Friday 22 April 2011

But I will see you again...







NCSU Central Campus, Easter weekend.






Listening to: Hello, I'm in Delaware by City and Colour.
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Sunday 17 April 2011

Civil War skeletons in their graves


Why yes, thanks for noticing, that IS a humorous reference to the stereotypical southern act of chewin' tobacco, underneath a label for Newcastle Brown Ale, collected by chance into one photo- what could sum up my experience in North Carolina more?!

A fun time had by all with Emily's housemate/friend/lover Lily coming to stay for the week. She got to see and taste all the Raleigh highlights and even go some places I haven't been yet, including Duke botanical gardens. A far cry from the grassy area outside Alexander Hall on NCSU campus, i'm told.


But anyway, down to what I really meant to write about. I was just looking through course options for next semester at Manchester, since module selection is coming up. Happy to see there is a bit more creative writing-based stuff in there than in the past two years, and I'm growing confident that I may even manage to get to the end of my degree having never studied Chaucer at university level- fingers crossed!

It has been making me think a bit more about impending graduation into the real world and, yep, what the hell i'm going to do with my life. One thing I've noticed here in America is that everyone in English seems to have this whimsical idea of one day graduating college and becoming 'a writer'. What is that?? How is it that I have gone through higher education and nearly completed a degree in English Literature and yet this intriguing choice of career has never been offered to me? Is it something that only Americans do? I have heard of journalists, novelists, poets, PR and advertising teams... but never have I considered packing up my pens and pencils and jazzy WH Smiths notebooks and running away to become 'a writer'. I was under the impression all these years that you had to kind of have a real job and do a bit of writing on the side to ever be published. You know, like those incredibly wealthy successful authors who used to secretly scribble away in a book during their toilet break working at Starbucks' scummy downtown competitor or whatever. 

If i'd known you could just whack a label on your forehead and use it when you did your taxes or met professionals at parties to avoid the pang of guilt at being effectively unemployed, I might have thought twice about bothering with university.

But oh well. Better get my CV in to Starbucks when I get back to Newcastle.




Listening to: Decatur, or round of applause for your Step-Motther! by Sufjan Stevens.
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Monday 11 April 2011

"This isn't government we're watching; this is junior high"



So despite NCSU student newspaper "The Technician" having absolutely nothing of worth to say at all other than the typical report on Alpha Kappa Psi's "Pig Pickin' Fundraiser" (wish I could say I made this up but in fact the top half of page 2 in today's issue is dedicated to this so-called "good networking opportunity"- networking with who exactly?), there is is actually quite a lot going on in the good ol' USofA this week. 

Some of the Alexander girls finally got to make the trip up to DC this weekend. It was looking like pretty unfortunate timing in many ways, considering all the talks last week of a governmental shutdown, which would have meant all the museums, galleries, memorials and, let's be honest, most tragically the amazing Smithsonian Zoo being closed: basically a trip to Washington would have been kind of crap and a little bit pointless.

But thankfully a short-term agreement budget of $3.5 trillion was finally agreed upon late on Friday night. So now the Republicans are being blasted for messing about with empty threats and getting their priorities so drastically wrong and Obama is being tarred with the "controlling Stalinist" brush by crazy Libertarianists like this loveably old guy, who we went to see speak on campus the other week: 



You might recognise him from here... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F7RnlPQCKBQ


God bless Amurricuh.


In other news, it's been a lovely few weeks of normality before starting the exam/paper due period, which needless to say I am not looking forward to at all. It was especially nice to have Mama and Papa Lewis come to visit last weekend on their trip to Florida to see the fam. Their gifts of chocolate, tea, money, and real non-dining hall meals were appreciated beyond belief.

Another memorable event was the Carolina Cup horse races down in South Carolina. Despite the fact I didn't actually see a real horse the whole day, it was a fantastic excuse to get dressed up, drunk, and laugh at horrendous frat boys. The Alexander guys and girls were all looking absolutely awesome, despite a cruel 5:30am wakeup call before driving down- not bad!




The weeks are flying by way too fast, so starting to make a list of things I need to do/see in Raleigh before we head off on our East-coast travels and home to England. Thankfully it's not the craziest or most vibrant city in the world so I think it'll definitely be more the people I'll miss rather than the place...



Listening to: "White Collar Boy" by Belle and Sebastian.
Listen here.

Title from "Our Cowardly Congress", by Nicholas D. Kristof, for The New York Times.
Read it here.