Monday, January 20, 2014

Altar Ego, Part Two: Life Advice From an 18 Year Old

There's quite a few times where I completely deny that I'm an adult forget that I've aged since I was eighteen. Okay, fine, sixteen. Twelve. You know what, let's not talk about this.

 While I know how one can come off as "mature" (it usually involves claiming you just can't live without your morning coffee and that you totally read the newspaper with said coffee), I often refer to my eighteen year old self for advice. This results in weird haircuts and vague, "I'm-trying-to-be-philosophical" statements about life.

So, for those of you who read my fifteen-year-old self's sage life advice and are yearning for just a little more guidance, you've come to the right place--seeing as 18 is the magic number where everything makes sense, and lotto tickets stop being cool.

And so, I present to you: life advice from an 18 year old!

Look, even though you're still a teenager, people expect you to present yourself, like...eloquently. You're an adult now. Not only should you accept your suffering, you should brag about it, and, here's the key, pretend to enjoy your suffering. Sure, you can't wear too much eyeliner and claim that no one understands you, but you can wear too much Clinique product and boast about how you get up at 5:00 every morning to jog and do laundry (note: you'll have to set about five alarms and you'll probably spend an hour laughing at cat gifs on Tumblr. Nobody can know this).

It's fun, you'll say. I can watch the sunrise.

Mature people genuinely enjoy sunrises. Remember that. Extra points if you can make it a metaphor for something meaningful in life. 

Suffering means that you're doing adulthood right. Fun is so last year. All your video games, cartoons, stuffed animals, and glitter, just throw 'em out the window. Say you have no time for such frivolous activities because you just worked a sixty-hour week.

If people aren't taking you seriously as an adult, dye your hair brown and wear glasses all the time. This applies for people with jobs, breasts, and love for makeup that doesn't resemble your natural face.

No more makeup that doesn't resemble your natural face. Colors are for children.

However, if you're a freshman in college, this is your chance to show how much of an individual you are. You're just so...unique. This is the only exception. Sophomore year, you must go back to glasses and solid colored shirts. But freshman year, show how you unique you are by wearing earrings that get caught in your hair and pants that anyone could spot from a mile away.

Talk about how into politics and the news you are, while you actually get most of your political information from Facebook and the Daily show.

Young adult books aren't actually books--they don't count. Only books by dead white guys count. Is that a John Green book I see you carrying? Stop. Just stop.

Whenever you go home for break, pretend you don't have a curfew and that you know as much, if not more, as your parents.

If life seems to throw responsibility in your face, 1) talk about how many obligations you have, and 2) run away to an ashram in Colorado to avoid those obligations.

You are just so serious. Like, seriously, life is so deep and meaningful now. Make sure you get through a dinner party (the ultimate sign of grownup-ness) without laughing--laughter is a sign of weakness. It is your duty as an adult.

Stop laughing at the fact that I just said duty. Secretly think that word is hilarious.

If you do end up making an ass of yourself, claim that it's because you're so secure with your maturity that you intentionally made a statement about how goofy is the new serious. Because this will end up on the internet:



Namaste.

Sunday, January 19, 2014

How to Succeed in English Class (Without Really Trying)

As the new semester ends my blissfully un-stressful winter break (anybody still in denial that real life is like, starting?), I've noticed a trend among English and non-English majors alike. Most everybody has that "easy class" where professors actually *gasp* go over the syllabus during syllabus week and introduce ice breakers and everybody's friends, la dee da.

These are very rarely English classes. English class is where socialization goes to die and professors go to enforce their creative genius. These are the classes that result in cries of despair and "eek! I have 4 papers due this week, a thesis, and an analysis of the meaning of my own teeth, which I must pull out of my mouth by Thursday!"

One of these is not true; on good weeks, 3 papers are due.

So. How do you get through these classes without losing your mind?


1) If there is water of any form in a book (ocean, lake, a glass of water), write about it. Your entire paper should be about water--it is a symbol for life, love, loss, that sentence you uttered last Thursday, and everything in between. Make your argument that the flow of the water is a statement the author is trying to make about the flow of the narrative. The less flow the actual narrative has, the more the water symbolizes said flow. If there is any hint of sadness in this book, the water represents the characters' tears. If you ignore the symbolism of water, it will soon be your tears.

2) You don't "use" anything in an English class. You utilize it.

3) You are creative spirit. You are a creative spirit. Does that guy sitting next to you eating a sandwich know that you are a creative spirit? Tell him.

4) Bring back every reading you discuss to "the system." Nobody likes the system. There is a chance your English professor had some weird, dreadlocked phase where he poured all his energy into fighting the system. You will get major brownie points for this one.

5) Make sure everybody (especially your professor) knows that your favorite book is Lolita. You will instantly become deep on so many levels.

6) You'll become even more deep if everyone knows you're listening to Bob Dylan.

7) Start listening to Bob Dylan.

8) Relate every reading to deconstructionist theory. You don't really know what deconstructionist theory is, but some French guy talked about it, so it has to sound impressive, right? If your professor ends up being master of all the theories and questions why a certain text rings true to deconstructionism, get really still and whisper "neither can live while the other survives."

9) Begin everything you say in class with "let me suggest that..." This will make you sound both un-threatening, and like you're constructing a paper right in front of your professor.

10) And remember, the pen is mightier than the sword. So when that engineering major asks you what you're going to do with an English degree, stab his hand with a pen.*

*This probably won't make you succeed in English class. But it will make you win at life.**
**Just kidding, violence is not the answer. Just tell him you're going to law school and be done with it.

And if all else fails, get a pair of hipster glasses and tell everyone you're writing the next great American novel. 

Namaste.

Thursday, January 9, 2014

"Summertime Sausage": A Parody

Seeing as I've had a month off of school, I've been bored enough to 1) Stare at the product we offer at work, and 2) Write parodies of Lana Del Ray songs about it. Since we've gotten summer sausage just in time for the winter season, I decided to write "summertime sausage," with help from Nathaniel.

Original:
Parody:
Summertime Sausage
Cut me up before you eat
Summertime sausage
I just wanted you to know
That baby you're a treat

You've got that red package on so tight
Eating in the dark of my house tonight
Smoked my ham up real big summertime style
Stir-fry done, I'm ready to eat

Oh, delish, I smell it in the air
I got my dinner ready and it's sizzling with flare
My kitchen's on fire and I don't even care
I'm a sausage eating beast

Verse one

I got that summertime summertime sausage
S-s-summertime summer time sausage
got that summertime summertime sausage
oh, oh,oh

I stomp on all vegans tonight
cookin' up my meat to temp 165
Got my hot sausage with its heavenly taste
I want it so bad, I'll fry it up right

Verse one
Chorus

I could eat you forever
Just like my grandmother's sweet potato pie
Savoring you like Sever...us Snape
Even if you're hot, I'll take the dive

Chorus
Verse one
Chorus.


Namaste.