Sunday, December 5, 2010

Christmastime

I love Christmastime. I love it SOOOOO much! (like the children's book, "SOO Big!" but instead, it's SOO much!) My apartment is all decorated, I love singing Christmas songs, I love the warmth and spirit that everyone has, I love trying to figure out the best gift to give someone...I just love it all!

This is a small nativity scene that I believe used to belong to my grandmother? (Correct me if I'm wrong about that, Mom.) 
 One side of my living room. (The couch is in front of that door because all that's behind it is the heater.) That advent calendar is from my childhood. And yes, the French horn is hanging over the heater dial thingy. =P
 My roommate's lovely tiny tree, sitting on the table, and lights around the windows/door
My array of ornaments and stockings =) Figuring out how to hang those took some ingenuity...I took one of those metal sliding rod thingies (no idea what they're called) and tried to put in the window sill, but it was too short, so I had to tape cups on either side of it, hahaha. Now the ornaments and stockings have something to hook on to!

Most of all, though, I love the Reason for the season. I am so grateful to my Savior, Jesus Christ! At this time of year, many people celebrate the anniversary of His birth, but forget about the rest. This is a time to celebrate the anniversary of the beginning of the greatest Life that ever lived, the birth of the One who would Atone for all of us, who would suffer for our sins and sorrows so that if we will dedicate our lives to Him, we will be saved. His birth was only the beginning. Christmas is a time to remember that He, Our Exemplar, Our Redeemer, lived a perfect life. It is our duty to follow that example, and Christmastime is our reminder to be more loving, more generous, more giving, and overall more selfless.

Tonight was the First Presidency Christmas Devotional. The prophets admonished us to focus on the good, to remember the true purpose of Christmas, to give the greatest gift we can give to others (the gospel), and above all, to keep the Christmas spirit in our hearts all year long. May we remember to do so this Christmas season and always!

Monday, November 22, 2010

Thankful for friends, family, the break from classes, exercise, fruit salads, writing three papers...

Thank you to my friends and family who read, and who commented, on my last post =) I very much appreciated your thoughts.

So, I'm sitting here, trying to work on a research paper. Obviously it is going extremely well, because I am on my blog, ignoring it... Anyway, I told my professor I'd send her my best draft so far by Wednesday or so. (Realization: that means I only have a day and a half to make huge improvements on it...yikes.) Unfortunately, she is one of those professors who gives confusing guidance, or no guidance at all, and so you don't know what to do, how to fix it, or how to fulfill her requests. I will be graded on this paper as though it is my thesis prospectus, which is it is not, so I feel like there is no point in doing it (except for the fact that if I don't, I fail the course, which means I have to repeat it. That should really be enough motivation.). So here I am, trying to motivate myself to work on this paper...and failing miserably. Sigh.

On the bright side, tonight I made a fruit salad with strawberries, kiwi, grapes, cranberries, and pomegranate seeds, and it was tasty and nutritious. Also, my run today was difficult (added 5 minutes in length from the last time I ran) but invigorating, and I feel strong. Also also, I don't have class again until next Monday, which is very relieving. Also also, my friend J is coming into town this week from CA, and I am excited to see her! Also also also also, Thanksgiving is on Thursday! So as long as I get somewhere with this paper (not to mention the other two I need to work on this week), this week should be a good one! =)

HAPPY THANKSGIVING! Eat lots of turkey, enjoy family, and thank the Lord for your blessings. If you're traveling, be safe! Enjoy the holiday...

Monday, November 15, 2010

The Life of a Failed Musician-turned-Sociologist

I usually don't share very personal things on my blog. I like to keep things to myself, so I rarely talk about my trials and concerns with anybody. But I thought about it and decided, it's my blog. I can write whatever I want on it (whatever I want that I'm willing for other people to read, that is), and you can feel free to read it or ignore it. Also, the way I write may present a different impression about myself than I intend, so just take it with a grain of salt that I am very honest and matter-of-fact about how I see myself and those around me. That being said, I will now write what I intended to write.

For as long as I can remember, I have been a musician. I've been singing almost as long as I've been talking. I have perfect pitch, which enables me to identify the name of any pitch or basic chord upon hearing it. If I had more extensive training in music theory, I am sure I could get to a point at which I could identify any chord upon hearing it, but for now, I can identify them mostly by the pitches included in the chord. I can also do the reverse--if someone asks me to sing a certain pitch, I can do so. I learned that I had this gift when as a child, my sisters and I would sing along with Christine in Phantom of the Opera, and I'd know when they weren't singing the right pitch for her high scream (a double E), while good old Michael Crawford would be singing "Sing for me!" in the background. I've also played the piano since I was small; I remember whipping through the John Thompson piano books on my own when Mom didn't have time to teach me lessons. I would check off the songs that I "passed", or I would have Mom listen and give her approval that I pass them off. Even at that age, I wanted to be a concert pianist when I grew older. When I got into fourth grade, I picked up my sister's old flute and joined the band. The first day of band class, the older students spent the whole time teaching us how to make a sound on our instrument; I'd already figured that out, so I went ahead and learned a few notes. I quickly progressed to the more difficult songs, and went through the entire book within a few weeks. The rest of elementary school band left me impatient for junior high and more difficult music to learn. Of course, when I got to junior high I only had trouble with a few select songs; the rest for me were easy as pie. Meanwhile, I was singing in church regularly, and playing piano all the time. For my brother's missionary homecoming at church, when I was 11 years old, I accompanied my family on a Marvin Goldstein number. I learned to play the Maple Leaf Rag, Jon Schmidt music, and other difficult pieces. One day when I was 12, I sat down and played an old favorite, Für Elise. To shake things up a bit, I decided to figure it out in a different key. I transposed the main theme into another key, then another, then several more. It became a project, and I ended up transposing the entire song into all 12 keys. I played the piano for eight hours that day. Soon my mom found a new teacher for me, Dr. Jungwon Jin, at a nearby university, and there began my professional music study. I also began voice lessons around that time.

My mother began taking me to see performances by prominent LDS musicians such as Marvin Goldstein, Janice Kapp Perry, and Kenneth Cope, and we'd have them sign their music books for us. She also told each of them details about my musical talent, and they'd encourage me to work at it. Once, during a church concert by Marvin Goldstein, he motioned for me to come up and turn his pages for him while he played! Inspired by Brother Goldstein, I began arranging my own music, hymns, other songs, and writing music to perform. I went to the California state level competition for a musical piece I'd written. Every new piano piece that became popular, I learned to play. Movies would come out, and I'd figure out the piano part to the score before the piano books would come out. My parents purchased a beautiful Mason and Hamlin grand piano, which I loved (and still love) to play. I would stay at the keys for hours, practicing away, then head over to practice my flute. In band, it irked me to no end when those around me would consistently miss the same notes or rhythms and the band director never noticed. Sometimes I would turn around and tell the clarinets that they were missing their F#s or ask my friend A to tell the other trumpets that they were missing partials, not because I wanted to seem better than them but because I just wanted the music to sound good. That's all I wanted, and that's all I still want...I just want music to sound beautiful, as it is meant to. High school came, and I joined the marching band and symphonic band. Eventually I also joined the jazz band, where I met my first real struggle--although I loved jazz, I was never very good at jazz piano, likely due to my background training in classical piano. But I kept doing it, and I enjoyed it. I continued performing at school and playing in church. Piano competitions were common at first, but because I started professional lessons so late in life and I was competing with students who had been professionally trained since they were 3 or 4, I rarely placed. Our high school band had some promising talent but weak support, and we never did very well in performances. I was in the high school madrigal choir my senior year, but that program was also weak.

Soon I became discouraged with piano, even though I loved it. In band, I became complacent, because compared to most of the other students in the struggling music program at my high school, I was leaps and bounds ahead. I performed in local and regional honor bands and orchestras to challenge myself, but there wasn't much to be done. I learned to play the alto and tenor saxophones, the clarinet, and the French horn to keep from being bored. When I joined choir, many of the other members were talented, but careless with their talent. They were in it for the fun, while only a few like me wanted more out of the experience. At some point Dr. Jin moved back to Korea for a while, and I began studying piano with a new teacher at the university, Dr. Elvin Rodriguez. He challenged me a lot, but I still struggled. I taught piano lessons throughout high school. I loved band and invested time in 0-period jazz and after school marching band, even though we weren't very good. I enjoyed the time away from home, being with my band friends. I dated another talented musician in the band for much of my high school career, and the time I invested there also pulled me away from personal practice. I joined drumline and played the keyboards; the unfamiliar stress led me to develop cysts on my wrists that I had surgically removed. That, of course, limited my ability to play the piano for a while. I took difficult classes like the rest of my siblings, trying too hard to do too much, and I had less and less time for cultivating my most promising musical talent, piano. I became the drum major for the marching band my senior year, and I quickly fell in love with the idea of being a band conductor. The conflict between my love for conducting and my love for piano made it very difficult to prioritize, and I fell short on both as I tried to keep doing both. I would have done musical theater all my life if we'd had the programs in my schools, but we did not. I loved all things musical and tried to do everything I could, which made it impossible to really perfect any one instrument or voice. 


Nonetheless, soon it became time for me to put my lifelong dream of being a musician into action and apply for the Piano Performance major at the School of Music at BYU. I had been working on a Chopin Scherzo, as well as a Bach Prelude and Fugue and a Beethoven Sonata. I'd worked hard, and I felt confident that I would be accepted into the program. I took the AP Music Theory test my junior year of high school (even though we didn't have the course) and received top marks, and I knew that would help. I also took the Aural Skills exam, which is an exam given to all music school applicants, with tests in interval, chord, and rhythm studies. Everyone else who took it was really scared, because they warned us that most people had to take it twice or more to score a passing score (30 out of 64 was accepted as passing). I took it the one time and got a 62. All things considered, it seemed certain that I would get into the music program at BYU...but I did not. Everyone at home was shocked, including myself--we all thought that I would get in. But I would have to try out again the next year. I went to BYU and picked up a job to help pay for school. I continued to practice piano so that I could audition again for Piano Performance in January (auditions were only once a year). With the help of my parents, I purchased a good quality flute and prepared to also audition for Music Education. Unfortunately, if I wanted to become a band director for a high school or college, I could not audition on piano even though it was my best instrument: if I auditioned on piano for education, I could only teach elementary school music. So I had to prepare both instruments to audition on the same day, because all of the school of music auditions were held on one day, the same day every year. I was very prayerful about what I should do, and felt that auditioning on both would give me more options. I couldn't afford both piano and flute lessons through the school, so I took flute lessons only, hoping that my years of private training on piano would help me perfect the piano pieces I would perform. My ability on flute improved greatly, and I was excited to audition. I changed the pieces I was doing for piano; I dropped the Chopin Scherzo and worked on a Prokofiev Sonata (it was more difficult and more impressive), changed the Bach Prelude and Fugue, and chose another Beethoven Sonata. I worked hard on them. When I auditioned that January, I was fairly certain I had not gotten in on flute (they only had 2 spots available for about 50 applicants), but I was also fairly certain that I had done the best I could for Piano. As self-critical as I was, and knowing that I had done my best, I was sure I would get in, even in spite of the competition...but again, I did not. Three auditions down for the School of Music, and I didn't make any of them. 


At this point I became very discouraged. All I wanted to do with my life was music, but the BYU School of Music wouldn't let me get in! I was mostly done with my GE's by the time I finished my freshman year of college, and I didn't know whether or not I should wait around and audition a fourth time the next January. Even if I got in then, I wouldn't start the program until fall of my junior year, and then I would have four more years of my undergrad ahead of me. I considered transferring to another school, but felt that the Lord wanted me to stay at BYU. I took piano lessons from one of the faculty members for the Piano Department at BYU that fall, intending to audition the following January. My teacher was extremely hard on me, but not in what I felt was a positive way: he never complimented, never noted my progress, and constantly suggested that I look into studying something else. He told me that if I liked ANYTHING besides music, I should do that instead, because music was so grueling that it had to be your only option or you'd never be happy. Basically, he faked me out into thinking that I wasn't good enough for the music program, I couldn't do it, and I wasn't talented. All my life I had this confidence in my abilities as a musician. I KNEW I was talented. I knew that not because of what other people said, but because as I studied it more and more, I knew how to identify good quality music and I knew that I was able to produce it. But after being rejected three times by the School of Music for the one school at which I really wanted to study music, my confidence became very shaky and then fell apart altogether. I finished the semester of piano lessons because I'd paid for them, but I decided not to audition again. Maybe I should have auditioned on voice, but I didn't. My confidence as a musician was (and still is) completely shot. Instead, I figured I'd find something else to do with my life.


That is how I became a sociology major. I was trying to figure out what I enjoyed and what I could be happy doing with my life, and I decided sociology would be good because I like people and have always been a people person. At that point I didn't have a clear understanding of what sociology is, but I joined the major and went through the program anyway. By the time I graduated last April, I had developed good skills and was good at the subject matter--I got into the Master's program for it, so I knew I had to at least be a decent sociologist. I knew graduate studies would help me with career options later in life, and now I am a sociology Master's student. I think about what I am doing with my life, where I am going, and I really don't know the answers to those questions. I know that having a Master's Degree will open me up to more job opportunities that I might not have if I don't obtain the Master's. I know that what I am doing is a good thing. I know I am good at it. But I don't love it. I like it well enough. I've learned valuable things that will influence many of my relationships throughout my life. But I get out of my classes and the first thing I think is not about how I want to study more about this, but about how I want to take a break from it. My teachers say I need to eat, drink, and sleep sociology, but I don't. I do the bare minimum for my classes. Generally, I try to do well in my classes, not for a love of the subject matter but because from the time I was a child I was taught to do my best in school. But now, when I'm concerned about passing one class in particular, I don't have the drive necessary to work harder. I don't think, "I really love this and it will be so rewarding if I just stick it out." I don't tell myself, "I'm so glad I chose to study sociology and I got into the Master's program." I don't know if I really believe those statements. I just sit here, thinking about how I'm dissatisfied with my life. I'm doing the program because of a myriad of reasons, including my lack of confidence that I could find a decent job that I like with a BS in Sociology, and my memory that when I was a kid, my Dad, who had a Bachelor's Degree, had to go back to school after he was laid off in order to get a good job. I'd rather not have to do that in fifteen or twenty years so that I can get a good job to support my kids. I wouldn't mind going back to gain an education in another field because I enjoy it, but I would rather not have to do so then just so I can get a better job. After I graduated, I looked into getting another Bachelor's in music at a different school, but the schools I researched wouldn't accept students who already had degrees because too many people are going to college now. I am no longer a musician, but a sociologist (and that, only kind of). So here I am, not exactly prostrate with depression about where my life is going, but by no means fulfilling any dream of mine. I'm just...going along, dissatisfied.


I didn't write this with the intention of asking my readers for advice about what to do; I just needed to put it on "paper". But if you have advice or counsel, thoughts, experiences, etc., feel free to share. Like I said, I'm not doing anything important...I'm just sitting here, wondering what it is I'm doing and why I'm doing it...and wondering why I'm not doing something else. 

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Hallowthanksmas: A Discourse

Does anyone else feel like Halloween, Thanksgiving, and Christmas are too close together?

Halloween: Come October 1st, or even September 1st, everyone is excited about Halloween. People talk about costumes, parties, dances, and the like that they will participate in for Halloween. Everyone wants to watch scary movies and go to haunted houses. Halloween gets the longest season for celebration of any of these three, purely because of its calendar date: there are 30 whole days of October before the holiday, not to mention all of September, whereas Thanksgiving has at most 27 and Christmas has only 24 (unless you're counting from the day after Thanksgiving, which could be as many as 31). But should it really have first priority here, people? Maybe my dislike for Halloween comes from a childhood tendency to get scared easily (this may or may not be a lingering tendency to get scared easily...). I was one of those kids who always dressed up as a princess, fairy, or angel; I always hated haunted houses, and I was usually secretly glad when Halloween fell on a Sunday and we couldn't go trick-or-treating. Now, I realize it is my dislike for the principle of fear. Call me a killjoy if you want, but fear is Satanic, and a holiday that has become associated with scaring the living daylights out of people for fun is not a good thing, if you ask me. But enough of that; my real complaint lies in the fact that the Halloween season is far longer than Thanksgiving or Christmas, and I don't think that's fair.

Thanksgiving: First of all, no one ever knows when Thanksgiving is, because it's the fourth Thursday...so you have to pull out your calendar and then count down from the first Thursday to find out when it is. I feel like Thanksgiving gets gypped, because people are still enjoying their Halloween candy and the fun of dressing up for various costume-wearing Halloween celebrations at least a week into November. Then there's the fact that Thanksgiving is downplayed anyway; everyone is excited for Halloween to come, but no one really seems to care about Thanksgiving. There are very few Thanksgiving decorations: when you're a kid you make turkeys out of construction paper, but after a few years you end up making jack-o-lanterns for Halloween, putting up trees for Christmas, and doing nothing for Thanksgiving because you're still cleaning up those rotten pumpkins and getting ready to put up all the holly and the ivy. I'm surprised that we Americans, notorious for how much we love stuffing our faces with food, should neglect this holiday that encourages a feast in which you eat as much as humanly possible. But in all seriousness, have we forgotten what it means to show gratitude? We feast for Thanksgiving to celebrate and show our gratitude for the many blessings we have received. Shouldn't this be more important?

Christmas: I could say a million things about Christmas, but I'll settle for a few. Christmas has all this wonderful music to listen to, when there is little or no music for Thanksgiving and Halloween. This is not a plug for more Halloween or Thanksgiving music. Rather, I feel like there should be more time to listen to Christmas music. Some people get mad if you do so before the official Christmas season starts, but I'm a supporter of Christmas music whenever you want to listen to it! Unfortunately, the school calendar does not support Christmas. There are always final exams, papers, and other projects that make it impossible to really celebrate the season until semester's end. By then there is no more than a week to celebrate the season. That really is not enough time. Christmas, as the holiday dedicated to the birth of Our Savior, ought to have the longest celebratory season of all, because the birth of Jesus Christ is of greatest importance. Shouldn't our priorities be with the Savior?

To be fair, we still have school on Halloween, and we get two days off for Thanksgiving and two weeks off for Christmas. But I don't think that makes up for it. I'm not proposing we overhaul the system and change the calendar so that Halloween is halfway through September, Thanksgiving at the end of October, and Christmas gets two months. I just think that our priorities are a little mixed up, and that we should place greater emphasis on Thanksgiving and Christmas.

And that is my long, but worthy, justification for the fact that I am currently listening to Christmas music. =)

Sunday, November 7, 2010

A Drop of Blood

A few years ago, a man I was dating at the time shared a song with me. It is called "A Drop of Blood", by Aaron Edson, and it is about the Atonement of the Savior. If the video doesn't work, I've transcribed the lyrics below so that you can at least read them. I think it's a beautiful song.



A drop of blood falling from his chin
He says, Mommy, I don’t want that bike no more
But a mother’s love says, Darling, try again
Let’s show this bike of yours who just turned four

And I know it hurts, but child, it’s just best if you pull through
‘Cuz the pain will go away someday but the strength will stay with you.

Once upon a time
A Friend of mine suffered more than you
Then He showed the world what men of sorrows ought to do
He opened up the door for me and let me walk right through
He paid the price
Let’s see what you can do

A drop of blood falling from her chin
Marks the hours every day she plays
But a master’s love says You’ll play that violin
And the sound will touch their hearts like heaven’s rays

And I know it hurts, but child, it’s just best if you pull through
‘Cuz the pain will go away someday but the strength will stay with you.

Once upon a time
A Friend of mine suffered more than you
Then He showed the world what men of sorrows ought to do
He opened up the door for me and let me walk right through
He paid the price
Let’s see what you can do

A drop of blood fell from His chin
When He was born in Bethlehem
A tiny child’s life begins this way
But look at what that Child became
He freed a world from sin and shame
That’s why we’ll praise His Blessed Name this day

A drop of blood falling from His chin
He said, Father, I would not drink this bitter cup
But a Father’s love gave Him strength to pay for sin
And thanks to Him, we might be lifted up

So I know it hurts, but listen, it’s just best if you pull through
‘Cuz the pain will go away someday but the strength will stay with you

Once upon a time
A Friend of mine suffered more than you
Then He showed the world what men of sorrows ought to do
He opened up the door for me and let me walk right through
He paid the price
Let’s see what we can do

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Tagged...

SO, my sister C tagged me to do this, and obviously that means I HAVE to do it now. I am obligated merely because I read her blog. Serves me right. Oh well, it's either do this or read Weber, and let's face it, I've already finished the interesting Weber stuff and don't really want to read the rest =P

1. What is the most ridiculous thing you have ever done in your life? Um...I seriously have no idea. I do ridiculous things every day. And anyway, isn't ridiculous in the eye of the beholder? =) Oh, I know one, I used to eat salt. Plain. I liked it a lot, okay? Also, one time on a dare I did the Tarzan yell at 10:30 PM in a mobile home park. I dressed up as "St. Patrick's Day" for Halloween once. Last year I performed (for no audience) an interpretive dance to Josh Groban with my roommate. There we go. I'm not ashamed of any of these things. =)
2. Describe your perfect vacation. Where, who with, what would you do, etc. Doesn't matter the cost! I would go with my spouse (this will have to happen sometime after I get married) to Europe, probably back to Italy, and just travel all over Italy for a few months. We would enjoy tons of glorious Italian food and gelato, enjoy the beach, enjoy the art, enjoy the warmness of the land and the people...and we would go to the temple in Rome. Obviously this trip will have to take place sometime after I get married and after that temple is dedicated. Seriously though, how awesome would it be to go to the LDS temple in Rome? If that didn't work out, we would do the same kind of things but in other parts of Europe, possibly all over Europe. If we did that, though, the trip would have to last longer to make sure we got to go everywhere we wanted. =) Now that I think about it, I think I'd prefer that to just Italy. I would love to go to Scandinavia and all over Ireland, Scotland, and England.
3. If you could automatically become fluent in one language, which one would it be and why? Either Spanish or Italian. Spanish because it would be extremely useful here in the U.S., or Italian because it is such a beautiful language.
4. You are stranded on a desert island and only have five books to read for the rest of your life. What are they? My scripture quad (4 books bound together with one spine = 1 book! I'm cheating the system!); The most recent General Conference Ensign; Harry Potter 1-7 bound into one book (ha ha! I'm cheating the system again! Man, that book would be huge...); How To Survive In The Desert: On Eating Desert Plants and Animals, On Finding Water To Drink, and On Avoiding Death by Poisonous Desert Creatures; and How To Build A Working Boat Using Sand, Rock, and Various Desert Plants.
5. You have the day off work/school and have no pressing responsibilities. What do you do with yourself? Go to the beach, of course. If I lived close to one, I would. If that's not an option, as it currently is not, I would find a friend to come with and blow off steam somewhere--maybe we'd go to the movies, maybe go shopping, or do something crazy that would probably involve spending money. Maybe I'd learn to hang glide. =)
6. What is your dream job? Do you think it's realistic? I would love a creative work life--to write books/stories/poetry, to write music, to perform music when and where I wanted. I don't particularly enjoy a rigid work schedule. I think this could be realistic for me if I get married and my husband's income is stable enough to provide for our family. If I need a more stable income, I don't think a job like this would be good.
7. What is your favorite thing about yourself? Any particular reason? I've never really thought about this before. I suppose I like my very unique quirkiness. I don't show it much until people get to know me--and indeed I would say very few people know it about me at all; most just know an aspect of my weird quirkiness--but I have some quirky habits, ways of talking, interests, talents, etc. that I like to think keep me at least somewhat interesting.
8. When you log onto the computer, what is the first website that you go to (after email or Facebook)? Well I was going to say Email, then Facebook...I suppose the next one is probably a toss-up between blogger.com, hulu, and blackboard. 

Now you know so much about me. Word. Okay, I am going to tag five people to do this, muahahaha...I don't know if anyone reads this, but I'm going to tag the authors of the following blogs: http://melodicallyme.blogspot.com/, http://amycarsten.blogspot.com/, http://paigiethoughts.blogspot.com, http://mwuest.blogspot.com/, and http://adverbfamily.blogspot.com/.
HERE ARE YOUR QUESTIONS:
1. Of all the music artists that you have ever liked, which are you most mortified about that now?
2. When you were a kid, what did you want to grow up to be, and if you aren't that now, why not?
3. What is the one place to which you would most like to travel? What would you do while there?
4. What do you hate that other people inexplicably love? (*credit this question to The Sassy Curmudgeon)
5. Is there anything you have a weird fascination with that other people just don't seem to appreciate? What is it? How did you come to like it so much?
6. We can all think of at least one word that sounds weird, disgusting, just plain wrong, or makes our skin crawl. Without getting too gross, what is your least favorite word, and why do you despise it so much? 
7. If you had the power to sign into law an amendment prohibiting a specific human behavior (i.e. using a Bluetooth or singing karaoke), what would you outlaw? (*credit this question also to The Sassy Curmudgeon--what?! I like the questions!)
8. What was/is your favorite cartoon?

I know getting any of you to fill this out (particularly you last three) is a definite longshot, but come on. Do it for the kids. ...and since none of you have kids (yet), do it for me. =) Here's lookin’ at you, kid.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Be Still, My Soul

You may know that my favorite hymn is "Be Still, My Soul." The peace that song brings is so powerful. Psalm 46:10, "Be still and know that I am God", was twice quoted in General Conference last week. Here are the lyrics to "Be Still, My Soul" and a video of an amazing boy's choir (Libera) performing the hymn.

Be still, my soul: The Lord is on thy side; With patience bear thy cross of grief or pain. Leave to thy God to order and provide; In ev'ry change He faithful will remain. Be still, my soul: Thy best, thy heav'nly Friend Thru thorny ways leads to a joyful end.
Be still, my soul: Thy God doth undertake To guide the future as He has the past. Thy hope, thy confidence let nothing shake; All now mysterious shall be bright at last. Be still, my soul: The waves and winds still know His voice who ruled them while He dwelt below.
Be still, my soul: The hour is hast'ning on When we shall be forever with the Lord, When disappointment, grief, and fear are gone, Sorrow forgot, love's purest joys restored. Be still, my soul: When change and tears are past, All safe and blessed we shall meet at last.

I have a Pandora music station dedicated to "Sunday music", and through it came across an instrumental rendition of "Be Still, My Soul" by one Chris Rice on his album "The Living Room Sessions". I highly recommend looking it up if you like the hymn. Though the piece was instrumental, there were lyrics, different ones that the traditional words in the LDS hymnal. I would like to share them here. They clearly have a non-denominational or born again Christian perspective which provides a different perspective than we might normally have.

How far are you? How close am I? I know your words are true and I don't feel them inside. Still I believe you'll never leave, So, where are You now?
You're all I have, You're all I know, Your breath is breathing in my soul. Still I am gasping, aching, asking, Where are You now?
'Cause I just wanna be with You. I just want this waiting to be over. I just want to be with You, And it helps to know the day is getting closer.
Every minute takes an hour, Every inch feels like a mile 'Til I won't have to imagine And I finally get to see You smile.
My journey's here but my heart is there, So I dream and wait and keep the faith While You prepare our destiny, 'til You come back for me. Oh, please make it soon.
I just wanna be with You. I just want this waiting to be over. I just want to be with You, And it helps to know the day is getting closer.
Every minute takes an hour, Every inch feels like a mile 'Til I won't have to imagine And I finally get to see You.
Every minute takes an hour, Every inch feels like a mile 'Til I won't have to imagine And I finally get to see You smile.

I just found those lyrics interesting. I feel as though the singer is struggling with his testimony, just as the person singing the traditional words is, and pleads with the Lord to be there for him. However, this perspective demonstrates a greater sense of aloneness, while in the traditional one it is as though the individual is consoling himself with the knowledge that God is with him. In that sense it is as though there is a great distance between the individual and the Lord. I do not believe that is the case; I believe the Lord is with us always, so long as we live worthy of His presence. I prefer the original lyrics because they demonstrate the closeness of the Lord to us. Yet this different perspective also draws more attention to the fact that each of us will be able to see our Father in Heaven once again, and the singer looks forward with eager anticipation for that day, not only when he will see His Lord again but when he will see Him smile. I think that will be one of the greatest sights to look forward to: a smile upon the faces of our Heavenly Father and Savior Jesus Christ. I just wanted to post those lyrics here mainly for that reason: that we can remember how absolutely wonderful it will be to see Him again, and to see Him smile. I, for one, am very excited to see Him again. =) I hope for the strength to live worthy now so that I can live with Him eternally.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

I'm a...what?

In the past little while I've taken on a few new identities, and while they've been good to me, I suppose, I'm having an identity complex right now with these newer identities.

I'm a sociologist...right? Aren't I? Haven't I put in three years of school and am planning to put in two more years just to prove that I am a sociologist?

I'm a grad student...or am I? Well, technically I am, because I'm taking graduate courses, but do I really want to be a grad student? Is it worth it?

I'm a researcher...I do lots of research, at least, and I see that it is important, and I can come up with good ideas, yet do I really care that much about it?

I'm an academic...or am I? Knowledge is important, and I want to keep acquiring it, but do I really want to be a part of the "professional academic world"?

I'm a young single adult...and I don't want to be, but do I really have a choice? It is hard to ask guys out without them getting scared off, and sometimes it is hard to get guys to ask me out, mostly because I'm "old" and a grad student in a place where most of the guys and girls around me still have a few years left of their undergrad. So I'm a young single adult...but I don't want to be.

I don't really know what else I am these days, and I am struggling with how I feel about all of this. How I feel about some things is clearer than how I feel about others, but mostly I just don't really know what I'm doing.

Maybe I'm not really struggling at all with it; maybe I'm just creating a problem where there wasn't one, like the "crisis" in social psychology in the 1960s-1970s. (Hey, at least we know I am learning stuff in grad school...but once again, do I care about it? Does it really matter? What am I doing here?)

Monday, October 4, 2010

My experience with SONY.

I purchased a brand new Sony Vaio laptop at the beginning of August 2010. It was an excellent computer and served me well for a month and a half, until it decided to stop working (it won't even turn on). The moment I realized it wasn't working, I called Sony. That was Sunday Sept 19. The first phone call was miserable--15 minutes long, with only a minute and a half total of actual conversation with the agent, who kept putting me on hold while he tried to figure out what he was doing. He put in an order for a tech to come on-site to fix it. The next morning I called again to see if they could suggest any troubleshooting, since the other guy hadn't suggested anything; three phone calls later (the line kept getting cut off, which never happens with anyone else I talk to on the phone in my apartment, so I know it was on their end) I was able to talk to someone who seemed to know what they were doing. He had me do a few things and we were able to get it to turn on--miracle! So he canceled the service request and I celebrated by treating myself to lunch. However, an hour later I went to turn it on, and of course, it didn't work, even after I tried everything we'd done earlier...so I had to call again. Another request was put in. The tech called on Wednesday the 22nd, and he came in the morning because he had to go to Nevada later that day for another appointment. He replaced the hard drive, tried some other things, and couldn't fix it, even with tech support on the phone. Unfortunately he got there a bit late and then stayed for an hour, which meant I had to miss a class. Not cool. He left, unsuccessful, saying that they were going to order a new motherboard that usually takes two days to arrive, so it should get there by that Friday and someone would come out with it to fix my computer. I didn't receive a call on Friday, so I waited until Monday since they don't do business over the weekend.

Monday Sept 27th around noon, I called them to find out what was going on (note that it had already been over a week). The agent I talked to said that he would put out an alert for a tech, who would be calling me within two business days, and he specified that those two days were that very day (Monday) and Tuesday, not Tuesday and Wednesday. I called Tuesday evening, having not received a call, and was told that another alert had been put out and I would get a call at 6pm the next day from a tech to schedule an appointment. I told him the situation and asked how I was supposed to believe that I would get the phone call when it hadn't been true for any of the other times I'd been told that; his answer was "ma'am, a tech will call you at 6pm tomorrow." I called at 11:30pm Wednesday night, having once again not received a call. Finally, I talked to someone who knew what they were doing again (every other phone call I'd had to re-explain the situation even though I was giving them reference numbers where they could look up everything that had happened so far). This lady told me that the product had been shipped the day before, on Tuesday Sept 28th. I asked why it was ordered on Wed the 22nd and not shipped until Tues the 28th, and she said she didn't know, but a tech would call me within four business days to schedule an appointment to come out and fix it. I asked what I was supposed to do while I waited around for the call; I asked if there was anything they could do to compensate or at least help me. Her only suggestion was to borrow a computer from a family member or friend (by the way, who has an extra computer just lying around that they don't need?). Of course, I never received that call she promised.

I called them this afternoon (Monday Oct 4th) and once again asked for information on my order. The guy said that the product was on back order, so I told him that last week I'd been told it had already shipped. He seemed very confused and said that it was never shipped, that it was on back order because they were doing some updates for the company and hadn't been able to process everyone's orders yet. I asked to speak to a manager, and was put on hold again (of course they were playing country music, which did nothing to help my already extremely annoyed mood); after 10 minutes of being on hold, the call was disconnected. I called back and asked to speak to a manager again, so he transferred me to Customer Relations (which is apparently the highest I could go; they refused to transfer me any higher). I talked to the Customer Relations lady, who put me on hold for 15 minutes while she read my information and tried to figure out what to do. She came back and said they would send someone out as soon as they could. I didn't want to wait around anymore (it's been over two weeks now), so I told her I wanted them to replace my product. It's under a limited warranty, but even that clearly says Sony will "repair the product using new or refurbished parts or replace the product with a new or refurbished product". I read that to her and said that since they'd failed to repair it, I wanted them to replace it. She refused to do so and said that the best option she could give me was for me to send my computer to San Diego (they'd pay for postage), have them look at it and try to fix it, and then if they couldn't, they might replace it. This process would take 3 business days for the box to come to me to package it in, so that I wouldn't have to pay, and then another 9-14 business days for the computer to be sent to San Diego, fixed, and returned. Basically I have to wait another 2-3 weeks at best. I accepted this offer because apparently it's the best I'm going to get, but I told the lady that I will never buy another Sony product again because of how bad the customer service is. She said only "we respect your right to make that decision", and did nothing to try and change my mind or even show that she regretted losing a customer. She seemed eager to get off the phone with a "difficult customer" and ended the conversation as quickly as she could without seeming too rude. Now I'm just waiting for my box. Updates soon.

Overall, my experience:
- Probably an hour total of being on hold.
- Calls were dropped at least six times, which meant calling back and re-explaining the situation to yet another person.
- Only three of the fifteen or so people I talked to knew what they were talking about.
- Only two of the people I talked to had English as their first language, and these were included in the three who knew what they were talking about. I understand that everyone needs jobs, but this is a huge problem with customer service! Especially for those taking calls in the U.S. and who don't seem to know what they are doing!
- I was lied to multiple times--they lied several times about when they would call me, they lied about the product being shipped, they lied about what was going on with the part.
- I tried to be civil; I never swore or yelled or anything like that, just spoke firmly, because I didn't want to be rude. Didn't help my situation.
- Only once did it sound like the person I was talking to actually cared about my situation, even though I told several of them how long it had been and that I am a grad student who needs her computer for school and for work as a graduate research assistant. Yet they didn't say anything like, "I understand and am very sorry about what is happening, but I can't solve your problem," or even, "would you like to speak to someone who might be able to help?"

I will never buy another Sony product ever again, not even earphones or speakers. I don't care how high quality it seems or how great the price is. If it breaks, their Customer Service will not help me at all. Of that I am certain.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

180th Semi-Annual General Conference!

General Conference was AMAZING! A few highlights (my favorite talks)...

Elder Holland (video) - He thanked the good people of the world for the hard work they do, and encouraged us to keep contributing because we're all useful. He shared the story of how his parents sacrificed so that he wouldn't have to pay for his mission (even though he'd earned the money to do so), and expressed his tearful gratitude. He made me get a lump in my throat, and that doesn't happen to me very often.

Elder Christofferson (video) - He talked about consecrating our lives to the Savior. He described how a consecrated life involves purity, hard work, respect for one's physical body, service, and integrity. Moroni 7:48- "that ye may become the sons of God, that when he shall appear we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is."

President Uchtdorf (video) - Slow down and steady the course! Focus on the essentials, especially when experiencing turbulence. He quoted Leonardo da Vinci, who is credited to have said that "simplicity is the ultimate sophistication." He also referenced Psalm 46:10, "Be still and know that I am God." We should make the changes necessary to simplify our lives, spend time with family/friends/ourselves so that we can strengthen our relationships with all of the above, and remember that strength comes from a true, settled foundation on simple things.

Elder Scott (video) - Faith and nobility of character. "When protected by self-control, righteous character will endure eternally." Faith strengthens our character.

President Eyring (audio) - Trust in the Lord. Trust comes from knowing God; he also quoted Psalm 46:10. We show our trust in God by listening and obeying Him, and over time as my trust in Him grows, I will be overwhelmed with gratitude to know that He trusts me.

President Monson's Sunday morning address (audio) - This talk made me cry, which never happens. He talked about gratitude and expressing it. Do we give sincere thanks for the blessings we receive? Christ is a perfect example of gratitude. Though there is much bad in the world, there is also much good, and we should cultivate an attitude of gratitude. A prayerful life is the key to expressing gratitude, and "to live with gratitude ever in our hearts is to touch heaven."

There were other good talks, of course, but these were my favorites. I love General Conference; it always gives us just the renewal of spiritual energy we need to keep on keeping on. I for one know what I will be focusing on: living more simply, trusting the Lord in faith, and being grateful.

Thursday, September 30, 2010

Computer Saga, Stage 37.2

No call last night. Apparently the part was shipped only on the 28th (Tuesday), so a tech will call me "within four business days". So probably next week, and then it will still probably be the wrong part. I pestered Sony to see what they could do while I am sitting here waiting for it and their only suggestion was that I borrow from a family member or friend. Luckily my sister is willing to lend me her desktop for the weekend, since I have a big lit review due on Saturday. She's awesome.

Also, I hung out with T last night (a friend from back home, we used to be in band together and his mom was my Young Women leader as well as my mom's good friend). We got Coldstone and saw Scott Pilgrim, which was fantastic. Highly recommend. Even if you don't know anything about gaming (I don't know much) but you can still appreciate eccentric filming styles, you will still love it. Hilarious.

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

The next stage in the great computer saga

I was right; my luck didn't hold. The part didn't come Friday. It didn't come Monday or Tuesday either. I called Monday to find out what was going on and they said I would receive a phone call either that day or Tuesday (yesterday). I didn't, of course. I called again, and received a clear "a technician will call you at 6pm tomorrow" (meaning today, Wednesday). I don't expect it to happen. If he does call tonight, I'll be very surprised and pleased, but of course with Thursday being my busiest class day he probably won't be able to come when I can be available (I had to skip class last time the tech came). And then it will probably not be the motherboard at all, but something else entirely, and I'll have to wait another week. On the other hand...General Conference is this week! Yay! And I have a lit review due Saturday! Not yay! My computer better be fixed so I can watch General Conference while writing it at home instead of having to write it on campus all day Saturday...

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Computers hate me.

Remember that one time just over a month ago when I bought a brand new expensive shiny laptop? Remember how it was my first brand new computer, and how I'd purchased it because it was time for a laptop and I was sick of having to fix up my old computers all the time? Remember how badly I was looking forward to finally having a good computer that wouldn't give me grief, at least not for a long while?

...Yeah. My new laptop stopped working on Sunday. It won't even turn on. Unfortunately I probably won't be able to get my files back, though I did back them up two weeks before it broke. So I'll only have lost what I've saved since then, which isn't cool but it wouldn't be the end of the world. A technician came out this morning to fix my computer, only to realize that the new hard drive and other repair parts he brought were not the source of the problem. Instead, it is "probably" the motherboard, which he had to order. Usually it takes two days to get the part from Sony, then they send a technician out with it...so hopefully it will be here by Friday. And hopefully a new motherboard is the correct part that will make my laptop work again. And hopefully I won't have to pay for any of this, since it should be covered by the warranty. BUT, knowing my luck so far, it probably won't be here until next week or later, a tech probably won't be able to come when I can be at home, and I will probably have to pay for something or other. "Is this real life? Why is this happening to me?!" (If you haven't seen that video, watch it. It will change your life. At the very least, it's guaranteed to make you laugh.) Sigh.

I didn't even name it Maher-Shalal-Hash-Baz, jr...

Friday, September 17, 2010

A boring update on my boring life

I was going to write about something interesting, but all I've got is...purple.

Grad school = Three weeks in. Exhausting. Generally good. Keeps me busy.

Work = Busy. Tiring.

Yeah, that's all I have to say.

Never get involved in a land war in Asia, and never go against a Sicilian when death is on the line.

Purple.

Monday, September 6, 2010

A little of this and a little of that

Here are a few things that bother me, all of which have re-manifested themselves to me today:

1. People who have no respect for other people's belongings and pick them up, handle them, leave them lying around, etc.
2. (This is a new one) People who expect you to talk to them all the time but who never initiate conversation themselves, or they never ask follow-up questions or keep the conversation going. This is especially bad if you are around someone like this a lot.
3. People who purposely add lots of vibrato to their voices to make them sound "better" or more mature, when really they just sound fake.
4. People who take it upon themselves to "check up" on others, to make sure the others are doing what they think the others should be doing.
5. People who look down on others who don't follow a standard that they think the others should keep.

On the other hand, here are a few things that I am grateful for, related to the above:

1. People who always ask before touching other people's belongings, and who take good care of them when they borrow them.
2. People who know how to keep a conversation going and who are genuinely interested in what you have to say, and who remember the previous conversation the next time you talk.
3. People who have naturally beautiful mature voices and sing often, or on the other hand, people who don't have the greatest voices and know it, and they don't make the rest of us suffer.
4. People who let others over which they have no jurisdiction do their own thing, and don't correct them.
5. People who don't hold you to their standards and respect that you have the agency to choose what you will and will not do, and they don't judge you for it.

Friday, September 3, 2010

School, Roommates, and Other Randomness

First week of grad school = done! There are 13 people in my cohort (first year MS Sociology students), with 11 women and 2 men. Poor guys. We have a good mix of people from all over, one from NC, one from NY, one who hasn't been in school for about 20 years, about half or more of the women are married, and we have pretty varied interests in what we want to do with our degrees. Everyone seems pretty nice so far, and we're all making friends because we're in the same classes and grad lab all the time. Five of us went and got lunch in the Cougareat today, and like the creative people we are, we decided to give fake names to the Taco Bell people. We decided to give them the names of sociologists, so A told them she was Karl Marx, T said she was Emile Durkheim, I said my name was Weber (the guy wrote down "Vaber"), and then I heard C tell them he was "Brianne Burr", hahaha. It was silly.

I think I've read probably 400 pages just this week of sociology books, and written three papers. I was also supposed to present on a few chapters in one of our readings, but we didn't have time. I get to present that on Tuesday along with another topic for a different class. Lots of presenting and trying to impress, woo hoo. Next week the real fun begins, when I get to start working, too! I haven't heard back yet if I'm still accompanying that jr high musical this fall (did I blog about that?), but I'm hoping to hear back soon because she wanted to start that asap. So soon enough I'll be working about 26 hours per week (20 doing research and roughly 6 for the musical), with classes M-Th, and lots and lots of homework. Doable, but exhausting. I was hoping to make it to the gym and the temple regularly, too. Sigh.

Also, there was a HUGE spider on our door, just sitting on the middle of the outward side. Luckily one of the guys outside was able to kill it, but seriously, I'd never seen one so big. From one end to the other it was probably two inches, and a dark reddish brown color. FREAKY. My roommate C and I have been freaking out ever since about there being more...and then there were two more in our bathroom! Smaller ones, but still. I hate spiders! ("I hate sunshine! I hate horrible wholesome sunshine!!")

Things are turning out okay with my freshman roommate, L. She's gotten better about her alarm (setting it and turning it off), lights, leaving things out, etc. but there are other struggles. She's gone to bed between 9:30 and 10:30 almost every night (usually 10 or earlier), which is frustrating for me since I live in that room, too. No, she doesn't work early in the mornings; this means that she gets approximately 9-10 hours of sleep per night. She doesn't really have freshman friends, though we keep encouraging her to make some and hang out with them because she seems so overwhelmed by how "old" our ward is. (Here she is, thinking we're all old, and here I am, thinking that they're all young.) That, plus the fact that she doesn't work, means that she is home all the time, not really doing anything, just sitting around, occasionally reading or writing, but mostly seeming to wait for something that she never expresses, not even when you ask her. She doesn't ask questions or try to keep a conversation going...I'll ask her tons of things about herself, and she'll give very short answers and say nothing back. It makes for a lot of awkward silences. She has also already shown a tendency to judge those around her by what she deems to be their unrighteous behavior...hooray for yet another roommate who is like that! (I need to move out of Utah, they seem to flock here.) Thoughts on how best to handle this situation?

I am SO STOKED for Bones and for Glee. =) I want them to start right now!

"It took Linda, then it came after me. It got into my arm, and then it went bad, so I lopped it off with a chainsaw. But that didn't stop it, it came back big time..."

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Vacation recap and Prep for a new school year

Completion of my "must do"s during my trip to California:

Enjoy family and friends -- check
Go to the beach at least once -- check
Go to my favorite restaurants -- I got to Miguel's and Don Jose's, but not BJ's. However, we did get to go to Claim Jumper, which is always good. -- check
Go swimming -- check
Go to J's and A's wedding receptions -- check
Get significantly more tan -- fail
Get more tan -- check
Finish reading grad school prep books -- fail (as I knew I would)
Get my restless energy out and stock up on vacation energy for grad school -- mostly check

Overall, it was a definite success. I start grad school on Monday and I am definitely nervous...the 2nd year Master's students warned us that the first semester is really tough. I'm not excited about that. Hopefully I can figure out my thesis prospectus really soon so that I can get my thesis done and graduate on time. Yeesh.

My new room roommate is a brand new freshman. FUN! This year will be interesting...

Monday, August 16, 2010

California love!

Oh em gee, I'm in Cali!!!!

...Sorry, I just read Seriously, So Blessed and had an insurgence of Utahn. Don't worry, it won't happen again. =P

But yeah, I'm home for a week and a half. If you're around and want to party, let me know! Or if you want me to say hi to my parents for you, also let me know. =)

Must do while here: Enjoy family and friends, Go to the beach at least once, Go to my favorite restaurants, Go swimming, Go to the two wedding receptions I came down for, Get significantly more tan so that it is noticeable when I go back to school, or at least Get more tan, Finish reading grad school prep books (don't want to, but have to!), and Get all my restless energy out and stock up on vacation energy for grad school. Sigh. Not thinking about it yet! It's still two weeks away...

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

On The Wing

I really like this song. I just think it's so cute. It ends on kind of a sad note, but I still think it's cute...probably because I've always loved the idea of flying, I dream about it all the time. I've even included a link for you to listen to it! Complete with scenic pictures for your viewing pleasure, should you wish for something to watch while listening. I really like Owl City...Adam Young (he is Owl City) is very talented.


On The Wing, by Owl City


Breathe and I’ll carry you away into the velvet sky
And we’ll stir the stars around
And watch them fall away into the Hudson Bay
And plummet out of sight and sound

The open summer breeze will sweep you through the hills
Where I live in the alpine heights
Below the Northern Lights, I spend my coldest nights
Alone, awake and thinking of...the weekend we were in love

Home among these mountain tops can be so awfully dull
A thousand miles from the tide
But photos on the walls of New York shopping malls
Distract me so I stay inside
I wish the rockets stayed over the promenade
Cuz I would make a hook and eye
And fish them from the sky, my darling, she and I
We’re hanging on so take us high
To sing the world goodbye:

I am floating away
Lost in a silent ballet
I’m dreaming you’re out in the blue and I am right beside you
Awake to take in the view
Late nights and early parades
Still photos and noisy arcades
My darling, we’re both on the wing, look down and keep on singing!
And we can go anywhere

Are you there?
Are you there, or are you just a decoy dream in my head?
Am I home or am I simply tumbling all alone?

I am floating away
Lost in a silent ballet
I’m dreaming you’re out in the blue and I am right beside you
Awake to take in the view
Late nights and early parades
Still photos and noisy arcades
My darling, we’re both on the wing, look down and keep on singing!
And we can go anywhere

Are you there?
Are you there?