However:
I've listened to Bruce Springsteen's "Growin' Up" twenty times today.
The girl who sits next to me in Philosophy of Language and who today whispered conspiratorally: "I love logic. I want to cuddle it" is totally my new friend.
I've listened to Bruce Springsteen's "Growin' Up" twenty times today.
Please let me never reach the point where I take things that are supposed to be fun- logic, pop music, comic books- so seriously I can't enjoy them. I don't want to be a joyless indie pop snob who's too cool to dance or won't listen to a band that's on Elektra. I don't want to look down on anybody who reads X-Men and I don't want to freak out over a bent cover. I don't want to be that boy in my seminar who acts so weary of philosophy and so unkind towards philosophers I don't know why he bothers.
Finally back in my own room after spending last night sleeping under my coat in a small room in 44 Green Street. It wasn't so bad, really- it had good scope for imagination and I gave myself a nice dinner to make up for it. I had extremely stressful dreams, though. I had hoped to sleep until Washburn was opened, but this proved impossible, so I went downtown instead and had a bagel. Then I came home and, to rid myself of four days' dirt and grime, I flossed, brushed my teeth, rinsed my mouth with Listerine, took a shower, cleaned my room, and brushed my teeth again. I now feel somewhat more human. The plan is to (any minute now) spend the rest of today doing homework, because I am now in the home stretch. There are just about four more weeks before winter break, so there's no putting anything off. I have to buckle down.
Have I mentioned recently that it's my birthday on Friday? Well, if you can't be self-absorbed on your weblog, where can you, I say. Today I got a present from my paternal grandparents. I suspect it's a book, although it's a little on the small side. Hopefully it's not a pocket-size New Testament or something (although I have been wishing recently that I had a Bible). My grandparents have on several occasions given me books which I have absolutely resisted reading, and I've managed to hold out for years on some occasions... and then when I eventually do read them, they become my favorite books. I'm thinking in particular of I Capture the Castle, which I wouldn't read and wouldn't read and oh my goodness what a spectacular book it turned out to be in the end. Do I learn from these experiences? Of course not. I still have a book on the shelf in Lillian's room that Grandma and Grandpa gave me maybe three years ago which I have never opened. It's probably amazing.
Stephen Fry is a thief. Not only did he steal somebody's credit cards and the pocket change of all his public school classmates, he also stole an entire character (Psmith) from P.G. Wodehouse and entire scenes from my life. Stephen Fry, stop listening in at my window, writing down what you hear, changing all the pronouns, going back in time 15 years and putting it in a novel. It's definitely not on.
One decided advantage to having Thanksgiving in New York this year is that, since I won't see most of my relatives until Christmas, they seem to have all sent me parcels in the mail. That, at least, is what I assume to be the explanation for the five package slips in my mailbox this afternoon. Two of them were marked as envelopes, and I was expecting a rather important envelope from my mother, so I turned those two in. Sure enough, one of them was the China info from my mum (including an exceptionally long letter, which was nice, as she normally confines herself to a sentence or two). The other was a big yellow envelope from my Aunt Carol and Uncle Bruce, which I have not opened because I am so very full of self restraint. *cough* Incidentally tonight at dinner Kendra was telling one of her long Kendra stories about her incredible hulklike rage and I was smiling and nodding and sipping my tea when out of nowhere I choked and spit a big mouthful of tea back into the mug- so unladylike. I think I may have to get myself a Sippy Cup, in accordance with a slight trend I've noticed among my housemates.
Here are some thank yous:
I've often said that you know things are bad when you listen to Steve Earle and really relate to every word he says, even though a lot of it is about heroin abuse. Today is one of those days. Other musicians to avoid relating to: