The Silence Between: Part 1
I admit it, I'm guilty. I have broken the cardinal rule of the blog--no posts in over a month. May the fates be kind to me.
So, what could make someone suspend their writing for so long? Why do so many blogs pop up with a few closely spaced entries and then fizzle out? The answer of course is simple: Life is hectic. I would like to share with you what goes on in the silence between my posts; it may give you an idea of what life is like as a working college student. Since there is so much to cover, this post will be made in two parts.
Part 1: School
I am an Environmental Science major with a strong leaning towards early education and conservation (environmental science is a broad term that encompasses a variety of fields; to learn more check out
The courses I am taking this semester each have their own set of demands, making free time a precious commodity. Generally speaking, when I'm not inundated with schoolwork, I try to spend time outside. I could carry my laptop along and write drafts to upload later, but that would defeat the purpose of communing with nature (if you've read some of my earlier posts, you understand just how vital that connection is for me). I see the computer as a tool first and as a distraction second. To put it simply, I spend so much time writing papers, reviews, and laboratory reports that I often grow a bit frustrated in front of a monitor.
The bulk of my study time is devoted to one course: Cellular biochemistry. The material is very difficult, but I have moments where there are flashes of intuition and the information just clicks. Those moments come at a heavy price; I have piles of flash cards with definitions for terms like “allosteric interaction” and “eicosanoid.” I have fallen asleep reading about protein folding and enzyme interactions (it’s not exactly best-seller material, after all). Beyond the difficulty this course presents, it has genuinely deepened my respect for doctors and pharmacists. Life at the molecular level is far more complex than we tend to consider it, and new studies continue to reveal intricate detail in the everyday cellular processes we take for granted.
Ah water, the elixir of life… and the source of previously unknown levels of frustration. Along with Cellular Biochemistry and Environmental Analytical Chemistry, I am enrolled in Hydrogeology. I am learning about the characteristics of groundwater movement. The material may be about water, but it is very dry (sorry, I couldn’t help myself). Much of it is theory and modeling, and the labs are not labs in the traditional sense, but hours of drawing flownets and churning through mathematical equations. The material has really only just begun to interest me because we are finally discussing contamination in groundwater systems. I know that an understanding of the earlier material laid the foundation for this, but I find the workload for this course to be unreasonable. I like the instructor; I just don’t like having to write formal lab reports on what amounts to a worksheet.
All of this is roughly half of what goes on in the time between my posts (my resposibilities at work and at home will be discussed in a later post). If there is a message that I want the reader to take away from today's post it is this: It is not impossible to succeed, but the most rewarding achievements are those that we must work for. I'd like to think that I can inspire others to strive to be their best.
--Gaia_song
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