Flashback
Today I needed to find some old test scores, so i started going through my paper files. I've been pretty good about not hording lots of things, since I move a lot, but somehow a lot of things managed to slip past the last 2 moves. There were pay stubs from Boeing, uncashed checks from Olin, PDEs problem sets and drawings from Sustainable Designs. A lot of things are now sitting in my trashcan, not making it through my upcoming 3rd move in 2 years, but one things won't.
I found a letter I wrote myself November of Senior Year. It's on Olin letterhead, making me think that maybe we all wrote them, but I don't remember doing it. Mine is basically an outline of what I was contemplating at the time and proves amusing in what I'm still thinking about and what I've resolved.
I apparently spent a lot of time thinking about the future. Should I do robotics or business? Is going to grad school just putting off the real world? If I wasn't enjoying classes at the time, would I even be happy in more classes? Would grad schools even consider me? If I didn't do grad school, would I find a job that I enjoyed? Did I want a job that would be close to my family or friends? How would I find a job where I could change the world? Did I even want to change the world?
Now, it looks like a lot of those questions have been resolved, at least temporarily. I made decisions, applied to grad schools, accepted jobs and worked on planning my adult life. I realize how important it is to live near people you care about and how much I needed a year or two to appreciate education. I love my family and still consider living near them. In retrospect, I wonder how much of the fretting and contemplation helped me make these decision and how much it froze me in inaction. It's somewhat enlightening to see how things change.
I think I'll write myself another one of these letters, attach it to this one, and lose them both for another 2 years.
I found a letter I wrote myself November of Senior Year. It's on Olin letterhead, making me think that maybe we all wrote them, but I don't remember doing it. Mine is basically an outline of what I was contemplating at the time and proves amusing in what I'm still thinking about and what I've resolved.
I apparently spent a lot of time thinking about the future. Should I do robotics or business? Is going to grad school just putting off the real world? If I wasn't enjoying classes at the time, would I even be happy in more classes? Would grad schools even consider me? If I didn't do grad school, would I find a job that I enjoyed? Did I want a job that would be close to my family or friends? How would I find a job where I could change the world? Did I even want to change the world?
Now, it looks like a lot of those questions have been resolved, at least temporarily. I made decisions, applied to grad schools, accepted jobs and worked on planning my adult life. I realize how important it is to live near people you care about and how much I needed a year or two to appreciate education. I love my family and still consider living near them. In retrospect, I wonder how much of the fretting and contemplation helped me make these decision and how much it froze me in inaction. It's somewhat enlightening to see how things change.
I think I'll write myself another one of these letters, attach it to this one, and lose them both for another 2 years.


2 Comments:
We wrote those letters at the "Senior Retreat" at that one house. The one where Joanne told us her story about all the stuff that happened right when she got hired.
Polina has a Facebook photo set http://olin.facebook.com/album.php?aid=2018388&id=214500239
Actually, this is dated November 2005. Could it have been Big Conversations instead?
I never made it to the Senior retreat due to SCOPE...
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