I return!
Which sounds like a good I poster, now that I think of it. But it needs to be something cool like coming back from Asia, not ‘writing a post in notepad, forgetting to actually post it, and then having to throw that post away because it was out of date.’ Oh yeah.
So new information!
Let’s start with the simple: COW is going well, Study Abroad classes are going well, as are my other classes. My honors advisor and I are continually hashing out the details of my honors thesis, and my father and I are having some interesting conversations about some of the finer concepts (like the nature of magic in role playing games). Relay for Life went really well, and while I wish we were able to raise more money, I think we can have a really good experience on that end next year, particularly since, now that I’ve been to Relay once, I am super-pumped about next year (insomuch as such a thing is possible a year away from the event). We had a study abroad meeting today that was really cool because we got to talk with folks who went on the China / Japan trip last year and the year before, and while I am friends with two people who have gone on the trip in previous years, it was nice to hear more people’s experiences in a group setting. Oh, and in one of my courses, we are talking about how - essentially - certain types of free speech are being eaten away here in the good ol’ US of A.
So enough ranting. For this post, let’s talk about Relay… and probably a few other things. But Relay for Life was incredibly fun. For those of you who don’t know what Relay for Life is, it essentially is a giant fund raiser to support cancer research and jazz of that nature. And it is an amazing coming together of survivors, family members, friends, and people who have been touched by cancer. And it is an incredibly emotional experience for some folks. In COW’s group, there were a significant number of individuals who had lost a close family member to cancer, and so it was a really remarkable experience for them to be able to be in a place with other people who have been in their situation, and further with people who have actually fought the disease and won.
In terms of the activities, it was tons of fun, though I have to say it was really really hard. The idea is that someone from the team must at all times (12 hours period from 6pm to 6am) be walking around the track (we were in a gym, though it is customary for some Relays to be outdoors). Often we were on the track together, but the point is that there is always someone representing. This - which I didn’t know until I was there - is supposed to be symbolic of the journey of a cancer survivor: dusk settles, and you are diagnosed with cancer. The light of your life, like the light of the day, seems to dwindle and fade out, seemingly never to return. It gets darker and colder and while you still have energy you start to feel fatigue. At one or two in the morning, they say, one experiences the kind of despair that sometimes takes hold of a cancer patient: one thinks they cannot keep going, in the context of the Relay, one wants to go home to their bed, and in the context of the cancer patient, may not want to continue with treatments. Finally, at four or five, dawn shows up, symbolizing the end of treatment and the realization that, while you have some distance to go, you can see the end. At first I admit I was not quite clear if the experiences would live up to the symbolism, but I have to say at like 2:30 / 3 am, after all the other activities that were going on at Relay, I just wanted to drive home and sleep. But we all persisted, so that was good.
A note on the activities one does at Relay: there are tons of things set up by the wonderful organizers, and those things are really fun, but I have two things of note to say. The first is simply that, if you are going to play in the basketball tournament, note that there are people who probably play basketball more seriously than you do, and you may get beaten horribly. Which isn’t to say I wouldn’t do it again, but next time I need to play a little first. Also, if you are going to play a Risk-like board game which simulates world war two, try not to play it while guys are throwing a Frisbee around you. To quote a friend. “Hey Chris do you know who won World War II?” “Uhm…” “The Frisbee.”
So yeah.
And now, I fear, I must run. But I’m shooting for another post this week, as I want to get in something from my Constitutional Issues class, because it’s pretty awesome. And terrifying.
And Happy Commuter Appreciation Week everyone!