Thursday, August 6, 2020

A Visitor In My Own Hometown

A Visitor In My Own Hometown Dont it always seem to go that you dont know what youve got til its gone Yeah, so it was boring. But its still where I spent the better portion of my eighteen years. Im back at MIT now got here the other night after a long day of travel and lugging. Good to be back, but Im glad I had a time to see my parents, friends, and get a taste of home while newly a visitor. I spent a lot of time pre-MIT longing for my days in Cambridge, a new land of activity and opportunity, all the while discounting and dreading the place Id lived in and known since I was a small boy. But over winter break, it really didnt seem so bad. Now that I feel like a visitor, now that I no longer subconsciously know that I live there, Im able to appreciate the positives. I suppose this stems from the same principle of a resident versus a tourist. If you live in New York, you may have seen all of the tourist attractions once a long time ago, but you certainly dont visit them on a regular basis. You live there and you do what you need to in the course of your daily routine. A bright-eyed tourist, however, is going to soak up all there is to see, singing praises all the way home. If you live somewhere, youre not pressed to make the most of your surroundings all the time, because theres this tacit notion of them always being there. Perhaps Im just restless, but it seems like as soon as I get somewhere, Im already thinking about where to go next. This isnt just in travel this is in projects and in life, too. I guess getting there is really more than half the fun. Today is the first day of IAP, and I attended my first French 1 class. The instructor, Laura Ceia-Minjares, seems to be a very knowledgeable, commanding lecturer, and the classroom was full at about twenty students. Even on the first day, a lot of interaction was involved as we went over basics such as the alphabet and numbers (up to 30), but we also paired up with partners and went over a French-language news update for le 9 janvier, reading about unrest in Haiti and about Ariel Sharons health condition, trying to pick out cognates and other familiar words. This is a daily class and it already looks like a lot of fun. I just have to get used to getting up for the 10am class! I also had a UROP meeting Im developing a new Web project for the BE department with my friend (and fellow East Campus resident) Chris Varenhorst. With that and the French class, Ill likely find myself busier this month than I was all of last term. :-) More on these daily events as they progress. Hope you had a pleasant winter break, and best of luck with your new semesters.

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