(no subject)
Sep. 29th, 2008 10:43 pmI want to be happy. I want things to be okay. I want to move on. But more than that, I want to be able to cry in more places than my bed and the movie theatre. I want to tell someone how I feel, and not be told that it’s going to be okay, and not be told that I need to change, and not be told that I need to feel something else. I just want, for once, to be honest with someone about how I feel, and have them tell me that it’s okay to feel that way, that I have right to feel that way, that being angry and scared and in pain is valid.
I tell people that I don’t want to go to counseling because I already know why I feel how I feel, and counselors don’t tell you where to go next; that’s partially true. But mostly I don’t want to go to counseling because I don’t want another person telling me I need to change. I know I need to change. I just want someone to tell me that I’m okay how I am right now; I want someone to tell me that it’s okay to feel the way I do right now. I’m not an idiot. I know I can’t be angry forever. But why is it not okay for me to be angry right now?
And people wonder why I internalize! Every time I admit how I’m really feeling, every time I’m truly honest and truly open up, I’m immediately told that my feelings aren’t valid, that lots of people have been there and weren’t as upset as I am, that I need to “get over it”, to change, to move on, to be happier. And so I internalize, and smile, and pretend everything’s okay because that’s what people expect from me and it’s what they want … and then I cry myself to sleep. I have never been told that it’s okay to feel the way I do right now once, in my entire life. Of course I don’t open up to people! Why would I when I always get shot down? Why would I when apparently my feelings are never valid?
I just want someone to look me in the eyes and tell me, 100% sincerely, that what I’m feeling right now is valid and isn’t wrong, and then stop. Not tell me, “It’s okay, but …” “It’s understandable that you’re angry, but …” Not tell me what to do next. I know what to do next. I know to move on from Square One. But why does Square One always have to be wrong? Why can’t I move to Square Two just because that’s the logical progression, and not because Square One is wrong?
I don’t know. Maybe I’m clinging to the anger not because I don’t know I need to let go, but because I truly, deeply believe that I have the right to be angry, and I can’t (or won’t) let it go until I find someone who will tell me that’s true.
(no subject)
Aug. 26th, 2008 10:27 pmAnd just ... I hate it. Not just because my own panic scares me more than anything else in the world, but because it just doesn't make sense. I was trying to explain it to my roommate last night because the thing is, I never panicked in Scotland. Not once. I was on the other side of the world, and I had no friends, and school didn't make an ounce of sense, but I never panicked. I mean, I was failing school, and there were nights when I went to bed hungry, and I was lonelier than I'd ever been in my life (which is saying a lot), but ... I slept at night; I didn't cry; I was happy. And that logically makes no sense at all.
I mean, here I can go to class and know what's going on (usually); here I have people who actually care about me; here I'm not completely on my own. But here I panic. I was telling my roommate how, emotionally, Scotland was really good for me because "it kept me stable and it kept me sane." And then I paused and said, "Or maybe it kept me delusional." Because the truth is that Scotland was the first place since I came to college that I didn't feel homesick. And it took me nearly the whole semester to work out why, but one day it finally all clicked into place:
In Scotland I was so far removed from everything that I was able to tell myself that at the end of it all I could go home. And here I just know that's not true. I can't lie to myself in Texas because I see all my stuff in that unfamiliar house; and here I can't lie to myself because I grew up fairly close to my school, so when I'm here I know what I lost. And I know that I can't go home because there is no home.
And so the panic sets in. And I hate it.
(no subject)
May. 29th, 2008 06:07 pmAlso, earlier, I was in M&S buying cookies for my uncle, but I was also buying - er - certain Doctor Who-related items, and the cashier asked me, "Oh, who's the Doctor Who fan?" I would like to make it very clear that at the time I was wearing the sweatshirt my sister gave me for Christmas -- AKA The Greatest Sweatshirt Ever Made -- which says on the back, "The angels have the phonebox", which is a line from the Doctor Who episode 'Blink'. This also means I had a picture of a TARDIS plastered over my left boob. Obviously the Doctor Who fan is me! But, amusingly in my opinion, I was so taken aback by the question that I answered, "Oh, my sister," without thinking. And, I mean, she is the person I was buying the stuff for, so it was true, but the saleslady gave me a weird look when I said it, so maybe she noticed the TARDIS splashed across my chest after all.
(no subject)
May. 24th, 2008 07:12 pmHow I think the story ends: Breaking Dawn is released in August, amidst feverish excitement from fans, and enjoys several weeks atop the bestseller list. Those dissatisfied with the ending write lots of fanfiction. Those depressed that it’s over write lengthy entries in their blogs about how excited they are for the film, and how they’ve already preordered the still unwritten Midnight Sun. December is filled with squeeing fangirls at various premieres, and there’s an upswing of Robert Pattinson icons on LJ. Fan reactions to the film range from adoration to fury, depending on the quality of the film and the anal-retentiveness of the fan. I go to see the film with Amy because no one else will go see a movie about vampires with her. I enjoy it more than the book because, since film is a visual medium, I don’t have to spend a lot time in Bella’s whiney, angsty, bitchy mind; however, I am still disturbed by the same things that disturbed me in the book. The film produces yet another generation of idiot fangirls fantasizing about being stalked and controlled by their boyfriends. I am furious. Feminism weeps. Stephenie Meyer’s writing improves over time, and each book she writes uses fewer flowery adjectives and features characters that are less Mary-Sue-ish than the previous one. She enjoys moderate success, though none of her other books become as wildly popular as the Twilight series. After a year or two, most of the fanbase outgrows the series and moves on. All is right with the world.
(no subject)
May. 23rd, 2008 09:19 pmAlso, Twilight wins the "Cheesiest Line Ever" award for this bit (about 90-95% accurate, as I'm transcribing from an audiobook):
“‘Aren’t you hungry?’
"'No.' I didn’t feel like mentioning that my stomach was already full … of butterflies.”
I laughed so much at that, I had to pause the audiobook because I couldn't hear it. Also, I'm amazed that so many people can take seriously a book that actually uses the phrase "alabaster brow" in a serious sentence. But mostly I'm frightened that it's slowly sucking my brain cells, and I'm powerless to stop it because it's so inexplicably addicting! Seriously, if iTunes hadn't stopped it automatically, I think I would have just kept listening into the night because I couldn't stop it! I'm scared, frankly.
(no subject)
May. 23rd, 2008 12:34 amAnyway, I'm still going to listen to it, at least until the part with the vampires, because maybe it gets better? I don't know, but I feel like I should at least give it that chance. I had to find a way to keep myself sane, though, so I took notes while I listened.
(no subject)
May. 22nd, 2008 10:19 amAnyway, one of my RL!friends has started reading the series, and she loves it, and was like, "OMG, you totally need to read it, it's fantastic!" Of course, I wanted to be like, "What do you know? You've never read Pride and Prejudice. You've never even read Harry Potter!" Not like P&P is the end all, be all, or even like I've read a ton of Jane Austen myself. Okay, so I've only read P&P and Emma. Whatever. I still know more about literature than this girl. More importantly, she's never read HP, which is the same genre (that's right, isn't it?), so I don't really trust her judgment about Fantasy, to be honest.
My main concern with Twilight is that it all sounds too much to me like the new Eragon. Remember how a few years back everyone was calling Eragon "The New Harry Potter", and Christopher Paolini was going around doing a ton of book signings, and everyone was squeeing over the film coming out and stuff? Yeah, that's what Twilight is like now. It's like Twilight is Eragon for girls. And that's really why I can't decide whether or not to read it. Because I read Eragon because everyone was into it, and it turned out to be crap. Utter crap. And granted, Stephenie Meyer isn't sixteen, which is definitely hugely in her favor, but I don't want to waste my time reading her books if they're crap.
Plus, I've heard Twilight is more a romance series, and I don't really care about romance that much. I mean, I'm a shipper as much as the next fan, but I prefer shipping on the side. One of the reasons I love Harry Potter so much is because it managed to be interesting for three books without romance. And then it managed to be interesting for four books more without romance ever playing the central role. In fact, the most romance-centric HP book (HBP) is my least favourite, and a huge reason it's my least favourite is because it's so romance-centric. I don't read Harry Potter for the romance. I don't read anything for the romance. That's why I haven't read a lot of Jane Austen. That's why my favourite book by L. M. Montgomery is A Tangled Web. That's why I read mostly Fantasy and Sci-Fi and Mystery, because those genres generally don't center on romance. I enjoy romance subplots, but if the romance is what makes the story interesting, then I don't care about the story very much. So I don't think I'll care very much about Twilight if it's mostly romance.
*sigh* I guess I should just suck it up and read the first book and decide for myself. That's what I had to do with Eragon in the end, and more importantly, that's what I had to do with Harry Potter, and obviously Harry Potter completely changed my life. Not that expect Twilight to change my life like that, because I think HP is the kind of thing that really only comes once a generation, if that. But you know what I mean.
(no subject)
May. 15th, 2008 01:05 pmAfter the exam I went to the mall and bought some more Torchwood books (yay!) since I'm going mad with boredom here. Now I should glance over my Sociology notes before settling in with the amazing-ness that is all things Jack Harkness and Ianto Jones.
(no subject)
May. 14th, 2008 08:47 pmI have Philosophy tomorrow, which I'm not overly concerned about because if I have what I think I have in the class then I can bomb the exam and still pass. I shouldn't bomb it, though, because unlike in History, I actually know what's going on. I've given my notes a cursory glance over, and now I'm going to give The Sarah Jane Adventures a try. This is my study method. Glance over, then relax. I've never hardcore studied in my life. I don't know how, and it doesn't work for me anyway. I think I'm just that kind of person where I either know it or I don't.
Friday I have Sociology. The good thing about Sociology is that I will only have to answer one question instead of two (unlike History and Philosophy). I've got a pretty good handle on Sexuality, and I know Crime a bit, so I should be able to answer at least one of those questions, and again scrape a pass. All I care about is passing, since this doesn't go on my GPA anyway. I've worked out how to make up History online if I flunk, though obviously I hope it doesn't come to that. But yeah, I'm just want this week to be over so I can relax and enjoy the rest of my time here. I still need to go up to Edinburgh and scout out Tom Riddle's grave!
Also, I'm very annoyed that Doctor Who has been switched to a later time, as well as I'd Do Anything. But I'm glad that Ashley has finally been sent home! If Andrew had chosen to save her, I would have been very upset with him! Oh, but I'm also annoyed that the finale of I'd Do Anything is 1 June, the day after I leave! Seriously, what up with that?
(no subject)
May. 9th, 2008 01:01 pmAlso, on Monday I went to the mall and there was a 3 for 2 sale on Torchwood books, so I bought all three from Series 2. I just finished the last one, 'Twilight Streets'. It was the best one, so I'm glad I read it last. It was full of Jack/Ianto goodness! I think at some parts I totally forgot how to breathe! *sigh* I miss Torchwood. Like, a lot. I miss Jack/Ianto. Can Ianto please, please be in the Doctor Who finale? Everyone else is!
Also, yesterday I was reading 'Something in the Water', which is another Torchwood book, and in it all these people got a weird alien disease that started out as a sore throat, and this morning I woke up with a sore throat, and now I'm paranoid. I took some airborne, though, and it seems to be going away. Maybe it was just because I left my window open all night. But if it is an alien disease, can Jack and Ianto come save me? And bring the Doctor and Donna with them? Because even if they didn't have a cure, it would still make my entire life.
(no subject)
Apr. 17th, 2008 02:55 pmProbably the biggest adjustment I had to make in college was having friends. I mean, it was very bizarre for me to suddenly have people outside my immediate family actually genuinely care if I was sick or sad or didn't turn up for dinner. It was weird for me to have people come into my room and ask if I wanted to do something that weekend, and even weirder when they seemed genuinely disappointed if I said I was going home. Even more bizarre: I wasn't the forgettable one anymore. There actually is a forgettable girl in my group of friends, and I can never get over how it's not me. Over the summer these girls called me, planned a trip with me, and pestered me if I didn't update them about what was going on in my life. It was all very new and weird for me (in a good way), and I honestly don't have any idea how it happened because a huge reason I didn't have friends previously is because I don't know how to make them.
That brings me to my point: I don't have friends here in Scotland. I actually have friends to a lesser degree here than I did in high school. I mean, the classes are all so huge that it's basically impossible to have "class friends"; and while my flatmates are all nice and I get along with them, hanging out with them is awkward, and I don't really interact with them beyond the occasional friendly greeting in the corridor. Basically, it's like high school all over again, minus the chats at lunch and the in-class banter, and also minus my mom bugging me to get off the computer when I'm home.
This doesn't really bother me. Do I wish I had friends here? Yes, of course. Am I miserable because I don't? Far from it. I couldn't take more than a semester here for a variety of reasons, the biggest of which is not the lack of friends. That said, I don't regret my decision to come here this semester, and in some senses I'm less miserable here than I am at my home university (certainly in the sense that here I don't cry myself to sleep every night (or any night, for that matter)). I only have one problem:
I don't know how to explain any of this to my friends from home. I've basically given them general, evasive, and I'll admit misleading updates about my time here because I don't know how to tell them that a.) I don't have friends here, and b.) that's okay. I'm used to being on my own, and in some senses I prefer it (and it's probably where I get the attitude my friends have told me they both hate and admire so much: No one who's not an authority figure in my life is going to tell me what to do!). It's not like it wouldn't be nice to friends here, but I don't require friends. I can get by on my own.
Normally, I wouldn't even worry about it, I'd just keep giving them the misleading updates over the next two months and avoid giving them specifics when I see them in August -- hey, it worked all summer! -- but I've encountered a huge problem. One of my friends is coming to visit me here next month. And yes, I've basically led her to believe that I have friends here. And I don't. Crap. Because what am I supposed to do now, go find friends the last two weeks of classes? How's that going to work? But I don't know how to tell her that I don't actually have friends here because this is the one girl who is still in close contact with her high school friends (even my friends who had real friends in high school don't really talk to them anymore); this is the one girl who I know will never understand that it's okay for me not to have friends. I don't even know what to do because I'll never be able to explain it to her but it's not like I can go get fake friends to show her, you know? And honestly, I'm tired of having to lie about not having friends. I just wish I could level with someone in real life, you know?
Suddenly, I realised what a bizarre child I was. I didn't have an imaginary friend. I had an imaginary enemy.
What sort of child has an imaginary enemy? The saddest thing is, it wasn't like I was lacking real life enemies. But apparently those people weren't enough. I needed an imaginary enemy too.
Also, bathroom buddies? What on earth? Looking back, I'm surprised I made it this far as well adjusted as I am. See, that wasn't the only weird thing about me as a kid, as demonstrated by my answer to the other TSI question I answered today (again, emphasis added).
Q: When you were a kid, what did you want to be when you grew up?
A: Well, I didn't realize until I was seven that kids actually grew up -- I always thought that was just a question adults asked to make conversation -- so I never thought very seriously on the subject.
This actually may be normal, I don't know, but it is true. I distinctly remember the first time my mom told me a story from her childhood and being utterly shocked. I thought there were two kinds of people in world -- adults and kids -- and that the adults had always been adults and the kids always stayed kids. I don't really know what I thought the whole birthday and age things were about (actually, I also remember when I discovered that it was called a birthday because it was the day of your birth; I assumed it was just a random date they chose to give you presents, so ... I guess that answers that).
I also believed until I was four that my life was a reality TV show (kind of like The Truman Show, only I was four a few years before that movie was made). When I was four I realised that life didn't make sense, and until I was eight I often contemplated the mysteries of life, the universe, and everything when I was supposed to be doing school (which is ironic now, given my aversion to philosophy). I always assumed this was normal, but ... I also had an imaginary enemy.
(no subject)
Apr. 13th, 2008 08:57 pmOr rather, I want to talk about how much I don't want to talk about personal identity. See, we're talking about personal identity in my philosophy class right now, and I just ... I have so much negative interest in the subject. I could not care less about the definition of a person, or if you're still a person when you're asleep, or if the mind and body are separate.
However, the reason I wanted to talk about it is because there's this theory that your consciousness is what makes up your identity, rather than your physical appearance, and there's this example that goes with it that ... well, okay, I didn't really understand it, but it's something like, if someone steals your horse, and then later you find it, the only way you know it's your horse is because it looks like your horse, but because you can't access the consciousness of the horse, you can't ever know for sure that it is in fact the same horse. But like, I mean, I know it's a hypothetical example and everything, but I can't get past how dumb it is, because is it really likely someone is going to steal your horse and give it a brain transplant? Well, unless it was stolen by an evil scientist to use for experiments, in which case you have way bigger problems here than stolen livestock. Also, how does any of this help the world?
(no subject)
Apr. 6th, 2008 10:30 amEverything in this entry is true.
Not that that makes much difference to the few of you reading this, but it would make a difference if my RL friends read my LJ. They’d think that I’m exaggerating, being overdramatic and cynical. Well, I am cynical, but I’m not exaggerating.
Last week I was visiting my uncle, and I finally got to meet his girlfriend after hearing about her for two years. I was rather wary about her because she’s nineteen years younger than he is (only one year older than my oldest cousin, in fact), but I absolutely loved her. Anyway, they were dropping me off at the airport yesterday, and she went to the bathroom, and my uncle asked me where I thought their relationship should go. It was the first time we got a chance to talk about it, or rather, the first time we had a chance where he brought it up; I think he waited until then because that guaranteed the conversation would be brief. But anyway, he asked me what I thought, and I said, “You and I both know anything I say isn’t going to make a difference in what you decide to do.”
“You never know,” he said. “It might.”
I shook my head. “You know even if I said she’s a great girl and I love her –– which, for the record, I do –– you still wouldn’t marry her if you didn’t want to.” He didn’t say anything, and I added, “And that’s how it should be. It’s your life, and you’re the only one who really knows if it’s going to work for you.”
He said, “You’ll understand when you get there.” Looking back, I’m not entirely sure what he meant, but I do know that he meant it in the least patronizing way possible, which is a refreshing change from all the similar yet extremely patronizing comments I’ve received from my mom and my friends. Anyway, then he sort of laughed and said, “You’ll probably make some snap decision. Just meet a guy and be married in a month.”
“No,” I said, “it’s going to take a lot to get me to marry.” He frowned, so I continued, “I saw what marriage did to my mom, and I don’t want that to ever happen to me.”
He nodded. “That’s understandable.” Which, given how great my mom’s marriage is supposed to be, was an interesting response.
It’s funny how much your perspective changes as you get older, and it’s funny how much you realize people … well, I don’t want to say lied to you as kid, but they didn’t tell you the true nature of things. When you’re a kid, all the stories end with the wedding like marriage is the ultimate, like after that it’s all sunshine and daisies, and that’s just not true. Isn’t it funny how you never stop and wonder what Cinderella’s dad and step-mom’s marriage was like? Or how the girl in Rumplestiltskin felt after marrying a guy who loved her for her money? You just think, “Cinderella and her prince lived happily ever after. I want that too.” And no one bothers to tell you that that’s not how it works.
I don’t want to get married anymore. I used to be leery of it for the reason everyone is: divorce rates. I was just talking with my roommate about that last semester. But after living with my mom and stepdad for over a month, I’m no longer scared my marriage will fail; I’m scared of the price I’ll have to pay to make it successful. I’ve seen what making a marriage “successful” has done to my mom, and I don’t want that to ever happen to me.
My mom has always had this sense of guilt that she couldn’t make things work with my dad because she thinks she “failed” at showing my sisters and me what a good marriage looks like. That’s not speculation on my part, by the way; she told me that. But now with my stepdad she’s overcompensating, and she doesn’t get that it’s backfiring. Yeah, I guess my perspective on marriage was always a little messed up; but living with my mom and stepdad for over a month completely killed any desire I ever had to get married. I would never tell that to my mom, of course; it would devastate her. But it’s true.
She’s into this whole “submissive wife” thing now, and it’s absolute crap! I know why she’s doing it, too. She’s afraid that the girls and I, after living with our angry-with-men grandma for sixteen years, hate men. What she doesn’t get is that strong women don’t make me hate men; weak women do. I hate that a man can turn my strong, intelligent, independent mother into a ditzy, kowtowing housewife. I hate that my friends have to ask their boyfriends for permission to go out on the weekends. I saw what marriage did to my mom, and I’ve seen what relationships have done to my friends, and I don’t want that to ever happen to me.
Relationships change people, and in my observations, ninety percent of the time it’s not for the better. That scares me about relationships, too. I spent my entire childhood changing for people, acting like someone I wasn’t because I thought that’s what people wanted. It might have been worth it if it had gotten me the love I craved, but it didn’t; it just made me forgettable. I’ve morphed so much over the years that I don’t even know how to act like myself anymore. Even now, at college, I have a reputation for speaking my mind, and it’s so cruelly ironic because people have absolutely no idea what’s going on in my head. Not even my family know who I really am. God, that sounded emo. It’s true, though.
I don’t change for people as much anymore. Sometimes I still catch myself doing it (old habits die hard), but for the most part I’ve stopped. But I know I’m susceptible, and I’m scared that any intense sort of relationship will make me weak again. I don’t want that. I don’t want to fall into the relationship trap.
I don’t want to get dependent on someone; I don’t want to have to get permission to go out at night; I don’t want to change. My independence is worth more to me than the gamble that maybe I won’t end up alone. Because marriage doesn’t guarantee you won’t end up alone, not anymore. And I saw what marriage did to my mom, and I don’t want that to ever happen to me. It’s just not worth it.
I'm a suburbia mouse...
Mar. 16th, 2008 01:17 amBut I was talking to a couple of my Scottish flatmates a few days ago, and I was sort of going on about how much I miss living in California, and how much I hate living in Texas, and they asked me why California is better than Texas. And like, I was so taken aback because at my university no one would ever ask me that. I mean, I would expect that from Texans because Texans have an irrational love for their state that I don't think anyone will ever be able to explain. But I always figured everyone else just sort of knew. I mean, Calfornia ... Texas. It's just one of those things.
And because I'm currenty in a foreign country, it's not like I could explain that a huge reason I don't like Texas is because Texas is like a foreign country ... except that I actually feel more comfortable here than in Texas.
But it's more than that. For my birthday, my mom offered to take me to see Wicked. And it sucks, because if we still lived in California, we could have done it, because stuff like that plays in L.A. all year round. But because it's not going to tour in Dallas (or it already has and I missed it, I don't know), we can't go see it. Or it's like, hey, people are coming to visit, we'll send them to Disneyland or take them to walk on the beach. But in Texas you can't do that. And in California "going into town" isn't this huge ordeal because there is no "in town". There's houses and shopping centers; and when they build new houses, they also build new shopping centers because, you know, no one is going to want to have to drive twenty minutes to get their groceries. But in Texas they just build new houses; and if the houses aren't close to grocery stores ... well, people just drive twenty or thirty minutes to buy groceries. And I hate that because seriously, what happens when you're having a dinner party and an hour before it starts you run out of sugar or something? You can't just run up to the store, and that sucks.
And I've actually totally forgotten where I was going with this. But okay, maybe all that means is that you like what you're used to, and I'm used to suburbs, and the bottom line is that Texas doesn't really have suburbs, and so I don't like it. But I still don't understand why anyone not from Texas would need it explained to them why California is better.
And I just got really tired (it is one in the morning), so I'm going to wrap this up for now.
In which Torchwood SLAYS me...
Feb. 15th, 2008 12:12 am(no subject)
Dec. 19th, 2007 12:01 pmA little over two years ago, I found some of my old writings and consequently wrote this entry. In it I made the point that I thought what I was writing at the time (Canis Majoris) was good but I was worried that in a few years I would realize it wasn't good. Yesterday I decided to reread CM for the first time in ... well, a long time, and it turns out that that was a pretty valid fear because I found that the whole thing is pretty rubbish, to be honest. It's all rather cliched, and it's quite annoying how Peter's character is never really developed, and the emotions are way over the top, and someone please teach me how to properly use a comma, and wow, could I use more italics?
But the great thing about finding all that out is that it didn't really distress me the way rereading People Change did two years ago. I mean, I sort of realized that yeah, it's rubbish, but honestly, writing Canis Majoris was one of the best experiences of my life to date, just in terms of how much I learned and how much it helped me through a pretty rough time in my life. And it's also pretty awesome to look back and see how far I've come in just two years. I don't know, maybe it's taking a Creative Writing class, or maybe it's experiencing real personal loss and realizing that people who go through that don't actually act ... well, the way I had them act in CM, but wow, I really don't write like I used to, and that's really, really great. But I also wrote a 151 single-spaced page story when I was fifteen/sixteen, and that's really amazing too.
I guess what I'm really trying to say is that yeah, I wrote 151 pages of rubbish, but I'm so, so glad I did. And I'm also really excited because I'm really starting to feel that I'm almost ready to write The Power of Will, and I've been waiting to write The Power of Will since before I started CM; I've been waiting to write it since I was fifteen. And when you've been waiting for over three years to be ready to write something, it is really, really elating to know that you're on the brink of actually getting to write it.
(no subject)
Nov. 7th, 2007 02:12 pmTwo nights ago I had this terrible dream where I was at this high school, and I kept having to crawl back and forth through this tunnel that in real life I would be physically unable to get inside because it was so small. I don't really know why I did, but it was all on Dumbledore's orders, and something I was supposed to do for him. I was trying to escape the enemy or throw them off or something. The dream also featured Mollie, a girl I was friends and then enemies with back in eighth grade. But the tunnel was the worst part because it was so small and I'm slightly claustrophobic, and then toward the end of the dream I came to find out that the ceiling could be raised and I could have walked through the whole time! And Dumbledore was like, "You didn't know that? Hahaha!" And it made me really, really mad because he didn't tell me!
This morning I woke up at 4:45 and it suddenly popped into my head that I needed 128 major units to graduate in four years. And I've only taken twelve major units. Obviously, I totally freaked out. So what better time to plan the next two-and-a-half years of your life than at five o'clock in the morning on a school day? As it turned out, I need 128 units total to graduate and only 54 major units, so I'll be totally fine, although I will spend the next two-and-a-half years reading and doing nothing else.
So at 5:30 I went back to bed, and I had this completely bizarre dream that took place in a strange commune, and in which my dog played a prominent role. The commune had moving staircases. I don't remember now why that was important in the dream, but it definitely was. Anyway, the dream also revolved heavily around a WII-like game something to the effect of "Help Sirius Black Escape from the Moving Staircase Commune While Holding Your Dog in Your Left Hand the Whole Time". Except that the real Sirius Black was in the actual dream (we talked for a while, albeit in a panicked sort of way), and if I lost the game, his life and freedom were at stake. It was highly stressful, and I had to battle a large, blob-like creature that could not be killed! Then my roommate's alarm went off, so I never found out if I helped Sirius escape or not.