Wednesday, August 26, 2020

This Is The Reason Everyone Loves UCSB

For what reason does everybody cherishes University of California, Santa Barbara? As a result of the sea shore! It is a general accord that UCSBs area by the sea is the reason all Guachos love their schools area so much, however theres still a great deal more to that. See what other exceptional characteristics UCSBs area and culture has that caused these 5 understudies to make the most of their time nearby to such an extent: Simplyjane2UCSB ‘20UCSB is a heaven, its insane to think its a genuine college. Youre directly by the sea shore, which is particularly marvelous on the off chance that you plan on going into something like sea life science. We even have our own marine creature lab/aquarium. This school is viewed as the Harvard of the gathering schools. UCSB is #3 in the UC framework and #28 in the state so trust me when I state we realize how to adjust fun and scholastics, yet school consistently starts things out. Dont stress on the off chance that you arent a partier, there are still specialties and spots to quarters if youre about the without substance life. In the event that you are earth well disposed, youll love hearing that this school is one of the greenest campuses!shanelee UCSB ‘15 As a fourth year understudy at University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB), I can vouch for its uniqueness contrasted with the vast majority of the different UCs. Since it is a school arranged on the sea shore, the general condition is stunningly excellent and is a stage unique in relation to different schools. In spite of the fact that the sea shore itself on the grounds isn’t the best, there are a lot of different sea shores around it that are extraordinary for exercises and occasions. Also, the best part of this ‘beach school’ is the climate. I accept this considers its way of life to be progressively cheerful and carefree. Understudies going to UCSB generally live either nearby gave lodgings or in the school town called Isla Vista, which is associated with the school. It is a region that gives genuine opportunity, autonomy, and foundations to eat, drink, and get together with individuals. For the area, similarly as with a significant number of the different UCs, UCSB is really arranged in the city of Goleta. Arranged between the two urban areas takes into account travel between the two urban areas entirely sensible and in this way gives more choices. There is a stunning transport framework that gives transport all through the two urban communities, of which UCSB understudies get free admissions. UCanStudyBuzzed UCSB ‘17 A bond a lot more noteworthy than just going to a similar college, that is the most alluring piece of UCSB. A year ago when an Isla Vista inhabitant shot and slaughtered huge numbers of our own it was miserable, however together, as a network, Isla Vista and UCSB understudies the same met up. As a network we not just grieved the loved ones we lost, yet praised their lives. As a gathering we reconstructed and became more grounded to show the world that we would not be harmed so without any problem. Past that solitary experience theres a general sentiment of association among you and others. Regardless of whether you dont know them they are there for you. K ChairilUCSB ‘18Students are to a great extent truly laid back and skill to make some great memories here, yet come midterms and dead/finals week, we can truly split down. Not to categorize this school and its encompassing territories to an extreme, yet in general the way of life here can extend from radical to smart efficient. You get a decent blend. Downtown SB (State Street), which is 15 minutes away by transport, helps me to remember Old Town Pasadena and Hollywood combined, if that implies anything to you. Gracious, and were directly on the sea shore. MirandaBlake2015 UCSB ‘19 I love that my school is by the sea shore on the grounds that the sea shore is one of my preferred places on the planet. I love that its in California since its near snow-topped mountains and sun-washing sea shores. Its likewise not to a long way from home, so I can be close to my younger sibling and other relatives. The way of life at my school is laid back and outdoorsy. Wherever you look, you see individuals outside, perhaps playing sea shore volleyball or riding their bicycle. Its likewise exceptionally scholastic, rating among the top sea life science schools in California, in addition to other things. Is it true that you are hoping to apply to UCSB? Picking where to head off to college is a staggeringly significant choice. Settle on an educated decision by conversing with current understudies on ourmentorship stage. Access 60,000+ successfulcollege application filesuploaded by undergrads (they get paid when you see them). is a network of understudies helping understudies. We will probably bring truly necessary straightforwardness to advanced education.

Saturday, August 22, 2020

The American Christian Holocausts Essay -- Holocaust History

The American Christian Holocausts As a secondary school understudy I was constantly irritated by understudies who might ask: Why do we need to gain proficiency with this stuff [history] in any case? We learn history so we don't rehash our errors. This is the regular answer that my educators, my dad, and pretty much some other grown-up would give. This answer sounded good to me at that point, and I handily acknowledged it. In secondary school, understudies find out about the Nazi-Holocaust, and which is all well and good. Data flourishes with respect to this point. In any case, my instructors never instructed me that our nation has its very own Holocaust (really there are two; one slaughtering 40 to 60,000,000 Africans, and one murdering 100,000,000 Native Red Peoples). Hitler himself frequently communicated his deference for the convenience where the American Christians evacuated the Native Americans and gave them mass graves like the one in Wounded Knee, South Dakota. Have you at any point heard the words American Holocaust(s) previously? As I read about history I was attracted to the Indian Wars. One day I started perusing Dee Brown's book Cover My Heart at Wounded Knee. I was stunned by what I read. I had never been shown these things, yet this history appeared to be so significant and unmatched in American history. As of late, I got Brown's book and perused it a subsequent time. At last, the words shook me from the rest in which we Americans love to enjoy; the rest of refusal, realism, and debauchery. The musings and pictures evoked in Brown's book returned and my heart loaded up with an incredible sentiment of agonizing outrage once more. I contemplated internally, I'm happy that is done with, I don't have the foggiest idea what I would have d one on the off chance that I had been alive, at that point. The expressions of William McPherson of the Washington Post with respect to Brown's book consoled... ...rican banner and harmony decorations by Abraham Lincoln and Colonel A. B. Greenwood in Washington just a year sooner and was informed that as long as the American banner was above them, nobody would be hurt). The overcomes present encompassed the ladies and kids accumulated under the banner. At 8:00 am in excess of 700 mounted force men under the order of Colonel John M. Chivington and Major Scott J. Anthony, rode in and terminated on the clustered Indians from two headings. After the underlying charge the US officers got off and proceeded with the unpredictable murdering of men, ladies, and kids. During the executing unspeakable monstrosities and mutilations were submitted by the fighters. Records from two white men, John S. Smith and Lieutenant James Connor, depicted the demonstrations of dehumanization. As per John S. Smith, Colonel Chivington realized these Indians to be tranquil before the slaughter.

Thursday, August 13, 2020

Highlight Reel

Highlight Reel Internet! Long time, no talk. Why such a long time and so little talk? Well, there has been a lot happening, although in some ways very, very little has happened, and I’ve been trying to write blog posts about both of those things at the same time which became very muddled and confusing extremely quickly. Here is a list of blog posts I meant to finish, to no avail: A post about Family Weekend, with pictures and videos A long post detailing how and why I went on leave from MIT, in honor of my three-year anniversary of going on leave (November 1!) A six-page autobiographical comic chronicling about three hours on a Saturday evening A post, mostly words, about the joint improv/a cappella event the Asymptones did with Roadkill Buffet And after a while it became even harder to write a blog post because I wanted to capture all of my experiences, good and bad, and as it inched closer to a month since my last post obviously I couldn’t fit everything in in one go. But! Like the Great Pumpkin rising from the pumpkin patch on Halloween, I am back at 1369 Coffee and have risen from the graveyard of unfinished blog posts to bring you… a highlight reel of the past  months adventures. Family Weekend Family Weekend happened in late October, and it went a little differently for me as an upperclassman than it did for me as a freshman, mostly because it was my parents’ fifth (!) Family Weekend and they felt like they’d seen and done pretty much everything worth seeing and doing on campus. They didn’t even register for the weekend officially because we spent a lot of it off-campus in Boston, shopping or eating or hanging out with friends. Having parents visit gave me an awesome excuse to finally clean up my room, yay! I assembled my futon and stuck a lot of the art I’d picked up at conventions on the above my bed wall and everything:   Sunday morning, we sat on that futon and Skyped with my little sister in Spain. It felt nice to have the gang back togetherâ€"or as back together as we can be until she comes home for Christmas. The main reason my parents come to Family Weekend in Boston year after year is for the concert Saturday evening, when MIT’s a cappella groups sing two songs each. I’ve been the musical director of the Asymptones, MIT’s nerdiest a cappella group (which is really saying something), for years now, and this is the only time my parents get to see us perform. You can watch as I awkwardly introduce the group and we cover a Weird Al Yankovic cover of a certain Lorde song below: #Yogtober In October, my yoga studio in Central Square had a special deal where you could buy a 31-class pass, good only for the month, for a supreme discount. The idea was that by the end of the month, all those classes would be gone! That’s a class a day, roughly. Maybe zero some days and two on others, if you need to catch up. Naturally, being me, I thought I didn’t have enough to do in my life already and that this challenge would be a fantastic way to fill up my free time. The studio called the challenge “31 in 31,” but since that makes a terrible hashtag I started calling it “Yogtober” and tracking my progress on Twitter. As it turned out, the challenge was an awesome idea for me. I only have classes on Wednesdays and Thursdays this semester, so doing yoga every day ensured that even when I didn’t have class, I had structure. It also ensured that I felt utterly invincible for two weeks in October. I was glowing. My mood took the most incredible upswing. When I saw my therapist in Newton, all I had to report was, “I feel awesome! This is amazing!” Unfortunately, after Family Weekend I completely crashed. I got sick and wasn’t able to completely complete the challenge, but I managed 25/31 Yogtober classes in the end. I think 25/31 is pretty good, and even a month later I’m still more stretchybendy than I have ever been in my entire life. ThesisNovel Sometime in the last month, I hit a snag on the novel thats serving as my writing thesis. I’m not sure exactly when that happened, but I know why. For a little while, I lost faith in the story I wanted to tell and the way I wanted to tell it. It’s not that I fell out of love with the characters, or with their lives, but I started questioning my ability as a writerâ€"as a human beingâ€"to bring them into the world. I’m told that this is a perfectly normal thing to do when writing a novel. Little by little, I started to piece my belief in myself back together. I worked through writing exercises with my thesis advisor and focused on developing my narrator’s voice, one of the important things that I thought had slipped from my fingers. For a couple of foggy weeks, in there I was gripped by the paralyzing (and incorrect) notion that maybe I was only writing myself in weird and different situations. Maybe my range is actually that limited. Maybe I have no talent! Maybe… One of the exercises my advisor made me do involved writing down an anecdote I often tell as I would tell it, and then writing it as my character would tell it. When I did that, I started remembering all of the differences between us, in how I see the world and how she sees the world, in what she prioritizes versus what I prioritize (her personal interests are vastly different from  mine). I came away with a stronger sense of who she was, and now I can slip into her skin again. It feels nice to get back to work. Superheroes Do you ever fall in love with other people’s stories? I do, all the time. My entire life has been cycles of me just falling in love with other people’s stories and other people’s characters. Right now, I’m in love with superheroes, and let me tell you, it’s quite the situation. I used the last week of October, when I was sick, to start reading a bunch of comics, and I tripped and fell into a hole I haven’t quite climbed out of yet. I mean, it’s not interfering with my schoolwork; it was for about a week, but only because I was in a perpetual state of groaning and wondering why I had to think about my homework when I could be thinking about superheroes! And that was stressful, because my work is hard enough without the added impediment of me really not wanting to do it. But I have a handle on my infatuation now. It’s exactly what falling hard for a person is like (all the songs make sense!) except with more fiction. And this has always been a part of who I am, how I think. I almost wrote a college application essay on fanfiction. I’m hoping to build a career on understanding fans and being fannish. So for now the thing that gets me going is superheroes, and maybe next year it’ll be something else. Why superheroes? Well, superheroes tend to have super-issues, whether or not they’re thoroughly messed up on a personal level, and it’s sometimes cathartic to hash out things that are bothering me, or have in the past bothered me, through the lenses of people who routinely have to deal with much, much worse, and keep going anyway. I started writing fanfiction again for the first time in about nine months. I started reading fanfiction again for the first time in about three years. And I’m drawing more… I also wrote a bunch of second-person pieces, none longer than 900 words, that are very, very loosely fanfiction, and I think they’re some of the prettiest things I’ve cranked out in a very long time, if a little morbid. If you told lies, here are three you would tell: there is nothing about your body that you would change; you are not in love with a ghost in a man’s clothing; you have never dreamed of dying in your sleep. Superheroes, man. Who knew they were so inspiring? The Vagina Monologues Just a quick word on this one, since there’s not a ton to say yet, but I auditioned for MIT’s annual production of The Vagina Monologues with a self-written piece, and I got in! This will be my second time in the Monologues and I am so stoked to be a part of it again. My monologue isnt finished, so I’m not going to tell you what it’s about, but as of right now it’s titled “Dear Benedict Cumberbatch.” More on this situation as it develops! Studies in Film Final project season is in full spring, and in one of my classes, 21L.706, or Studies in Film, has somewhat lax requirements. That is, what we have to do is very clearly mapped outâ€"a ten-page paper and a twenty-minute oral presentationâ€"but our topics are complete wild cards. The focus of the class was basically “film adaptations of books, plays, and other films,” so our final paper topics can be on… anything in that sphere, whether it’s a deeper dive into an adaptation we’ve already examined or a completely new adaptation entirely. Which is amazing! Our syllabus already provided us with rich material for this projectâ€"as you can see belowâ€"but most people elected to go the route of doing something fresh. We had our first round of final project presentations this week, and they included: A comparison of The Departed and the Hong Kong film that inspired it, Infernal Affairs An examination of the way the 2011 Captain America film plays with and off of its comics heritage (mine, of course) A look at a film and a video game adaptation of Heart of Darkness and how different mediums offer different experiences A study in the rise of zombie films and how they reflect the cultural and philosophical attitudes of the 20th century Obviously these topics were reflective of the interests of the presenters, but everyone did a good job of tying in legitimate analysis. I love thinking critically about the things people love. College! Improvapella! As I mentioned at the top of the post, the Asymptones had a joint performance with MIT’s improvisational comedy group, Roadkill Buffet, last week. (For an idea of what Roadkill Buffet does, check out the long-running improv comedy TV show Whose Line is it Anyway? Similar stuff.) It was our first time doing a joint show with them, so we were both winging it a little, and in the end it went fantastically. The auditorium was so packed that people were sitting in the aisles. We alternated brief song sets (ours) with improv games (theirs), culminating in a giant game of Freeze Tag that we both played together. It was a formula for maximum humor. The Asymptones and RKB have a similar comedic energy, so we amped each other up. The event only lasted an hour, but I was smiling for the rest of the weekend, and I received a ton of positive comments from people who had been introduced to the Asymptones for the first time via our collaboration with RKB. (Personally, it was my first time seeing RKB, and I laughed so hard I cried twice. Not exactly conducive to singing, but man, did it feel good.) And thats the October-November highlight reel. See you again soon, hopefully not in a  month. c: As always, I am followable on the Tweets.