Adventures of Katie

This blog will be personal reviews of food/recipes/entertainment and travel destinations based on the experiences of a mid-twenties graduate student.

Tuesday, February 13, 2007

Happy Valentine's Day

So tomarrow/today I meet with someone to talk about my chances of graduate school. Its strange that so much can ride on a casual meeting. This isn't part of the interview phase or anything like that; just a meeting to see what my chances are and what I can do to increase them. It would be far too easy for me, a B average student to bitch about the exclusivist nature of higher education. All of my stresses and troubles concerning its availability are of my own making. I am perfectly reconciled to this. What scares me is that tomarrow I am going to be judged with nothing but a paper grade and a short introduction to represent me, my future and my options. This scares me because I do not look exceptionally good on paper (and in person I'm not sure exceptional is the word... not 'wolf ugly' or anything but not EXCEPTIONAL) That got me to thinking about how I will be remembered. In the end, once everyone you knew has passed away, all that is going to be left is essentially 'paper' (electronic counts too). What can you leave that is meaningful on paper? (There is no guarantee of decendants at this point and besides that's really very little of your own doing so we're going to call that a mute point) Granted, a GPA and decent credit score will bode well for you but what meaningful papers are there? Does one have to be privy to a constitution or a founding of some sort to make a mark?
Today, we are supposed to remember Saint Valentine but how many people know what he did? (If you're interested, he tried to convert the emporor Claudius to christianity, fell in love with the jailor's daughter and through his faith and love cured her of blindness. Before his execution he wrote her a letter signed 'your Valentine') This man is a saint. Even if one doesn't believe in these things, it is arguably a difficult status to achieve. Even if we are not remembered personally, is any part of our daily life going to be meaningful to future generations? Just as I don't like to think of my GPA as indicitive of my potential, are our daily activities going to reflect our capability? I keep telling myself that on the whole, whether or not I earn my doctorate will have very little effect on the future of mankind so it is really not that big of a deal, I don't want to generalize this to all of our existence. So at what point do things begin to matter? If it is now, then I am nervous. Happy Valentine's Day <3 Katie