Monday, June 9, 2014

8 Changes You Go Through In Grad School

When people ask me, “how was your first year of grad school,” I typically illicit this maniacal giggle that completely gives away the fact that I lost damn near all my sanity, as I feel most graduate students do at some point. 

To anyone considering graduate school, good luck, and to those of us in the muck of it, hats off to the size of our balls.

You literally have no idea where your money went.
When you started the year, you had mounds of funds just sitting in your checking and savings accounts, and more to come with those hefty student loans you applied for.  But you promised yourself only to use your checking account; savings was money for ‘the real world.’  Like, putting a down payment on a house or a boat or adopting a kid from Cambodia.  All of your money from summers of nannying for 5 days a week and sacrificing the week-long benders of most of your friends who work in the food and retail industry started to accrue, and you’re ready to be an adult and invest in your education, but also live comfortably (i.e. going out for drinks on the reg and splurging at Sephora occasionally).  Fast forward to the end of the year as you’re looking at your bank statement and laugh-crying, because you halfway think this is some cruel prank that a friend pulled on you when she talked you into giving her your PIN number when you were drunk, but you halfway know it’s because you’re inescapably financially irresponsible, just unwilling to admit it out loud (or to your parents).  You contemplate becoming an Uber driver to make some money on the side, then realize you have no car.  You settle for a waitressing job, because you’re 90% certain that your Masters of Science in Television will land you a great career as a food service industry professional by the time you’re 30.

You lose your shit. A lot. Especially in public places.
Your tear ducts get more action than the Boston Fire Department (and probably more action than you, if we’re being honest).  There’s something about grad school that rips away anyone’s dignity in the ability to stay composed.  And you always feel it coming.  It’s always right after a week when you’ve had 10 cumulative hours of sleep, maybe had time to shower about once or twice, and watched too many episodes of New Girl to procrastinate on loads of work that was all conspiratorially due the same day.  That lump creeps up into your throat as you quietly sit on the train.  You think about all your student loans and the fact that you’ll forever be deemed a poor ‘starving artist’ and then you think about the people who fall for poor starving artists, and the options are so slim that you see yourself settling for a guy named Chad or Todd, who will most definitely have a bald spot or an ugly soul patch he refuses to shave and his favorite show will be Family Guy and he'll say things like 'okey dokey', but you can’t give him up because you never know if anyone will love you, and oh, your poor children, who will most likely hate you, because starving artists can’t afford to send them to nice schools and buy them nice things, then they’ll take up prostitution and drugs and get tattoos, oh god, NOT TATTOOS.  And suddenly, you realize you’re doubled over and sobbing on the guy next to you in the Red Sox hat as he eats a burrito and manages to drop a few pieces of mango salsa into your hair.

Your skin reverts to its pubescent ways.
Remember that unflattering yearbook photo of you in 7th grade?  The one where you had a huge zit on your chin, but you were so cosmetically inept because you hadn’t really gotten into make-up yet, (apart from those N.Y.C. colored mascaras and unhealthy amounts of tinted Bonne Bell), so you used your mother’s foundation, which was CLEARLY not the right undertone?  You ended up looking like someone rubbed Cheetos all over the lower half of your face.  Yeah.  You know the photo I’m talking about.  It was totally acceptable back then.  Your body was doing weird shit and your face became a breeding ground for more weird shit.  No one blinked an eye at the 12-year old with skin problems.  As a 22-year old, I can’t say there’s much sympathy.  Who actually has time to maintain a Clinique facial care regimen when you’re ass deep in assignments, too exhausted to take off your make-up at the end of the night, and only find happiness in consuming all the pizza and beer because it provides a solid coping mechanism?  Your face definitely pulls an America and declares its independence, as you’re left excusing yourself with the line that generates the most compassion from female audiences, “oh, you know, period breakouts.”  And then people start to wonder why you have your lady time 4 weeks out of the month.

You get fat.  Like, really fat.
This is the point in your life when “sweatpants are the only thing that fit me right now” is your anthem. After months of stress, sobbing into slices of pizza, consoling yourself with a 3 a.m. study break for Thai food delivery, and putting off all responsibilities until after you devour a whole half-gallon of Edy’s, you’re a bit touchy about your new waistline.  You have had nights you refuse to leave your shitty, overpriced studio apartment due to the inches separating you from buttoning your jeans that you bought while you still had your undergrad body, but now resemble overstuffed sausage casings as you make a futile attempt to do the jump and wiggle (you know what move I’m talking about).  Spanx cannot fix this.  All of your clothes are a smidgen too tight, but not so tight that they don’t fit, just tight enough to be in that awkward well-I-guess-I’ll-just-throw-a-boyfriend-cardigan-over-this-to-hide-my-muffin-top phase.  You refuse to get a bigger size in anything, because you say it motivates you to go to the gym.  Spoiler alert: you’re not going to go to the gym. Seriously, WHEN is there time to go to the gym?  You spend at least an hour commuting to and from class daily, you have hours upon hours of class that are usually prime for Snapchatting, especially when you have to watch films you've 17 times, and then let's not forget about that job that you have that helps pay for graduate school.  The fact is, the last thing you want to do when you get home is change into a pair of yoga pants that don't fit your ass anymore and take another commute to the gym where you'll be taunted and ridiculed by all of the undergraduate varsity soccer girls because you can't go 5 minutes on the stair stepper without falling off.

Your boobs get HUUUUGE.
Not like the, I-want-to-motorboat-the-shit-out-of-those huge, but like, she-looks-like-she’s-fed-a-whole-village-in-Africa huge.  This is most likely a symptom of the weight gain that you would think bodes in your favor.  Well, it doesn’t.   It prohibits you from wearing any sort of A-line dress or a belt around your waist, because it only highlights the ill-fitting bra lines that start to create back boobs.  Your cups runneth over, and there’s really not a damn thing you can do about it.  You still have all the bras you wore in undergrad that made your boobs look perf, especially for all those frat parties you now reminisce about, mainly because in the real world, no one hands out shitty, heavy-handed mixed drinks for free, even if it is Karkov, for having a nice rack.  You’re too poor to have the luxury to go out and buy the right size for your girls, so you’re stuck being nostalgic with your old titty tamers that give you a mean case of the quad boob.  And don’t you dare even think about going braless if you’re bigger than a B.  You put everyone at risk of being a casualty to your nip-slip.

You become a functioning alcoholic.
Monday?  Margs.  Tuesday?  More tequila.  Wednesday?  Wine.  Thursday?  Anything, just because.  Friday? Was that called a Scorpion bowl…?  Saturday and Sunday?  I’m not going to drink today, really.  Just a Mimosa or a Bloody Mary.  Okay, well maybe two.  But I stop at three. 
This type of bargaining goes on every week.  It’s that voice inside your head telling you that maybe you should let your body have just one day without an elevated BAC, but then you look at your to-do list for the week, put on a bra, call up your girlfriends and say, “let’s just take a really quick study break at Yardhouse.  Oh, yeah, definitely.  Just one beer.”  The next morning, you find a half-eaten, open jar of peanut butter next to your head, mascara stains on your pillow and 37 outgoing calls to your ex-boyfriend.  But you still pull your shit together enough to take a shower, albeit, you vomit into the drain a few times and cut yourself with a shanty armpit-shaving attempt.  The motion of the train makes you sick, and you almost lose your skimpy breakfast of half a container of Chobani (they were on sale at Stop N’ Shop) into your backpack, but you’re successfully on your way to class.  Totally functional.*

*alcoholism is a real thing and I don’t condone it.  I had to put this disclaimer to make it seem like I’m not insensitive.

You nap an unreasonable amount.
You wish you could go back to your childhood and add up all the hours you refused to nap, no matter how much your mother implored, because let’s be honest, you were probably a little terror as a child, and stash them in your sleep bank.  You. Need. All. The. Sleep.  And you take it, unapologetically.  Huge script due tomorrow?  Let’s nap on it.  Thesis proposal?  I should probably nap first.  Production packet that counts for half of your grade for the semester?  I think a nap will clear my head.  There is seriously not enough sleep in the world for you, you determined, worn-down, soul-sucked graduate student, you.  You nap with vengeance.  Even when you’re not tired (but when are you never tired?).  When you’re overwhelmed, the only plausible thing to do is overwhelm yourself even more by taking time to nap and putting off any sort of responsibility whatsoever.  You have missed several outings due to their infringement on your precious nap time, and you’re notoriously known for missing calls and not returning them, because you checked them in your misty-eyed state and then passed right back out.  People probably argue that you’re depressed with the amount of sleep you need.  Depression and sleep deprivation are just side effects of grad school.  Just like student loan debt and superiority complex.

You learn to just go with it.
Yeah, you’re emotional and you can’t afford to feed yourself occasionally, and yeah you’re probably a little pudgy, and yeah, you probably haven’t been sober in about 8 days. But you’re in fucking graduate school.  You’re getting a degree in something cool as hell, and when you finish and get through all of this, you’ll hold a shiny Master’s Degree in your hand, and think, “damn, that wasn’t so bad after all.”  All of your complaints seem silly and so surface level when you think about it.  You realize that you have to be poor to experience how incredible it feels to make money and really earn it from doing what you love.  You realize that emotions shouldn’t be tamed, even if the whole transit system probably thinks you’re on the verge of a mental and emotional meltdown and threaten to pull the emergency break, because feelings are meant to be felt and expressed.  You realize that the way you look is so infinitesimal on the Grand Scale of Things That Matter, because your ideas are what will continue after you, not that goiter of a zit you had on your forehead during finals week or that pair of fat jeans you wear after you indulge yourself in a night of gastronomical debauchery.  You realize that getting drunk and rowdy with friends will always be a perfect pastime, and you’re probably not as much of a lush as you think you are, because you managed to get through a rigorous grad program, which is pretty fucking valiant.  And you realize that you can sleep when you’re dead, because there’s too damn much to see and experience, and it’s better to go through life happy and a bit haggard than to have your eyes shut completely.

Sunday, January 12, 2014

Things You Need To Know Before You Read Another Article Telling You About The Things You Need To Know

            Over winter break, I took a few weeks to spend time with family, overindulge in Netflix and Christmas leftovers, and waste a good portion of my life that I will never get back reading BuzzFeed articles.  Don’t get me wrong—I wouldn’t dare skip a mind-blowing piece that shows me 35 Photos Of Naughty Restaurant Signs—(You Have To See To Believe!!!), and I love making sure that my significant other lines up with all of the 127 Signs You’re Actually Dating Your Best Friend, and how could I pass up the opportunity to confirm that I already feel old as shit with my medicine cabinet consisting of Osteo Bi-Flex and Fiber Gummies, my inability to consume more than 3 alcoholic beverages before falling asleep at the bar, and my dwindling knowledge of hip, new music because it all just sounds like ‘noise’ to me by taking the How Old Are You, Really? test (SPOILER ALERT: I’m actually 42).

            While these are all imperative to my growth as a human being and an active, knowledgeable member of society (as most BuzzFeed articles are), I can’t help but start to break into a cold sweat when I see articles with titles such as “20 Things You Should Know In Your 20s” or “25 Things Women Need To Stop Doing” or “10 Places You Need To Visit RIGHT NOW, Just In Case You Die A Premature Death And Never Get To See Them When You’re Old And Probably Need A Hoveround Or A Life Alert Button Or Some Shit Like That.”  My demeanor switches from interested and optimistic to depressed and a little nervous about halfway through the list because I think to myself, “well damn, homegirl missed the boat on all of these, I guess my life sucks. I didn’t know that there was an expiration date on learning how to make a quiche, pay bills online, sew a button, and properly pronounce Sauvignon Blanc” (I still have trouble with 3 out of 4). And I would really like to meet the figure who deemed himself or herself Ruler Of All Things Women Should And Should Not Do, because as far as I’m concerned, I don’t even have the will power to tell myself that I shouldn’t have 5 cupcakes in one sitting, so the chances of me listening to a some anonymous, bossy cyber writer?  Slim, my friend. Very slim.  And let’s be honest, if I’m expected to travel around the world RIGHT NOW to these MUST SEE places, shouldn’t the writer of this article hook me up with a scholarship or like, some grant money?  Maybe a rowboat? Anything?

            It’s overwhelming, ya know? I’m constantly being told that I NEED to do this, or I HAVE to know this.  Why doesn’t someone write an article titled “Reasons Why It’s Okay To Be 22 And Have No Idea What You’re Doing And Not Have A Bucket List, Because You Don’t Even Know All That You Want To Know To Create A Bucket List Because You’re Constantly Learning New Things And Your Life Is Constantly Changing And There Is Absolutely Nothing Wrong With That”?  or, “The Fact That You Are Broke And In School Is Actually Really Admirable And You Shouldn’t Go Gallivanting To The 10 Places You Need To Visit RIGHT NOW, Just In Case You Die A Premature Death And Never Get To See Them When You’re Old And Probably Need A Hoveround Or A Life Alert Button Or Some Shit Like That, Because Your Degree Is Actually Worth A Damn, So Just Tough It Out For Now” or “You’re a Woman. Keep Doing Whatever The Fuck You Want.”  I’m sure I’d be really popular on the interwebs.

            So, if I were to hypothetically go against everything I just said and make a list of Things You Need To Know Before You Read Another Article Telling You About The Things You Need To Know, then this is what I would say. Hypothetically.

There is no set formula for happiness.
Why people still try to give universal answers to individual happiness is still beyond me.  Chances are, that article about “5 Steps To Happiness” probably won’t change your life, and probably won’t make you any happier than you were 5 minutes ago when you sat down in front of your computer with a bag a Fritos and opened up Internet Explorer.  It’s not like you’re going to walk back into the kitchen and open the pantry to grab a Chip Clip and accidentally bump knuckles with a golden bag labeled HAPPINESS.  Finding happiness is a completely personalized thing, no matter how many books or articles claim to offer all the secrets.  Some find it in friends and family, some find it in money and material items, and some find it in a bottle of Riesling and day-old pizza in an apartment that smells like dog and has half-chewed underwear strewn across the floor.  Stop looking everywhere else for the answers and living vicariously through proposed solutions.  Just go out and do something that makes you smile, and make it a habit.

Age is experience, not an expiration date.
There’s really no basis for putting deadlines on when something should be learned or accomplished.  I mean, if you’re having trouble wiping your own ass at age 36, then you probably should be getting that taken care of instead of fiddling around on a computer.  Living is about learning at a pace that you set by yourself, not by some blogger who makes you feel like your life is worthless because you haven’t traveled to Thailand or taken a picture holding a baby seal by age 19.  That’s the beauty of it all; if you learn everything early on, what improvements are to be made further down the road?  And how can you pass up all the fun it is to make mistakes and not have a clue what you’re doing?  Take advantage of the experiences that you do have, and don’t worry if some idiot tells you that you’re doing it wrong.

Undesirable character traits are interesting.
So don’t listen to any malarkey about making yourself more desirable by nixing these qualities.  They’re part of you; embrace them.  I am loud and whiny and I bitch and complain like I have a royal vendetta against almost everyone.  I am impatient and intolerant toward behaviors including but not limited to: impatience, intolerance, tardiness, rudeness, grammatical ineptitude and just general incompetence.  I get cranky for no apparent reason sometimes and then say things that make no sense, but still use the “I’m always right” justification, because it makes me feel better about my incapability to argue my way out of anything.  I also don’t censor myself when I talk about bowel movements and menstruation.  I joked about having herpes on a first date.  So don’t let anyone tell you to hide what is deemed “undesirable” if it’s just who you are.  There might be more dates and more herpes joke to come.

Relationships are self-evaluated.
I feel like I shouldn’t have to say this, but I KNOW there is someone out there who broke up with her boyfriend after taking the “Is He The Right Guy For You?” quiz in Cosmo.  Go ahead, you can admit it.  Just solemnly shake your head.  No one is watching.  I understand that it’s nice to evaluate your relationship every once in a while to make sure your needs are being met (this goes for significant others and friends, or best friends that act as your significant others [we all have them]), but that evaluation should never be based on a third party decision.  I’m the queen of dishing to all of my friends about my relationship, whether it’s good or bad, but ultimately, I make my own decisions, despite what other perspective someone might offer.  The important thing is to understand whether or not YOU are getting what you need, not what some teenybopper magazine is telling you that you need.  And personally, I don’t need someone to tell me whether or not my best friends are actually my soulmates/boyfriends/whateverthehellelse in disguise; we’ve all seen each other naked.  We know it’s real.

The future is not one size fits all.
When I was in high school, my plan was a little different.  I would attend the top med school to become a radiologist and be the top radiologist in the country.  I would be rich and I would have a lake house and a beach house.  I would be hot and skinny and Botoxed and liposucked and my husband would be hot and buff and penis-enhanced and our kids would be hot and talented child models and we would have the perfect life.  Because THAT is the American dream, right?  Just being like, hot and rich and stuff?  I thought I had nailed it with my future plan.  And then I shadowed a radiologist and had a lukewarm time, at best, then had to write a personal narrative about the experience, and when my high school English teacher handed back my paper, she asked “why a radiologist? Why not a writer?”  Wait, what?  I don’t think there is a concept of “the American dream” anymore, just Americans with dreams.  All sorts of dreams that shouldn’t be judged based on whether they meet an imaginary standard.  Some people my age are engaged or married or having a baby, and you know what, that’s fine.  I shouldn’t knock it just because it’s not my dream.  Some people are going to business school and law school and med school and will be throwing around hundos at the restaurants and bars where I’ll be forced to work to supplement my shitty income if I follow my dream to be a writer.  And that’s totally fine.  Because there’s nothing I need to do or have to do if I don’t want to. I’m still just figuring it out, yo.  So if I haven’t been to Antigua by the time I’m 25, no biggie.  I made it to grad school in Boston at age 22, so I’ll take what I can get.