Week At Wofford

  • The Week At Wofford
    The Week at Wofford blog is your one-stop for the pictures, videos, sounds, and more from what's going on at Wofford! Also featuring tidbits by the Old Gold and Black student newspaper staff.

May 2008

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Wofford College News

Quintessential!

Anna Lee

April 30, 2008

Sky Water

In Yeats country I walked down a rough slab of concrete and stood on a piece of sky. Lake Innisfree was quiet. The tourists had left for Rosses Point or Glendalough after a round of photographs, the fevered click clicking of their cameras sounding small and distant. I was alone. Above was blue wispy sky straining from the weight of clouds that hung low and clung to the rolling hilltops of Sligo. Below was a perfect mirror version. Thoreau would have called Innisfree sky water, and I was reminded of his own Walden Pond that was impenetrable to dust and storms and stones.

I arched my back to watch the falling red-rimmed sun. Rose pink and midnight clouds spread across the earth. Two worlds slowly darkened. When I finally stood, I felt a stirring in a body part I do not know the name of, though I sometimes call it the soul. I did not try to interpret the sensation as ache or bliss. I held the feeling high above me, far removed from human understanding.

Six months before, on the Li River, the same stirring came to me. For two hundred yuan, a shirtless fisherman took me to Yangshuo on his boat, and for fifty more, he allowed me to sit on the narrow prow. Karst mountains stood as noble as ancient kings. Moss crept up the sides like dust and spider-web. Unlike Innisfree, the water here was as thick as mercury. Ripples the boat made ran like folds of velvet.

I had run out of batteries for my camera, and unwittingly bought some the day before from a street vendor in Guilin, but like most things in China, the batteries were a scam, no doubt foraged from a town dump and then washed off. Deprived of film, I could only sit on the prow and watch.  At some point I ceased to see, and became a part of what I saw. I had emptied myself of everything. I had stilled my mind. I was simply one of ten thousand things rising and falling.

Those two brief moments of clarity filled me with a sense of profound contentment that I had never felt while attending the small Baptist church of my youth. Lodged in bare, cramped rooms, we sang hymns as one and prayed as one to the empty, stagnant air. Head bowed in prayer, I willed the preacher’s words to move me in a way the Our Father had for Simone Weir.  She often recited the prayer lovingly, for the words transported her thoughts to somewhere “outside space where there is neither perspective nor point of view.” But I could not lose myself in solitary contemplation when always I was aware of the person next me. After the prayer came the sermon and after the sermon, another hymn.  The church’s program was tightly regimented. I began to dread the Sundays that left me exhausted but never fulfilled.

When I was seventeen, I left the church, but I did not abandon religious service altogether. I held my own. The warm, unhurried creek behind my house wandered along, exploring every tree limb and wildflower, and I roamed with it. Sunlight warmed me more than prayer and birdsong sounded more pleasant than hymns. I was alone with the infinite that had no schedule to keep. Some might have called me a nature worshipper, but I found the term too base and reminiscent of two hippies addicted to starlit nights. No, I was not a hippie. Like Thoreau, I had found divine inspiration in nature, but I did not worship it.

If anything, I was inexplicably drawn to the water. Water awoke my soul that so often lied dormant and unmoved. I spent many hours gazing upon fields of water, and at certain unexpected moments, an infinite energy drifted up out of its depths as slow and languid as mist turning lazy circles. The water’s energy sought out my soul, the rhythm of its pulse merging with the movement of the lake, the river, and the ocean.

Water is formless, shapeless, endless. I can stare into its depths for all of my days and still never see the bottom. My religion is the streams and rivers that flow into the amorphous sea. The sea is never-ending, the vast length of which cannot be wholly comprehendible by human notions. Once, some friends and I drove to Folly Beach in early March. While they bared winter white skin and dived into the ocean, I sat alone on the sand. Bare bottom feet ran over sea grass and seashell. Tiny grains explored the spaces between my hands. Towards the east sunlight brushed across the waves dusting hazy gold as far as the eye could see, and cerulean sky tucked his shirt into slate-colored water. After awhile I looked for my friends, but the sea stretched wider so that I could make out nothing. In vain I tried to penetrate its murky depths, but everything remained veiled from me. That is the same way I view religion. The Dao de jing  says that the way of the universe cannot be defined. “Look, it cannot be seen— it is beyond form. Listen, it cannot be heard— it is beyond sound. Grasp, it cannot be held— it is intangible.” I did not want the mystical explained to me in human language and broken down into tedium. I wanted to remain awestruck. I desired nature’s inarticulate religion, its invisible energy that somehow matched my heartbeat and allowed me to sense it doing the same for the ten thousand other things alive.

I understood why Thoreau lived by the shore of Walden Pond. He called the lake “earth’s eye; looking into which the beholder measures the depth of his own nature.” On the Li River I realized my nature in comparison to the nature of the earth. I was infinitely small. I was the youngest of ten thousand things. The limestone mountains counted the number of my breaths and considered me as harmless as a bug skimming the river’s surface. The boat that carried me parted the water into two undulating lines, but when I looked back, my presence had been smoothed away, the last ripples meeting the forested shore.

I yearned to be like the impenetrable water that absorbs all things and remains tranquil on the surface. I wished to be like the valley river. The water makes its way from the sky to the mountain peaks, the peaks to the river. Along the river’s journey, a young doe will sip from it. An ancient tree will sink its roots into it. A murderer will wash the blood from his hands in it, yet the water remains calm. When faced with conflict, I let the tide ebb and flow— stir up the lakebed and watch it settle. I was happiest and most content as an observer. I enjoyed all that flowed into my life for the pleasure of enjoying the flow itself.

February 12, 2008

Upon Graduating

The other day I came to the terrible realization that the future is at once wide open and closed, dead bolted,  doomed. In the sleepy winter months, this throat restricting, panic-driven paranoia lied dormant, padded with three hour naps and marathon America's Next Top Model. But with the start of my final semester at Wofford, my general apathy has been poked rather rudely by the awful ephipany that I have absolutely no job skills and double majors that proclaim my proficiency at two languages I've been using for the past twenty years of my life. Perfect.

Now I find myself waking up at 3 AM with a start and stumbling to the computer for hours upon hours of unsuccessful job hunting.  And I know the search is starting to reach the point of hopelessness when a Jenny Craig consultant actually doesn't sound quite that bad. But what about Career Services, you say? Sure, if I want to find a job as a summer camp counselor or stay in Spartanburg for the rest of my life.

I wonder if the rest of my classmates feel the same way I do. I stare at their silly, smiling, wholesome faces in vain, hoping to see vestiges of the same frantic frenzy that is slowly ruining my life. How can I sit through another class discussing the uses of the semi colon when three months from now, my future employer at lame job x could care less if I knew where to put a comma, or even the secret behind the oft-used but never correctly, dash? In an effort to cure myself of this dreadful disease, I've come to rely on apathy. Apathy in high doses is generally helpful in cases like mine. On an average day, I usually say "screw it" on at least ten different occasions. Parts of the old Anna still attempt to peak through, for instance, that time at Burwell when I became unnaturally angry after spotting some poor unfortunate thing wearing corduroy capris. But then, good ole apathy rubbed my tummy while making soothing, clucking noises, until I felt right again.

November 14, 2007

Joke of the Day

I've decided that the Wofford main page is nothing sort of Communist propaganda. When it's not stretching the truth, then it's flat out lying. Take what's been on the last few days. It's headlined, "Wofford Recyclers with a couple of typical Wofford students riding the new "green" bikes up Campus Drive with that glorious fountain spraying up good will and hope and studiousness. Underneath the headline is

"Wofford Recyclers try out the new campus bicycles, aimed at encouraging more exercise and reducing gasoline consumption. The bike program is just one element of the college's green initiatives that include renewed emphasis on recycling and lowering energy use."

Well. Where to start? Let me pick up my pen of wrath and take it sentence by sentence. First of all, it makes the assumption if A, then B. Bike riding (A) obviously leads to recycling (B), if you are a Wofford student. I doubt half of those people in that picture have ever recycled anything in their lives.

I thoroughly and absolutely support environmental awareness and going green, but I think Wofford administration needs a little reality check. These new bikes are certainly not encouraging more exercise. MOST students use them so they can get up just a little bit later and bike to class to save time, while plowing over on-time, conscientious walkers like myself. It is a vehicle to aid in laziness. Secondly, what is this "reducing" gasoline consumption? I don't think any students have ever drove their car from Olin to Old Main before these bikes came. Our campus is simply too small to really utilize them to their fullest. Walking from one end of the campus takes only about five minutes at a brisk pace. Here, walking would probably be more strenuous exercise than 30 seconds of bike riding down a hill. Students still drive their cars from their dorm to the bookstore or downtown.

So, where is this renewed emphasis on recycling and lowering energy use? There's been more recycling bins, yes, at the urging of a select few. The Wofford Planeteers have been working and planning, but that group only has about 15 members. I haven't received any notices from Wofford College that encourage students to turn off their lights when they leave the room, or take shorter showers to conserve water. Simple things that could have been done earlier are bogged down by bureaucrats trying to figure out what body part to scratch next. Quit lying to yourself, Wofford. If you're a green campus then I am white. Wait, let me check in the mirror. Aww man. Still Chinese.

October 25, 2007

The answer to life

Sometime last week in a moment of heavenly epiphany without the use of hallucinogens, I decided that I will stick it to the man and NOT go to graduate school. Yea, take that. Or at least, not immediately after graduation like the rest of my silly, goal-oriented, ambitious, and futurely successful classmates. A broader question: What is wrong with everyone? Why the rush to go to more school? We're young now; we just spent four years memorizing the five hundred points to the Treaty of Tientsin, writing papers on the function of estate in Jane Eyre (extremely bad idea, don't recommend that topic at all) and deciding that Toni Morrison is the most undeserving person in the history of undeserving people to win the Nobel Prize. But no, apparently those four years of coffee and Adderall addiction haven't been enough; people have somehow miraculously forgotten that chunk of time and are fervently applying to graduate schools right and left. And some of these people, in my kindest opinion, shouldn't have even applied to college, unless there was a Investigative Study of Beer and Greek Life major at Wofford that I am not aware of.

What happened to only living once? Do you want to spend your one life (or present life, if reincarnation is your thing) reading books about Art in the Spanish Golden Age (cough, Sarah) or wasting $100,000 on law school knowing full well you will most likely fail the Bar exam repeatedly? Grad school will always be there. If you really want to continue your education, you shouldn't be afraid that if you take a year or two off, you will not want to go back to school. Because that is what graduate school is supposed to be about: Furthering your desire for more knowledge not, so I can get a good job and a 401k, whatever that is supposed to be.  Or, in my case, so my mother won't disown me for being a complete disappointment and waste of birth giving. If you're not absolutely sure what you want to do later on in life, right now at 12:24 AM on October 24, then WHY ARE YOU APPLYING TO GRAD SCHOOL? Take a year off! Two years! Find a job...get some REAL job experience that doesn't include working at your family owned landscaping business with your daddy paying you under the table.

I'm getting annoyed and a little frightened with this growing trend of going to graduate school straight after a four year college. Annoying because all of you certainly have more ambition than me, and frightened because if everyone starts going to graduate school, then what will happen to the job market in the future? Competition will heighten tenfold. You'll probably need a Ph.D just to be a manager at Barnes and Noble or something ridiculous (notice: correct usage of the word ridiculous) like that. We're all so strung out and worried about the future that it is taking all the fun out of life. Take a road trip, work as a bartender, move to Maine, join the circus! Don't worry, all the graduate schools in America won't simultaneously blow up while you're doing your thing.

What blows my mind is I was talking to someone the other day who was considering taking some time off and then applying to graduate school, but then immediately decided no, she could not do that. Why? Because she didn't want to "waste a year" and be one year behind on getting a Ph.D and being the most attractive art history professor the world has ever seen. Is ONE year going to make a difference? Would a college not hire you because you're 32, whereas the other candidate is 31?

(Not to be hypocritical, I once entertained the thought of being an English professor until I realized I can barely write a five page paper, let alone a novel length dissertation.)

I just want everyone to be happy, I really do. I might be bitter and angry and sleepy most of the time, but I hate seeing everyone so stressed out about graduate school and feeling the pressure to decide exactly what you want to do for the rest of your life before the semester is over. I want people to enjoy their senior year of college, to do something they've always wanted to do, and most of all, to STOP TALKING TO ME ABOUT THE FUTURE because I am sick and tired of hearing everyone whine. It makes me whine, and my roommate is tired of staying up till five in the morning trying to reassure me that I am not a failure at life and that boys are absolutely the worst species in existence. That is, next to shrimp, because I am allergic. to it.

So, that is the answer to life and everything. It was very illuminating. You can thank me later.