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Sebastian's Blog

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December 28, 2008

Christmas Oddissey

I must thank whatever God or Gods made my arrival to Bogota and my survival of that hateful week possible. Why...? Here's why. There's two possible scenarios during finals week. Scenario 1: my finals are scheduled with appropiate timing so that I spent a healthy amount of time studying for them. Let's say I have one final a day... so I can spend the whole day before reviewing the material and taking my finals with enough sleep and relative confidence. Scenario 2: my finals are all clustered together... leaving me prone to all-nighters, endless cramming, puffy eyes and constant energy drink consumption. I decided to buy my plane ticket to go home a day before finals ended, confident that (worst case scenario) I would have to move one final early. Everything was set for Scenario 1 (a calm relaxed finals week) until I found out that I had to move my Wednesday and Thursday final to Monday (I flew on Wednesday). I had another final and a take-home test due on Tuesday. That means... two days per final with five completely free days before my first final to prepare for the final cluster of doom ahead. If I were an organized, diligent student, I would've balanced my leisure and studying time during those 5 days so that I wouldn't have to cram or deprive myself from sleep....

Well... I ended up in scenario 2. After going salsa dancing Wednesday night, to a friend's birthday Thursday night, Christmas shopping on Saturday and procrastinating on facebook and youtube all Saturday.... I started cramming on Sunday. By Wednesday morning, I had totaled 5 hours of sleep in a 72 hour span. I was obviously exhausted, but I thought I could sleep enough on the plane ride back home so I could regain some energy.

I landed on Chicago after a good two hours of sleep on the plane to San Antonio. I headed to the gate for my next flight which was delayed 15 minutes due to icy weather in Boston, from where the aircraft was coming. I had a two hour layover at Miami so I had no worries. 15 minutes became 30... 45... a full hour delay. Timing was tight , but I thought I could still make to my flight to Bogota. Right before we take off, the ground crew discovered thay had forgotten to load our luggage onto the plane. It took them another full hour to load everything. I obviously couldn't sleep the whole flight... knowing that I had 15 minutes from the moment I touched the ground to catch the next plane. Once on the ground, the aircraft had to taxi for about 10 minutes until the gate assigned to it was cleared, and another 5 to open the door because "it froze". The flight status was delayed 15 minutes... so that compensated for the time lost on the ground... and I ran... ran like there was no tomorrow. I got to the gate but my flight had left already. A bunch of other passengers headed for Bogota argued with the airline agents for awhile, until my Christmas miracle happened, the plane was coming back from the runway to pick us up. It was the most relieveing news ever! I could hardly sleep on the plane due to adrenaline still running through my veins. My suitcases didn't arrive with me to Bogota, of course, but I was grateful beyond any boundaries of being able to make it.

My parents picked me up at the airport and a bunch of friends were home reeady to welcome me back. We celebrated till 3 am. At 6:30 am sharp I stood up to get ready to go the US Embassy. I had to renew my visa during the break since it was close to expire. The visa process is another oddissey itself, but to make things short, I had to sit around 8 hours waiting for my damned visa to be approved. By 1 pm that day I was delirious with exhaustion, laughing to the most ridiculous things and losing my marbles one by one. Thank god I was able to sleep 16 hours that night.

It's recommendable to cram and survive a terrible finals week, if the cost of feeling you will collapse any second doesn't exceed the benefits of the spare time you earned. I think I don't completely regret doing what I did... I enjoyed my free time... and I definitely think it's almost a miracle I'm back in Bogota. I will go to Cali during the Feria they celebrate every year, and later on to Quito to visit my Ecuadorian friends from Trinity. Later on, back in Bogota, I will meet some of the alumni from Trinity in Bogota. Apparently there are 3 American alumni there... so it will be an eventful break. More of that on my next entry. Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

December 3, 2008

Going out with a bang

These past two weeks have been filled with great news. First of all, I was nominated to receive the Who's Who in America's Colleges and Universities award. A handful of senior at every university are selected for nomination, their profile reviewed a faculty and student committee to give them the award. Many of my friends say I have a lot on my plate all the time, but I guess this shows that it pays off. I haven't written my application yet, but I'll try not to procrastinate on this one.

I've become a chronic procrastinator since I returned from Thanksgiving break. I only have a presentation due Thursday, and I've been "working on it" (and by that I mean wasting my time on youtube and/or facebook) since Monday morning. It's bad, pretty bad. But anyway, I digress...

I also won three awards from the Study Abroad Photo contest at Trinity. I won the first place in the Landscape and Abstract categories and the third place in the Architectural category. My Landscape photo also won the Best in Show award! At the end of next semester it will be permanently displayed in Upstairs Coates with all the previous winners. Maybe this will be my excuse not to donate the $20 for the senior gift since I have a cooler legacy on campus than a signature on a brick (j/k).

The senior gift is a donation of the graduating class to the University for a scholarship fund. Each senior is asked to donate the year of his/her graduation; in my case $20.09. This goes to a scholarship fund for the incoming class next year. You also "buy" the right to sign one of the bricks on Murchison Tower. Permanently displayed pictures are much cooler, but again... I digress...

Last but certainly not least, my brother back in Colombia has finally received his first produced song. He wrote a very cool song and showed to his guitar teacher, who owns a recording studio. He loved the song and asked my brother if he'd like to record it. Of course he accepted and I now have in my iPod one of the catchiest, greatest songs ever. He has made me really proud. He's accomplished one my dreams... writing a song that's decent enough to be produced. I'm quite challenged at composing and my parents don't do any music, but I'm glad my brother had this breakthrough in the family. I'll post a link sometime so you can listen to his song. I've been playing it over and over again for two days straight. Mmmm.... I just realized he's been helping me procrastinate by listening incessantly to his music.


ABOUT SEBASTIAN

Bogota, Colombia
Class of 2009
I study: economics, international affairs
TU Extra-curriculars: student senate, executive officer of both the International Club and Venga (the Spanish Club), choir, opera workshop
Outside Hobbies & Interests: guitar, singing, dancing, learning about other cultures

IN SEBASTIAN’S BLOG

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