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In Which I Do Not Even Apologize for Being this Whiny

The past week, in spite of the nothing that I have had to do in terms of scholarly duties, has been cram-packed with friends and activities and such. Two friends’ birthdays are this week and another friend just got a great job offer at a very fancy school, so there has been a lot of celebrating going on. Between that and our Pub Trivia Obligations (every Tuesday evening we rule the town with several PhDs, dozens of years of watching television, and seven very drunken fists), it has been a party almost every night.

It turns out that nightly partying is not entirely good for the body. Used to be, I could party it up eight nights a week with no bad physical repercussions, but I guess now that I am all old and shit, that can’t happen any more. Oh, I would love to detail all of my many woeful ailments, but I will skip out on a few of them. If I were one of those tell-all blog ladies, I would have no qualms about describing things like my Special Ladies’ Time and my Digestive Activities, but I seem to have a mostly male readership and I don’t want to scandalize any of you.

I will tell you that I woke myself up in the middle of a nap the other day when I bit my own tongue very, very hard - hard enough to draw blood - and that now it is still sore and mildly swollen and I keep inadvertently chewing it when I try to talk, because it insists on being in the way of my teeth. Add that to a handful of other ailments, some of them which necessitate the drinking of much cranberry juice (which itself leads to heartburn, fucking heartburn!), and I am a miserable girl.

The other morning, The Dog and I had to have a very self-indulgent sulk fest: he was very upset and traumatized at having had to go do his business in the pouring early morning rainstorm, and when he came back in he whined disconsolately, ran around the house, and finally got up on my bed and wound the duvet around into a pile of whipped-cream-looking feathers, and nestled himself inside it. I thought it looked like a pretty wise idea, so I joined right in. It was very cozy and nice. Sometimes I just need to hide away from the world and take a day (or two or three) completely off to regain my sanity, you know?

While I would like to continue the lazy bed-lying, the whiny and disconsolate moaning, and the generally self-indulgent behavior, I actually have to get up early tomorrow as I am supposed to go yard-sale-shopping and brunch-eating with my friend S. for her birthday. Woe is me; I must arise at 8:00 in the morning. The very thought of this is miserable. All I can say is that there had better be some absolutely bitchin’ yard-sale finds to make up for the pain and injustice of it all.

At Least Until Summer Semester Begins

Things have officially wound down here in New Wye: after over a week of prepping, writing, proctoring and grading finals, I finally was able to complete the process of actually calculating and submitting the final grades.  One would think that this would be just a matter of entering things into a spreadsheet and then giving the results to the registrar via the course grade submission system, but it honestly entails a lot more stress than that.

I also had to determine students’ participation grades — a careful algorithm incorporating whether they offered comments and questions in class and their usefulness; whether they had the required materials, such as drafts on workshop days or textbooks on discussion days and so on; whether they surreptitiously texted their friends on their cell phones under their desks and how often.  Trust me, I wish that this bullshit did not have to factor into things, but it does.  I would love to operate on the shared assumption that class time is best used to discuss and learn about the assigned materials, but I would no doubt be nearly alone in such a belief.  For many of them, class is a time to glare at me in disdain or to make full use of their unlimited SMS plans with Verizon, or, for a skilled few, both.

Grading the finals is always a fun enterprise in that I never know what to expect.  Some of them have obviously been paying attention, unbeknownst to me, and manage to write very accurate and insightful things about the texts. I always wonder where they were in class discussions — who would have known that they had such great ideas?  Others, unfortunately, seem to think that “A Room of One’s Own” was a text written by the famous “liberal” author “Rebecca Wolfe.”   Yeah, I don’t even know. Let’s not waste time trying to figure that out.

Then there are the ones who think that writing accurate yet completely uninformative and irrelevant statements will somehow earn them credit.  For example:  “In this passage the auther uses a lot of diction and syntax.” Indeed, who can dispute that “the auther,” whoever he or she may be, uses a lot of words and arranges them together in an unspecified fashion?  Nay, I cannot dispute this!   Others, they try so hard, and yet some up with claims such as this: “Narrative point of view is a technique that Kafka uses a lot in his poem about George, who turns into a varmint.”  There are so many things wrong with this that all I can do is scratch a heavy red slash across the paper with such force that it rips right through the page. I am not joking about this.

I have spent a lot of time over the past couple of weeks cursing myself for having to dumb things down to the level of a pre-schooler’s afternoon cartoon, and whining unprofessionally about the level of whining my students escalate to in the final days of the semester, and then meta-whining about how whiny I have become.  Now that the grades are all in, though, I feel a keen sense of relief.

I now am able to — at least for a week or so — indulge in some domestic tinkering, sweatpant wearing, over eating and over drinking, leisure reading, and other decidedly unscholarly and normally verboten activities. Thank dog!

As the grades roll through to the registrar’s office and are reported to the students, grade-grubbing and generally whiny emails arrive from those who didn’t get the As their daddies expected, and overly flattering, butt-kissing emails arrive from those who did a smidge better than I guess they thought they deserved.  I am, respectively, either an unsympathetic hardass who never understood how hard they were working, or I am a brilliant muse who made them understand literature in a way they never even knew they could.  Either way, what they don’t know is that I am currently sitting on my couch in my skivvies with a glass of champagne, a dog asleep on my foot, and my only complaint in life is that in order to smoke in the house I have to open the windows and turn off the air conditioning, and thus am feeling a tad dewy.  If that’s my only problem tonight, life is looking pretty damned good.

there has never been anything false about hope

I don’t normally post this stuff, but if you haven’t already seen this somewhere, at least you maybe saw it here.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jjXyqcx-mYY&rel=1]

“All eyes on California,” as the news ticker tells me. Oh, please.

cats can’t help it if they use bad grammar

Go look at these.  I have to go eat breakfast.

plagiarism is for whores

Fellow blogger and friend Chris of the Stupid Bank (I think you’ve met before) has some crazy conservative crackpot hooker stealing and republishing his blog posts.  I found this out because she stole one where he links to me, and didn’t bother to edit the link.  Dumb, dumb, dumb.  Read about the drama here.