Dream

May. 15th, 2011 08:42 am
scarfman: (me)

I dreamed I spent a weekend in Evanston wandering the Northwestern campus. I wasn't there to see any particular people or event even though, in the dream, my parents lived there instead of here. I spotted Geraldo Rivera on the street more than once. By the end of the weekend people I didn't recognize knew me, or perhaps they'd already known me when I arrived. At the end of the dream I was walking the streets of Evanston south of the campus, finishing the pizza I'd bought for lunch as time came to catch the bus home, cranky because I haven't finished my degree.*

* I haven't finished my bachelor's, but I do have an associate's.

scarfman: (Default)

  • 18:31:31: DVR didn't pick up Tara or Jackie. Were they not on this week?
  • 19:25:21: #AKOTAS update: depends on your perspective. http://tinyurl.com/akotas/2548.htm #webcomics #kingarthur
  • 19:52:15: @redneckgaijin It's my hosting, I think. You may not see the new 5/11 strip till you clear cache or restart your browser.
  • 21:14:03: @evilmonk It's flattering that you'd think I was a teacher insteada a CSR, but I dunno what I've twitted/ljed to give the impression.
  • 21:15:57: @evilmonk I've written of going to classes, but more recently of ceasing to go because money ran out. (Still tryna figure that one out.)

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scarfman: (Default)

  • 04:59:43: Because I've no complaints. RT @truthmakr Why? The latest version is available for free download.
  • 10:15:04: They're changing open time later at work, want us going to later shifts. I still said I'm in school evenings cuz I hope I'll be, but ...
  • 10:17:27: My cursor and character-count #newtwitter issues do seem to be home Firefox issues. Everything's fine on IE at the work station.
  • 10:18:22: Uh oh. IE isn't showing the logoff link!
  • 11:53:18: @rustyshock I know where the logoff button is. On this browser the dropdown goes behind main application div, 'steada in front.
  • 11:54:56: @ rustyshock I hadn't clicked "remember me" so I was able to log off by closing all IE windows.
  • 11:55:45: @rustyshock This is at work so I don't get to upgrade.
  • 11:58:08: It doesn't bother me the production values on #DoctorWho aren't as cheesy any more but, sometimes, it does that the episode titles aren't.
  • 12:00:20: @rustyshock This station is just for employees on breaks. Won't be upgraded any time soon, is my guess.
  • 12:00:49: @rustyshock But is #oldtwitter going to go away?
  • 14:30:29: @rustyshock The problem is, #newtwitter does have some features I could get used to ...
  • 21:41:00: #AKOTAS updated: anachronisms are fun. http://tinyurl.com/akotas/2333.htm #webcomics #kingarthur
  • 22:30:23: There must be climate change. For the last few months I've had trouble keeping my ears popped.
  • 22:51:54: I had a good burger today. #sorkinoncolbert

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scarfman: (me)

I've hit a bit of a hitch in my plans to return to school fulltime at the end of the month. I've landed a part time job, which was part of the plan. But when my financial aid award was made, despite the switch from part time to full time, it was a fraction of what I'd been receiving because I've reached my lifetime cap for federal aid. My tuition isn't covered, and we sure don't have it. The financial aid officer suggested I check for further possibilites with my advisor at the adult education program, who was able to point out a few program grants I could apply for. If those don't work out, I could possbly switch from the traditional degree program to the adult ed. accelerated program which'll get me a B.A. for half the tuition. Meanwhile to apply for one of the program grants I had to write three hundred words on why I've missed five or more years of college and what I intend to do with my degree when I've earned it.

I've been working on my Bachelor's degree half-time at Creighton since 2003. Before that I took a hiatus from school for about ten years while my wife was completing her undergraduate degree preparatory to attending Creighton law school, where she graduated in 2005. Before that we lived in Chicago where, between 1987 and 1992, I attended classes in the School for New Learning at DePaul University, a B.A. program for non-traditional adult students. Previous to that I earned an Associate's degree in Commercial Art from the American Academy of Art in Chicago 1985-1987. Previous to that I attended Northwestern University for a year 1978-1979. My year at Northwestern was right out of high school.

For almost forty years I've been an informal student of the modern screen action-adventure hero as the contemporary equivalent of the fireside oral folklore hero of all of human history up until, relatively, recently. Upon completion of my present in-progress English degree I would like to enter into graduate studies to become a formal student, and teacher and professor, of this aspect of the story-telling phenomenon like, for instance, Dr. Henry Jenkins, the director of media studies at M.I.T., author of such works as Textual Poachers: Television Fans and Participatory Culture and Convergence Culture: Where Old and New Media Collide. I believe the explosion of what Jenkins calls "participatory culture", brought about by the last fifteen years' advances in electronic communications, shows that it provides necessary human psychological needs, such as social contact with like-minded people and even value systems, than people have not been able to find reliably elsewhere in Western cultures since religion began falling out of favor with the Enlightenment. I plan on continuing to graduate work in either media studies or in King Arthur studies - a particular favorite area of my own - where in the time before the Enlightenment the relationship between the attractions of pop storytelling and the attractions of religion became explicit with the tales of the Holy Grail. When there is no human culture that doesn't tell stories, storytelling is worth studying and passing along.

scarfman: (me)

I'm still looking for a job, since getting laid off last February when the plant closed. But the criteria for the search has changed.

Since I last wrote about this, [livejournal.com profile] qtrhorserider sat down and made me consider the possibility of going back to school full time to zonker that bachelor's. After my next birthday we'll both be past the half-century mark, and there's no sense wasting time on things we don't like doing. I was convinced.

But that led to something else that I'd been thinking about for longer than I ought've gone without resolving it, like, more than one semester. It seems to me that a computer science major oughtn't be someone who's only interested in coding when he has a class assignment. And there are pretty fundamental concepts, like interfaces, that I can only define when I've been studying for a test. So I saw my adult education program advisor and changed my major to English, focussing on British literature, with an eye to going to grad school for Arthurian studies.

So now I'm looking for a part-time job that I can keep when school starts in August (I did summer semester once. Not doing it again. Everything goes in one ear and out on the test.). Meanwhile, [livejournal.com profile] qtrhorserider has been laid off. She can use the time for studying for the bar - she's determined to pass this time, having missed it by three points last time - but making ends meet until September when the results of the test are announced and the candidates are sworn in may be a little tricky.

The last time I brought up this subject in this space, you may recall, in conclusion I said that I had done so largely to record that the eyelid tic I get when stressed was occurring in my lower right lid, so that the next time I got one I could look back and see whether it migrates. Today it's in the lower left lid.

scarfman: (me)

The shift I'm presently working at the customer service call center is Sunday through Thursday 05:30 to 14:00. I am not a morning person; I took this shift so I can take classes in the afternoons. In fact I'm on the verge of zonkering: I only have eighteen credits to go for my B.S., in computer science. Though I'm not quite sure what I'll do after that.

Meanwhile, we're confident that [livejournal.com profile] qtrhorserider has passed the bar this time; the past few practice tests she gave herself, not only did she do well but she knew why she did well. Since the exam at the end of July she's been hired as a legal assistant in the office of a lawyer for whom she did research as a student job while she was in law school, with the assumption on our part that she'll be hired as a lawyer when the exam results arrive and she's sworn in.

Consequently I've found myself with Fridays at home alone the past few weeks, which is what this post is actually about. I'm going to try to use Fridays to review my entire 20th century Doctor Who collection, which features everything that's aired on PBS since 1983 (which is all the stories that're complete in the BBC archives) and then some. We have hopes of transferring the VHSs to DVDs someday (especially now that the transition period between law school and bar exam is over and our budget will stabilize), and I want to see how the tapes are holding up, particularly since some of these recordings are twenty-five years old.

Today I started at the beginning. "I can see by your face that you're not certain, you don't understand. I knew you wouldn't! Nevermind!"

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