Wednesday, August 19, 2020

Eleven

Eleven I know, I know, I havent written in forever and a week. Um, yeah, about that. Basically, Jess Kim summed it up as well as I could, so theres really not much else to say about that. Incidentally, are there some people who you always think of by both first and last name all the time? Jess Kim is one of those people for me. I was debating earlier on what the best way to talk about my life since I last wrote without publishing a novel and I decided a list would be the best way. I keep lists of pretty much anything you can imagine because I really enjoy, um, numbering things. Also, lists are really easy to comment on, because you can say regarding 1, I actually dont think that Boston weather will be as great as you say it is, because I am a sane person.So yeah. A list it is. 1. I love Boston weather. Most people look at me like Im crazy when I say this, but its true. I find it so surprising. One hour its beautiful and the next its storming and the next its hailing and Im never bored. 2. I went home a few weeks ago for a weekend, since I wont be going home this summer until late August. Judging by my previous experiences with air travel, youd think I I would never step foot on a plane again. When I visited MIT my junior year, I missed my plane and was really worried the people waiting for me at the airport would just leave because they thought I wasnt coming, and d e stranded at Logan airport until my flight home (they waited, though). When I came to MIT last August, my car caught on fire on the way there and I got in a car with a stranger just so I wouldnt miss my flight. No, seriously. So yeah, its just not something that works out for me. This time, I was six minutes late for self check-in, so I had to go to regular check-in and there was a really long line. The lady working there told me I missed my flight because I still had to go through security and everything, but I convinced her I could run really fast. Then I got the people standing in line for security to let me cut them so I could make my flight, and most of them did until I reached some Japanese tourists who didnt know English, so they just looked at me when I asked them if I could go in front of them. Luckily they werent far from the front, so I just stopped there. I went through security no problem, got to my gate and they were still boarding WIN. Then they asked me for my boarding pass and I realized I left it in security, along with my ID. Luckily I had my license and they printed me another boarding pass. On the plane I decided to text my dad to let him know I made it, and thats when I realized that, along with my boarding pass and ID, I left my phone in security. Hurray. So yeah. Airport fiasco number 324807. I should keep a file. (Miraculously, I called my dad a few days later from my friends phone to tell him I lost mine, and he told me he knew already because they mailed it back to my house (along with my ID, which is presumably how they knew whose it was). My luck bo th good and bad amazes me sometimes. 3. When my dad mailed me my phone and ID, he also mailed me an apple corer and a set of utensils. Ive been drinking cereal from the bowl all year and he decides now, with two weeks of school left (at that point) to mail me some. Buy utensils before you come kids, I sometimes found myself drinking cereal from the bowl. Dont let it happen to you. 4. Speaking of food, I came across a friend the other day in the hallway, eating a chunk of raw ramen. Every mothers worst nightmare. Dont worry though this isnt really the status quo. There are dining halls and grocery stores relatively close. Some dorms have communal dinner. As an advocate of eating healthily and a strong believer in the fact that Food is Really Really Important to not only healthy, but happiness, I urge to to consider carefully which is the best option for you. 5. I think geese are really weird. Long necks and so sleek and awkward-looking at the same time. 6. By the way, Im sitting in a park by the Charles River not anywhere close to MIT right now, which might make that last comment less random. I went for a bike ride and its so beautiful outside that it inspired me to take a break in the sun and finally write. 7. On bikes: I really like them. You should like them too, because if you live in Next House, or you decide to major in Architecture or Management, or if you just want to leave Cambridge for awhile to go somewhere with more trees, you will want to have a bike. And youll love your bike and go for rides along the Esplanade on beautiful spring and fall days, and all will be well in the world until your bike gets stolen, which it inevitably will. Mine did, and I was really sad and felt trapped for a long time until I got a new one. This one is a road bike, though, and Im not so good at riding it yet because the tires seem really skinny. ANYWAY this is another dont let it happen to youthing. You should get a damn good lock for your bike maybe two (I have two now, because I love my bike too much. Ill probably be one of those parents who never let their children go outside for for of their being kidnapped, as well. Good thing Im not having kids). 8. This is the last thing on the list about bikes, I promise. Summer is coming up, so I thought Id divulge my plans, even though I already have in an earlier post. But I really wanted to use the word divulge, so Im not changing it. This summer Im participating in Bike and Build, on the Southern U.S. route (Florida to San Francisco). Bike and Build is the epitome of a lot of things I love, so Im really really excited. I like long-distance physical activity I ran cross country in high school and always found it very satisfying. I also like travel, and Ive never been to the south, so that should be really cool. I like learning about service and service organizations because Im interested in making such things more efficient and effective, and Bike and Build is a service trip as well as a bike trip in all the towns we stop in, we give presentations about the affordable housing crisis in the U.S., and we spend several days helping build houses with organizations like Habitat for Humanit y. I think the best way to evaluate how effective something like this is to do research, and then actually try it out, so it should be a very educational experience. Also, I like promoting bike use instead of cars, and I like doing crazy things, mostly for posterity (both of them). Bike and Build also raises money for said affordable housing organizations (not just Habitat, it just happens to be one of the most recognizable) by asking each of its riders to raise $4000. So this is me exploiting my position as a blogger to ask each one of you for a donation of whatever youre willing to give even if its only $5 or $10. It makes a difference, and it makes me like you a lot. =) 9. Another Dont Let This Happen To You type thing bad hass classes. Mine is over, thank every natural and supernatural being, and I hope none of you ever have to suffer through an experience like this. It wasnt hard, just very badly organized. At the end of every term, youll get to fill out an anonymous class evaluation so the powers-that-be know how much people love it or what they should improve. To be fair, its a fairly new class. Im not sure that justifies how much I actually paid for it considering the tuition here, but at least its over. As one of the students in the class said when the professors left the room for the last time, this moment [filling out the evaluation] is the very reason we are justified in not having dropped the class, like the other half of the class did.For this reason, Im not going to tell you what class it was, because optimistically, it will be significantly better next year, considering they have pages of student suggestions to use. But really, ask peo ple you know what they know about certain classes before you sign up for them, no matter how cool they sound. Itll save you a lot of trouble. 10. Senior House had its annual water drop last week. We drop containers filled with water from the balcony to (and I quote the email sent out about it) shout out the evil classes what you are glad you are done with, so they can be written on the gravitational sacrifices. I didnt participate because I was still writing a paper for said Terrible Hass Class, but it sounds, umwet. 11. Eleven things because Im course 11 and class of 2011. I still have a lot to say so Ill probably write another post soon, but I think this is enough to digest for now. Last week I went to the Student Leader Awards. Normally these things are really boring and I dont go, but Amnesty was getting an award, so I thought I should. It was surprisingly unboring they had MTG sing random songs throughout the ceremony, ending with the song No Time At All from a previous production (Pippin) sung to Dean Benedict, our fairly popular dean for student life, to commemorate his retirement. They put a veil and shawl on him, and he even sang along. It was ridiculous and amusing, and the food was good, so Im glad I went. Unfortunately I didnt take pictures, but Im sure theyll pop up on teh internets sometime soon and when they do Ill let you know. Amnesty won the philanthropy award, by the way. Woohoo. Im going to ride back now. See ya [I took a couple pictures on my way back. Hope you enjoy them :] This is one of my favorite parts of the bike path. I love trees This is on the Harvard Bridge! Id never noticed it before. Pretty cool

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