Saturday, January 29, 2011

Living for me.

Purposelessness is something I strive to avoid. I have felt that intensity that comes with feeling without purpose, and it's something I never want to revisit. I think that this dire need to avoid feeling without purpose drove me to become over-involved in the community. I tutored kids, I wrote for a newspaper, I was on the board for a few organizations, and started my dance team, and not to mention worked to plan events for the Desi community at SC. All these things were great in their own way, but none amounted to helping me achieve what I want and need to achieve.
So, what DO I want or need to achieve?
My goal for years now has been to become a professor of Neuroscience and study disorders and diseases of the brain. But that goal is so isolating. Unless I am the BEST in my field, there's no way I will get to dictate my options.  That goal disregards the social issues that I have now seen with new eyes since studying here. That goal feels oddly selfish, though humanitarian. I think it's because society perceives science to be the selfish field, out to disprove or prove something before someone else. Science is cutthroat when you get your credentials, whereas medicine is cutthroat only until you're a doctor. There's two sides to the coin, however. Without the scientists at the lab-benches, the doctors have nothing to prescribe--no means to help.
Then there's part of me that is frankly intimidated by the jargon and the field and makes me think that maybe I'm cut out to teach about it, but not participate in the process. I chalk this part of myself up to inexperience and with time and research experience, this way of thinking will hopefully subside.
So where does that leave me now?
I have to live for me. I have to complete my Bachelor's of Arts in Neuroscience and hope that God will figure it out and not worry. Having a positive outlook to be the best I can be in these last few years here is all I can require of myself to get through to the end. I have to be motivated by the moment-- which is something that is such a foreign concept to me. I am one to live for the future, putting things on hold for later. Now, I really need to delve into the RIGHT NOW and excel just for myself.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Explosion! ...

Summary of my week:

  • read more than I thought imaginable while simultaneously not reading enough
  • understood In Defense of Anarchism, somewhat.
  • understood the use of the terms nongovernmental organization & nonstate actor and the difference between the two
  • learned the way to study International Relations
  • ignored Psychology 100 for the most part, though I quite enjoy my TA's perspective of it
  • felt stupid at the office for not knowing simple office procedures like how to answer the phone. :(
  • felt awesome for listening to freaking five Desi Dilemmas in a row in order to pick the BESTEST one to discuss
  • felt drained from watching not even 30 minutes of a documentary about human trafficking [wahh soooo sad :( ]
  • watched television on my computer (to relieve my headache)
  • had a headache that simply would NOT go away
  • passed out of a semester of latin. :) gratias tibi ago, bhs!
  • got my sweeeeet biology teacher in high school to rewrite me a rec letter!
  • got my usc biology professor to ALSO write me a rec letter (on TIME!)
  • rerushed
  • bought a lovely cup of coffee from my favorite campus location
  • felt superawkward
  • made new friends
  • made waffles
  • went grocery shopping
  • ate all my clementines (mmm...) 
  • ate all my fruit
  • enjoyed some sea salt and almond dark chocolate
  • celebrated my dad's birthday with boba, fried banana, and thai noodles that are too spicy.:)
  • felt judged
  • ...judged someone else
  • felt discouraged
  • felt inspired
  • felt grateful
  • thought that everything will be alright in the end. 
  • cooked a satisfying meal
  • said hanuman chalisa
  • asked myself WHY I do the things I do 
  • questioned my own motives
  • applied for housing
  • felt alienated
  • felt accepted
  • felt major envy
  • felt proud
  • wrote out a list of remembered actions over the last week to make myself see the positives and understand the negatives. 
  • putting this list into excel to categorize and number the good and the bad.
  • IMPROVE so that the negatives grow smaller and the positives are more numerous :D 
thought this would be a more succinct way of saying what's on my mind without overtly SAYING it.
 

Friday, January 07, 2011

thoughts for the new year.

I resolve to...
1) be more responsible.
2) watch less (read: almost no) television.
3) genuinely LEARN more.
4) study harder, for its own sake. Learn for the sake of learning, and don't take for granted this one time in life where the universe compels one to study.
5) apply to many summer internships as well as try to establish myself in the Neuroscience realm.
6) do things before someone else tells me to.
7) not obsess. I am a fanaaaatic at heart, and learning to curb that will help me be more productive in general.
8) dance & choreograph.
9) don't underestimate other people, but simultaneously don't under or overestimate oneself.
I have the tendency to overestimate, and then in the aftermath, wallow in my 'failure'.
I have to see that not every time in life will be a success, and life is about getting up when it knocks you down.
10) make school a #1 priority. joining and being a part of organizations is not the only way to make an impact in communities-- excelling in school and learning about issues has loads more merit than it seems at first.
11) be grateful to my parents -- make them proud, but also make myself proud. pride is a motivator.
12) take mom's advice: don't give of oneself to others until you have something to give: I have little to offer right now in terms of knowledge or anything. I'm still young. learning from professors is the best and only option I have right now.
13) don't discount repetition and dedication. repetition and dedication. repetition and dedication. the greatest scientists didn't become great because one day, they plopped out of the sky and started spouting out great aphorisms about the world--luck is a factor, but any passion is 80% skill. :) and to learn anything, a neuroscientist should know, it takes lots of repetition--and repetition takes a lot of dedication!
14) do something AWESOME this summer!
15) see the good in EVERY situation, person, and thing.
16) be less judgemental.
17) talk less, work more.
18) be more resilient!