Monthly Archive for November, 2007

doctor life: not what i was promised

It turns out that becoming a doctor is not as glamorous or exciting as one might imagine.  The minions I was expecting never showed up with that sushi, for one thing.  To add insult, it seems I am still expected to carry on teaching, grading, and generally corresponding with those pedestrian pantywaist students rather than, as I had expected, being able to loaf and lounge about all day, sipping champagne from a diamond flute while David Boreanaz and James Marsters feed me fancy cheeses.  Oh, cruel disappointment!

“Mrs. Vaaaaague, do you have our paaaaapers graded yet,” the chowderheads whine wheedlingly at me through the internet computer box, all oblivious to the facts that a) I am not, nor have I ever been, a missis, and b) I loathe and detest grading their papers and will do anything in my power to avoid it.

Sadly, however, I must eventually do the work they are paying me to do.  To that end, I have devised a brilliant scheme for X-Treme Grading Awesomeness.  Here’s what I do:  I have typed up a list of generic comments and I simply pick the ones that apply to each paper and copy and paste them onto a sheet, adding in enough detail so that they seem to apply to the paper in question.  This not only saves my hand from the torture of writing out a good 75 pages of comments with a pen, but it also gives the illusion that my (careful, typed, formal-looking) comments are far better thought out than they actually are.

Here are some examples of comments I might use to talk about the argumentation:

Your thesis is intriguing and your nuanced, complex reading of the textual evidence supports it brilliantly.  I tip my hat to you, Great One.

You have a clear and interesting thesis that you support well with ample textual evidence.  I will thus refrain from feeding you to my dog.

You make some interesting claims, but the argument would be more convincing if it were supported with specific textual evidence. What kind of fool do you take me for?

There does not seem to be one central claim in the essay, but rather a lot of vague observations that aren’t in the service of any specific argument.  Congratulations, you just typed some words!

This essay rambles on like a old man sipping moonshine out of a paper bag on a park bench.  I am grievously insulted that you would even ask me to read it.

This paper has clearly been plagiarized from a monkey.  I will be taking sanctions as outlined in the Surely You Jest Handbook of Student Offenses to Decency.

Guess which one of these I never use?

Seriously, though, this technique has made my life so much easier.  I finished grading 24 papers in about five hours, and I don’t even have a hand cramp at all.  In fact, I even have time to go watch Heroes at the home of one of my doctor friends. Maybe while I’m there she can explain to me where Boreanaz and Marsters are with my champagne.

it’s done!

I passed and am now officially a doctor.  So far I have learned that doctors have a lot of drinks bought for them.  Doctors also get to sleep in.  Sometimes doctors are faced with problems, like a headache, for example, or like the sudden inability to figure out how to put on a tank top.  Hey, tank tops are confusing.  Nonetheless, as in all things, doctors will face these problems bravely.

I am still not sure where my minions are, however.  I was told there would be minions, and right now I need said minions to bring me some sushi.  Still waiting for the minions.

the long dark roadway of the soul

I have always preferred to be the passenger rather than the driver, especially at night, and though it may sound like one (a bad, bad one), that’s not meant to be a metaphor for anything.  If I’m traveling with someone else, I’ll try to finagle a way to get them to do the driving.  One of the things that worked well in the last serious relationship I had was that The Boyfriend gladly chauffeured me all around town, in my own vehicle, even.  He was so happy to do so that his mom used to joke that he was dating me for my car (a 1986 Corolla with over 200,000 miles, a broken air conditioner, and serious rear-end damage, which is also not a metaphor).

I like to sit in the passenger seat because there you really get to see the things you pass by — I’ve seen cities I had lived in forever in a completely new light the first time I was finally able to read the signs, peer into the gardens, and give the stinkeye to the roadside panhandlers.  That’s how I saw Schleswig Holstein and southern Jutland when I lived there — the times I wasn’t on a train, anyway — I was carelessly perched on the back of a boy’s motorscooter, letting him do the driving while I watched the sailboats and the cows (so, so many sailboats and cows!) pass on either side of me.  It’s a nice way to travel.

Since I, like Beyoncé and all the Destiny’s Child ladies, am busy being an Independent Woman these days, I had to drive myself to the airport this morning at 2:00 — it’s not something new to me, since when I lived in Zembla I was also two hours away from a decent airport and often had to leave town in the dark of night, all hauling my suitcases down the apartment stairs while everyone around was sleeping, like I was some kind of criminal or something.  I always drink as much caffeine as possible and find something to sing along to at top volume and make my way to the nearest Real City.  It’s always fine — a nuisance, but fine.

My trip this morning took me through a dark, dark, empty, depressed, and depressing part of the state.  Between where I live and the Airport-Having Real City, there’s a lot of emptiness: long flat fields; brown, rolling hills; one-stoplight towns with empty storefronts and and broken signs; the occasional farmers’ outpost with only a gas station and a tractor supply store, both built out of corrugated tin.  Driving through all this nothing, I thought about something that had just sort of fluttered vaguely around my head on my much longer road trip this Summer: driving like this, alone and at night, is the most solitary I ever feel.  It’s some kind of combination of independence and detachment and loneliness that I can’t quite put my finger on.

The urge to check my cell phone’s signal strength obsessively takes over, just so that, I suppose, I can note the exact moment when I pass from an area where I can make calls into an area where, if my car broke down and some retarded inbred redneck chowderhead decided to abduct me with a shotgun and take me home to become his kidnap victim / common-law wife, I would not be able to call 911 to stop it. Hell, in this comedic-yet-sick scenario, the kidnapper is probably the local sheriff or his brother, anyway.

Annnnd I think that last paragraph is a clue that I am letting the mind wander a bit too far. Better lighten up!  Clearly, I have been spending too much time worrying about the dissertation defense and/or distracting myself by watching too much Buffy and Angel.  Nothing to put a person in a dark place like television shows where there’s always the threat of an apocalypse and/or Boreanaz’s appalling Irish accent.  It could also be the airport decor getting me down: there is just no excuse for maroon and teal in the same room, people. No excuse.

stress, lists, and pie

I think I’m done with the Pillow Book posts — those were fun, and I muchly enjoyed your participation. I mean, who doesn’t love a good list-making session?

Currently I am in the throes of list making as it applies to my upcoming trip to Zembla, and by “upcoming” I mean I am leaving tomorrow night. (Also “upcoming”: my dinner. Oh, the stressful tummy!) That’s right, y’all: it is the moment of truth. I am going back to defend my dissertation, at which point they will either make me a doctor officially, or they will uncover the horrible fraud I have been perpetrating over the last seven years — finally realizing I am not an academic at all but merely a lame lump who spends more time thinking about TV than literary theory — and kick my round butt to the curb.

As far as the list making goes, I have already crossed off such items as “fret,” “worry,” “stress,” “revise last chapter and bibliography,” “subtly probe committee members as to what their tough questions might include,” and “arrange a dog sitter.” I still have to find the perfect blouse and do my nails. Let’s not forget the crucial things, shall we?

It’s going to be a busy week, starting with my leaving for the airport at 2 a.m. tomorrow night (OK, technically Sunday morning, but since 2 a.m. is before my usual bedtime and I won’t be going to sleep first, it will feel like tomorrow night, and that’s what counts — how things feel to me, for I am the center of the known universe.  Of course.). After the defense I will fly back to New Wye, arrive the night before Thanksgiving, then leave the next morning to go up to my parents’ house for the holiday. I plan to spend all my time there happily consuming turkey, pumpkin pie, wine, and their adulation. Monetary gifts are also welcome, of course.

What are you doing for the holiday break, if you have one? I hope it’s something a little more relaxing, and I hope that wherever you are (and whether you’re doing Thanksgiving or not), you have plenty of pie and wine.

pleasing things

The sound of a well-hit tennis ball or baseball.

Soft, droopy ears of a small hound dog.

Making the first cut into a roast chicken.

Walking in sand without shoes.

Unlocking one’s front door at the end of the day and knowing that no work awaits one inside.

The heavy feeling of unread pages in one’s right hand when beginning a new novel by an author one loves.

Pulled pork barbeque.

The sharp outline of deep orange October leaves against a perfectly blue four-o’clock sky.

Fresh basil.

Hot coffee.

A laughing baby.

(See: The Pillow Book)