Sunday, March 28, 2010

good ol' Stanley Miller

So in our issues class a few weeks ago, Dr. Spencer had a nice little surprise waiting for us in the form of a quiz. Had any of us read the 60 pages assigned? I submit that we had not. So some of us wrote stories. Here's what I turned in (posted here in celebration of Dr. Spencer giving me back 40% on my exam paper and returning it to A status). He gave me a few points for it, too. :D

His question: describe Stanley Miller's experiment.

My answer:

Stanley Miller looked down at his test grade
And suddenly found himself afraid
Then he yelled, “What the junk!
“This whole scoring is bunk!”
And quickly found himself enraged

So Stanley an experiment devised
To make his exam score rise
He should know, Doc Spence should
That the paper was good
And to raise his test grade would be wise.

And so Stanley sits here, mad
For he’s NEVER had a test score this bad
In 15 years of school
Never felt like such a fool
And now he’s dreading his college grad.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

46 days...



The sea is rising, the dark is falling,
A small crab scuttles by
This curving piece of rippling blue
Cerulean liquid sky

Hissing warmth, incoming waves
Surround me where I stand
A slice of carnelian dripping sunset
Cupped within my hand

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

get ready, get set...

Speed is freedom. There is an odd sort of peace when you're careening through the world at a much higher rate of velocity than normal. When you swim so fast that the water itself carries you along, or run though the woods dodging trees or jumping roots...or my favorite, flying along on a bike with the wind coming at you from every direction. Or flying down a mountain on a thin board, kicking up a spray of snow. Especially that.

When I was smaller, I watched the movie "Treasure Planet" until the DVD almost wore out. I wanted nothing more than to build my own solar surfer and use it to catch the wind and lift myself above the trees, the clouds, the earth. I was too practical to try jumping off of roofs, but I still wished. I don't know what it would be like to skim over the earth that fast, that effortlessly. I can just imagine.

Unfortunately, for those who seek their freedom with their own version of speed, there is a glut of Cop types around here, whose latest offenses include interrogating people in their dorm rooms and threatening to drag them to court because they glanced out their window at a speeder who just wasn't fast enough. Of course, there were four coppers with flashing lights for the one speeder, so you can't really blame the college kid. Silly coppers.

Somebody in the world now thinks I'm a few huskies short of an Iditarod. I borrowed Bec's bike and got going fairly quickly headed out of SV, and the curve into the church parking lot was fun, and the wind was blowing in my face and the day was so very very warm and fresh, that I couldn't help myself and did something between a giggle and a chortle. Of course, the poor person I nearly ran over as I slipped around their parked vehicle didn't seem to share the joy. I guess I could be more careful. Or not.

I missed work this morning. First time since I started working every morning. I'm so screwed. If I was currently running on enough sleep to care, I'd be freaking out. I'll have to bring Mr. Benge some kind of bribe. Oh, gosh. I've rambled long enough.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Snell's Window

It's a natural phenomena I came across in my Physics textbook (proving that it is, indeed, useful for something), and it's absolutely rad, or sweet, or whatever antiquated word you prefer. Apparently, when you dive deep enough, either under the sun or the moon, the entire word from horizon to horizon condenses into a circle above your head. Everything is focused and clear and quiet.


Dad always tells me that trying to see your own problems clearly is like sticking your nose in the middle of a painting. You may have a general idea of size and subject. You might even get a little paint on your nose for your trouble. But unless you pull back and get a different perspective, focus on the bigger picture, you will never see clearly. Bless him for teaching me how, because I'm muck-deep in personal situations presently, and some perspective other than my close-up-and-personal, nose-in-the-picture, paint-on-my-eyeballs ones would be welcome. One that focuses my horizons into a vision floating on the surface would be even better. Oh, well.

I guess there's some deep insight tying these all together, but you're smart, you can figure it out yourself. I just wanted to share how cool this underwater window is, and that I want to see it myself someday. That's all.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Banishing the sting...

When you least expect it, Death reaches out and touches your soul. Tap tap tap. Are you there, Alyssa?

I've felt that light knock before, on a black icy lake, sprawled near a pressure ridge and a dead snowmobile. Just a light brush, but it was enough to made me scream in terror. I've been questioning my own mortality ever since that spring last year, and it's made me more thoughtful, more cautious, less prone to take risks just because I think I can. But yesterday, the pictures and the emotional backlash hit so very hard.

Are you afraid of death? I used to think I wasn't. I used to be firmly certain that I might be scared of dying painfully, or frighteningly, or--my worst nightmare--losing my life in a pathetically feeble attempt to save somebody I love; but that the concept of death itself didn't faze me.

I was wrong. Oh, was I wrong. I saw more death on that video clip yesterday than I ever have before, and it shook me. It's ugly, I never realized how ugly, but more than that it's just wrong. As if gravity suddenly reversed but everything still looks upright. We aren't supposed to die like that. Nobody is supposed to die like that.

I almost made it through, until the flashlight-lit picture of the twisted pieces of what used to be a blue-eyed girl. Her eyes were so very, very blue as they stared through the dark into the camera, at an impossible angle to her body. I could feel myself inwardly hyperventiliating and came closer to passing out than I ever have in my life (except for the time in surgery dad cut that lady's tendon and it sounded like celery crunching. That was pretty bad). I guess the only reason I didn't was because I felt it coming. You've got to be kidding, I thought in disbelief, there's no way I'm melting into a puddle in the middle of convocation. I don't mind blood--not even hunting--so I figure it was just my mind telling me that it'd had enough. And in a way I welcomed it because it let me know that I've not been dulled into insensitivity just yet.

Death is the antithesis of all my God created us to be, and the innate wrongness of it frightens the living daylights outta me. I wish I could say I had a long chat with God about all of this, and that now I could look death in the face and cackle, or something equally brave and perhaps a little more dignified. I can't. Yet even though my heart still hurts, my head thankfully knows that God takes away the sting. The victory is only temporary, and if I do have to answer the tap tap tap someday, well, that'll be ok. Can't say I'm not afraid, but that's ok too. Jesus did it first.

Remember how the evil dude in the Mummy scrawled "Death is only the beginning" on the inside of his sarcophagus? He might have been an ugly son, but he was right. This life is short but there's an eternity after this, and there's nothing ugly about it. Too hoo! say the Narnian owls.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

It is so NOT my life...

Dr. Nyirady came to do pre-application interviews yesterday, and I showed up in my customarily dark dressy attire, hands cold and hair messily curled, because that's how I roll when I'm nervous.

But, while he was an interesting, genial gentleman and in no way intimidating, I still left the short meeting mentally drained and deeply disappointed in myself. And I'm tired of being disappointed.

Loma Linda's list of requirements is set rather...high. And while I mostly fall within the parameters, due to my two bad semesters of mostly B's I'm in Loma Linda's "grey area" of acceptance. What can save me is my continuing "upward trajectory;" aka nearly straight A's for the rest of my time here.

Oh, geesh. There goes my life.

But I hate how it seems like my whole college career has been a painful balancing act between falling just short of the elusive A and still being out and moving and alive, living, and yet being guilty; because if I studied all the time, I could indeed get A's. But if I'm not supposed to be out and getting to know people, making connections, then why are my parents paying skads of money for me to be here?

Is being a surgeon worth this? I have to believe so...

Friday, March 5, 2010

sleeping with nightlights

My heart is broken.

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle kills off Sherlock Holmes. How I managed to live 21 years in happily naive enjoyment of the Hound of the Baskervilles, and The Sign of the Four, all the while contemplating the wit and shrewd deductive skills that belonged to the man with the pipe and trenchcoat, without realizing the author killed him off, I do not know. I haven't even read the story yet--but I'll never forgive Sir Arthur. Not even if it's really, really good.

The world no longer seems a safe and welcoming place with Holmes dead. Chuck Norris needs to sleep with a nightlight now.