be able to keep in touch in a very real way
Darren: Well, that's really just to get noticed and whatnot.
Darren: I'll see what's involved in telecommuting back.
Darren: I've seen it done.
Darren: But only by people who started in CA.
Darren: Because as much as I feel welcome here, I don't think anything can beat home.
Adam: home
Darren: Not the location. Just where the heart is.
Adam: what I've just realized is that's not so much a place
Adam: it's the people
Darren: Exactly.
Darren: It's never gonna be "I miss Friendly's".
Adam: it's going to be "I miss farting toilets"
Adam: :-{
Darren: It's gonna be, "I miss when Adam walked out of the bathroom at Friendly's and proudly exclaimed, 'The toilet farted.'"
Adam: :-P

Hey Dad!
Classes start tomorrow. When Mom mentioned that you'd have to leave work to pick me up on a Thursday before a weekend, it made me realize that I'd be spending the following Friday home alone. That got me really depressed for about an hour or so. Then I realized, home is home. It doesn't matter how long I'm gone, you guys will still be there for me and my home will still be there. Just because I'm gone doesn't mean I'll never be able to go back. Knowing that home is always there for me if I really need it wiped my depression right away. I think I can get on with my college experience now. I just wanted to let you guys know what I've been working through, emotionally. Right now, I'm actually excited about classes tomorrow. Should be fun. I'll probably still call, but if I'm too busy I wanted to say "hi" anyway. Hope everything is going great. I'll let you know if I need anything.

Love you!

Adam

  posted by Adam at 01:12 | 0 comments

September 02, 2004
Day Forty-Five
Well, I spend the vast majority of my day very happy and the vast majority of my evening horribly depressed. It's homesickness of a most terrible degree. It's also a Catch-22; I meet people and put myself "out-on-the-town" socially most when I'm happy. But I'm not happy unless I'm socially fufilled. As a result of missing the most excellent year I've had, I'm withdrawn and spend most of my time moping about in my room alone. It's a brutal cycle. Each day, however, I seem to spend less and less time depressed, so hopefully things are moving in a positive direction. I need people in my life to fufill the roles my high school friends provided for me; I need to fill something in the realm of what I did in high school. The parent/child bond cannot be replaced of course, which may make the whole process moot. I recognize the neccesity for evolution and change, but I'm not sure I can handle it yet. I hope I can handle it before it's too late. It feels so strange that it's only been five days since I woke up in my own bed and it feels strange that I'm worrying only five days in about whether it's too late to get myself to a place where I can be happy again. And all the while, my mind's eye polishes over the faults that I had living at home, polishes over the very things that made me eager to move on in the first place. This summer was damn near perfect, and I savoured every day of it. But the times before it weren't, and if I expect the rest of my life to be as easy, free, and fun as the summer after high school, I'm going to live in a state of perpetual disapointment that I'll never be able to awaken from.

The weather today was absolutely fantastic, which did alot to keep the optimism from yesterday night's bowling going strong until a very depressing dinner. I didn't think it could get any more depressing than eating every meal alone but I was wrong; eating dinner in silence while your one RA tells you how sick you're going to be of the food and the other bitches about picking the wrong major is actually much worse.

Counterpoint to this, when I ran into Mike on the way to visiting my academic advisor, I was more than content and didn't have a care in the world. The weather was perfect, the sun was shining, my attitude was finally optimistic. From the conversation with my parents after buying the microsaver lock on, however, my day just went down hill. If things don't pick up soon, I may have to stop keeping track of it. Reflecting on your own miserableness does nothing but plunge you deeper into depression and cause you to feel even more sorry for yourself than you already do. Somewhere in that last point is the key. If I could garner the strength of character and maturity to accept my problems without dwelling on the whole "woe is me" thing, I'd be much better off.

  posted by Adam at 22:29 | 0 comments

Days Forty-Three and Forty-Four
I didn't write yesterday, because I was in a very depressed funk that lasted through the first two games of bowling with my floor tonight. But then I stopped playing things safe and opened up a bit to things. My outlook on college is better again; for the first time since I've come, I'm actually looking forward to waking up tomorrow. Big events of the last two days: Tuesday's floor meeting designated which stall would be the pisser and which would be the shitter. Today, my residence hall caught on fire and we all had to be evacuated. I talked to my mom for the first time since she left, all of two days ago. And my floor went bowling, and by the end it was actually a really good time. I also got talking with Darren in a very real way for the first time since we both took off.
  posted by Adam at 00:49 | 0 comments

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