LikeThal
A dday in which events like long jump, running, high jump, and genearl athletics happen. Everyone at school is meant to participate in it.
What is spring break? I have only heard about it in context with insane college parties in below-average highschool movies. In Norway we have easter, practicly the same thing I guess...
When I was in college, spring break sounded like the worst time of the year to book a trip to Cancun or the Caribbean. Nothing but meatheads and fat geeks walking around shitfaced looking for breasts. Occasionally you would hear about some classmate dying in a party-related mishap. The one that stands out to me is a story I heard about some sophomore who got blasted on Bacardi and proceeded to take a headfirst dive off of his hotel balcony to the pool two stories below...only to go land in the 3-ft end.Well, at least he died doing what he loved.
optimism is a wonderful thing, indutrial . . . but yeah, you're right
In all seriousness, I'm not trying to be negative. I just think that things like that and the other elements that have come to associate themselves with typical college "spring breaks" (being excessively drunk, wet t-shirt contests, the crap on the commercials for girls gone wild, etc...) have become a little bit excessive and people might consider finding some better outlets for all their repressed desires and outrages.
We here in Canada have the most ridiculous situation ever.March break has just come to an end. And then we get a 4 day weekend for Easter! Great planning that was.
By what I've heard the student culture is largely about partying around here. They're all over certain bars on certain days, it's like a circuit: Mon get drunk at Essies, Tues get drunk at another bar, Wed get drunk at Blarney, etc... It is what it is, but I can't stand when I hear some indignant student whining that they can't get enough of a student loan or the government doesn't pay for enough of their tuition, while pissing away all their money on booze.I'll find out firsthand this fall.
What sucks is that even after college, tons of people haven't kicked those social habits and it's somehow considered unusual to not be obsessed with liquor and bars. Whenever people who I graduated with (mostly non-musicians) want to hang out, it always boils down to some alcohol-related b.s. that I'm not interested in. Somewhere I heard of the tendency towards "social alcoholism," wherein people can't seem to understand that it's possible to engage in a social event that doesn't require getting buzzed up or totally hammered. There are numerous people I know who I would never consider asking to go to a recital with on a Saturday night, because they would probably be miffed because we weren't drinking. Being an American non-drinker and non-drug-user, I'm pretty astounded at what seems like an overwhelming fetishism built around alcohol, weed, pills, and partying in my own society. I'm not quite sure what it all bespeaks about civilization, but it seems like widespread signs of desperation sometimes.
yayness. so i'll be in the chat room a bit again, so for all of you who undoubtedly missed me over the last 7 or 8 months... I AM BACK. spread the good word. etc. etc.