Archive for April, 2008

dance, clap, clap ya hands

Wednesday, April 30th, 2008

Last weekend lost me in a blur: Acclamation Dance Ministry performed our spring concert,”With Beautiful Feet.” ‘Twas a tiring, yet successful, blast. Check out some of our photos. Hope y’all enjoyed the show!

Dance buddies

The senior dancers

Our Jazz III piece

The company

Way to go, el tenis!

Monday, April 21st, 2008

A shout-out to the men’s tennis team for yesterday’s stellar match against LVC and a three-peat Conference Championship! Way to go, guys!

Buena suerte as you prepare for your individuals competitions next weekend!

To catch up on the Falcons’ winning season, check out the team’s website.

Also, congrats to the tournament MVP, Jonathan Siemen ‘08. I hear you’re pretty awesome.

a corner of the Forum

Monday, April 14th, 2008

Last night I got a backstage look at the Compassion Forum. I worked in the Message Room and the Media Filing Center, observing journalists from several major publications in action. What an eye-opener. Call me ignorant, but, not being a journalism major, I haven’t experienced the broadcasting side of the field. Last night I learned new vocabulary terms, rubbed shoulders with some influential Faith in Public Life figures, and witnessed the crazy pace at which the professionals function. Experiencing the media commotion was exciting - what a great opportunity for the College. I hope the forum served to encourage a thoughtful and honest relationship between politics and faith.

Fridays are PJ days

Friday, April 11th, 2008

I spent this morning on the couch, wrapped in a blanket, guzzling coffee and watching The Today Show. My cell phone alarm had sounded at 8:30 a.m., much earlier than my sleeping self anticipated, and I stumbled out of bed (literally – I’m on the top bunk and missed the lower rung) in a groggy state of pseudo existence. I didn’t bother with turning on the lights or opening the shades, preferring to leave my roommate’s younger sister – our weekend visitor – blissfully unaware of the post-dawn day. My roommates were nowhere to be found. (Ah yes, the concept termed “classes” rings a bell) I stumbled to the living room, groping the walls for light switches. The refrigerator light temporarily blinded me as I searched for milk. I shoved down multiple, consecutive bowls of Corn Flakes to stay awake; my eyes weren’t yet open. Somehow I brewed a pot of coffee, traversed our cluttered floorspace safely, collapsed into the couch, and flipped on the TV for noise. Anything to prevent myself from reverting back to dormancy.

This is how I passed the morning. Or, the morning passed me. Mind you, Fridays usually discipline me toward productivity, prompting me to make use of the 24 hours of class-liberation. Yet today, despite my lengthy to-do list, I accomplished virtually nothing. I didn’t go to the gym. I didn’t read the assigned chapters in my senior seminar book. I didn’t catch up on my required literary criticism blogs (I’m eleven behind, excellently enough). I didn’t read the dog-eared articles in the news magazine. I didn’t print out the couples surveys my fiancé and I are supposed to tote to this weekend’s marriage seminar. I didn’t create lighting sequences for the upcoming dance performance.

Around ten o’clock I endeavored to crack down on the blogging. I poured another mug of coffee, pried open the textbook, and fired up my laptop. Then watched TV. Then read a page. Then turned off the TV. Then read a paragraph. Then opened InStyle magazine. Then gave up.

Nearing noonish, a knock on our door. I didn’t bother to get off the couch, and croaked “Come in.” I shouldn’t have done that. First, they were the first words I had uttered all day, and they sounded like frog audibles; second, I had forgotten that the rest of the world was long awake and running. Me: in my pajamas, minutes away from my third siesta of the day. A classmate opens the door timidly, observes my sorry state, asks if I’m sick. We’re just trying to organize an end-of-the-year furniture and appliance giveaway, ya know, the stuff you’d otherwise throw away; we’ll donate it for you, he explains. Oh yeah, we’d actually love to give away this couch, I say. If I can detach myself from it, I think. He doesn’t sound convinced. And his facial expression reads concern in all forms.

Maybe I should be concerned, too. A perfectly fine Friday, filled with unfulfilling laziness. Unashamed, unabashed. And here I am at work, blogging about it. (Articles yet unwritten, of course.) Some call this ‘senioritis.’ Whatever it is, today I’m the posterchild.