Friday, December 30, 2011

My Inner Geek

If you've never listened to the Radiolab podcast you are missing out.  Let me tell you, I've learned so many awesome, but slightly useless, things from that podcast!  You don't even need to be a geek to enjoy it because there's something for everyone.  I can't pick a favorite episode because they're all just so stinkin' delightful.  I've learned about the origins of outhouses, how babies think logarithmically, the limits of the human body and mind (and if there are limits), how liar's brains are different from normal brains, where AIDS came from, how words affect our daily lives, what stochasticity means and a slew of other things.  It's incredible!!!  Seriously, you need to go to radiolab.org and then find their podcasts and download as many as possible.  Most episodes that are an hour long have three or four stories within them.  I used to listen to them while working out but they're great for long car rides too.  Did I mention they're totally free??

To make this easier, I'll just link you right to their site!


Friday, December 23, 2011

Libros, Libros y Mas Libros!!!

One thing we're encouraged to take to Peru are children's books for the kids.  I finally got on ebay a few days ago and ordered a bunch of them and they came today!  I can't believe how fast they got here-- especially when I didn't pay anything for shipping.  I was just praying they'd get here before I left.


Twenty-nine books in all!  Ranging from pre-readers to chapter books.  Three of them are bilingual so we can teach them some English as well.  

The sad part of this?  I tried reading the "Spot" book (bottom left) and failed.  I can't even read the easiest book I got!  It's a book you read to your two year old!!  Awesome.  Just awesome.  My goal will be to read Magic Treehouse level by April...

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Shots and Pills

Ouch and Yuck.

I got three shots today (Hep A, Yellow Fever and Typhoid) and picked up a bottle of huge green malaria pills that I will have to take everyday in Peru.  

Oh, and I got a haircut but that didn't hurt.  It feels quite nice actually!

Monday, December 19, 2011

Grades

I kind of obsess about them and I know that's not a good thing.  Every semester I try to be better and focus on learning instead of grades but I just can't.  It's engrained in my brain that good grades equal success and I don't think it's leaving anytime soon.

With our online grade book I can see each grade for an assignment and how I compare to the rest of the class.  If I'm not in the top few it's kind of a big deal.  I can still get an A and be upset if everyone gets a higher A than me.  Now, it's not like I have no life outside of my grades or this has totally consumed me, but I do take them seriously.

Let me tell you how this semester stacks up.


Looks like I have all As again, right?  Wrong.  The bottom three classes (Nutrition through the Life Cycle, Epidemiology, Foundations Capstone) require a 93% to get an A which I have surpassed.  The top class- my baking class- requires a 95% for an A.  Just short.  I'm seriously hoping he rounds up the score.  My fifth class (not pictured) is a mystery.  He has given us NO grades/ feedback/ scores at any time in the semester so I'm going on faith that I did enough to get an A...I had one for midterms.

In other news, I am home, in Ohio, now and I have a million and a half things to do to prepare for Peru.  The biggest would be mastering the Spanish language....

Blog Update 12/23-- Grades were posted yesterday and my professors were merciful :)  4.0 for the semester...can't do much better than that.

Friday, December 16, 2011

I Graduated!!!

My name is in the program and everything!  I now have graduated from BYU-Idaho with my Associate of General Science, Magna Cum Laude.  Only three more semesters and I'll have a bachelor's :)



Two stars...not as good as three but still something to be proud of!

Elder Quentin L. Cook, of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, was the key speaker.


Plus, my roommate, Alexis, actually graduated with her bachelor's degree in Child Development...I don't have a picture with her so you'll have to take my word for it.

Monday, December 12, 2011

Cute as a Button

We had a roommate gift exchange and Lauren made me these cute hair bows!  I have decided they are going to be perfect to make with adorable Peruvian girls :) 

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

The Skinny on Skinnies

Fine, I'll put in my two cents on this whole skinny jeans hoopla.  For those who are not familiar with BYU-Idaho, we have an honor code that we agree to live by when we accept admission to the school.  This includes refraining from alcohol, tobacco and premarital sex, having a curfew, being clean shaven and yes, a dress code.  All students MUST agree to this code before coming here.  This code is not church-wide, it even differs from the honor code at BYU in Provo, UT (brought to fame last year with the BYU basketball team).  This is an honor code specifically for students of BYU-Idaho.

Recently, there have been issues with the dress code.  It's probably the part of the honor code that gets the most crap from students.  Why?  Because clothing is how we identify ourselves.  We follow trends or we rebel from trends.  The colors we wear reflect our mood.  The brand of our clothes shows how wealthy we (or our parents) are.  Our clothing lets the world know that we woke up early and took time to get ready or we just rolled out of bed and barely made it to class in something other than what we slept in.  People get defensive about their clothes and most do not find it amusing when others tell them how to dress.

The thing is, when we came to BYU-Idaho, we agreed to dress a certain way.  We agreed to no shorts, capris or flip-flops on campus.  I'm sorry if flip-flops are the only shoes you own but you need to get some new shoes.  I'm sorry if your definition of a knee length skirt included skirts that come two inches above your knee but you need to get some new skirts.  You don't have money for that?  Then why did you agree to come to a school you have no clothes for?! 

I'm getting off-track (hooray for cracking an admissions joke in the middle of my blog).  Skinny jeans.  Where do they fit in the honor code?  Personally, I don't like skinny jeans.  They don't look good on me and I highly doubt I will ever purchase a pair for myself.  I do not find them particularly attractive but at the same time, I'm not bugged when other people wear them.  The honor code does state that clothing should not be formfitting.  Skinny jeans are one of those articles of clothing that can go either way.  There are jeans that fit your leg and then jeans that suck the life out of your leg.  Another formfitting article would be leggings.  Thick tights, if you ask me.  These are popping up all over campus and I've had enough of them.  They are about the formfitting-est things you can wear. 

Is BYU-Idaho saying that skinny jeans are of the devil?  What about shorts and flip-flops?  NO THEY ARE NOT!!  They are merely saying that skinny jeans do not comply with the honor code as it is laid out.  This means you do not have to repent for wearing skinnies to the store just like you don't have to repent for wearing flip-flops to the beach.  Skinny jeans are not of the devil and they do not induce sexual thoughts (as some of my peers have suggested), they are just not in compliance with the honor code!  Wear them out and about, just not to class.

If you ask me (and no one is, but you're reading this so technically you were looking for my opinion), I'll tell you I'm glad the university is finally doing something about this epidemic sweeping campus.  I don't think the administration really thinks skinny jeans are causing moral problems on campus.  I think they are seeing the students wearing leggings and other non-real-pant articles and then drawing the line at skinny jeans because the students obviously can't think for themselves as to what is appropriate.  The enforcement is in place for those who struggle the most.  Laws are created for the weakest of us and that's what this is.  If girls don't watch their skirt length I would venture to say that in the next few semesters they'll go from knee length to mid calf.

Some people might be taking the skinny jean thing too far and I can definitely see how some people are going to be offended by the new enforcement.  There needs to be some mutual understanding between students and administration at the beginning because it's been accepted up until this point.  I do not agree with stopping skinnies cold turkey because, truth be told, many girls only own skinny jeans.  This should be something the administration makes clear will be fully enforced NEXT semester after everyone has had time to ask for new pants for Christmas.

I have no idea if any of those ideas flowed together at all and I apologize if they didn't.  Basically, I'm glad someone is stepping up and giving some set standards.  Even though we're all raised in the same religion there are different ways to interpret things.  Maybe the girls wearing short skirts never learned where the knee was actually located, or their parents thought it would be funny to switch the word "knee" with "thigh."  Really, that's the only thing I can think of.  The enforcement is needed because if one person can wear leggings than another thinks they can and there's a whole downward spiral.  Side note- same principle with sweatpants on campus and those pants that are not quite pants but a little longer than capris (which are also skinny).

I love BYUI and I have no problem living by the standards I agreed to.  I'm sorry for those students who did not understand what they were getting into when signing the honor code.  Luckily, they're not being kicked out of school or otherwise mocked.  They're getting a nice reminder of what it means to hold up their end of a deal and be obedient. 

In four years you can leave BYU-Idaho and wear whatever the heck you want.  If you can't wait that long then leave.  There are plenty of other students who would give anything to be receiving the education you are and would happily abide all aspects of the honor code.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Surprisingly, I Have Plans

Anyone who's read my blog knows I've basically given up on planning my life since nothing ever goes as planned.  Well, I'm going back on my previous decision to go planless and now making more plans.  I know, why can't I just make up my mind and stick to it?  Decisions are not my strength so that makes this post even more out of place.  Maybe this post is to prove to the world that my plans never go as planned, so in six months I can look back and laugh at myself.

My life the next eight months:
- Plow through the last week of school and finals (easier said than done although classes really aren't too bad this semester)
- PERU PERU PERU!!!!!!!!!  We had a skype meeting with our project manager to work out some details and I'm getting more and more excited!  I'll be leaving January 10th and coming back April 10th.  Breathe in and breathe out, everything will be great.
- Back to school for Spring semester.  I will be taking hard classes, increasing my work hours to 20 per week AND learning a new job.  I'm really excited to move from being a receptionist to being an actual admissions counselor but I'm freaked out too.  I'll have much more responsibility and the first few weeks are sure to be stressful.  I'm sure you'll hear all about it once I start the job.
- Stay in Rexburg for the summer break and work 40 hours a week...hopefully I'll be a pro at my job by then or it'll be a looooong summer :P

Seems easy enough, right?  What could possibly happen?  ....Okay, here are my predictions of what could possibly deter these wonderful plans...
- I meet a boy this weekend who sweeps me off my feet and we elope on Christmas
- My plane crashes during any of my multiple flights to and from Idaho or Peru (don't worry, I'll survive)
- TAKEN.  Enough said.  I will try to forget that movie during my foreign travels
- I screw up someone's admission and get fired or a drive one of our carts into a tree and cause thousands of dollars of damage
- I flunk my classes this semester and decide to drop out of school
- I meet a Peruvian man that sweeps me off my feet and I live happily ever after in South America
- I catch some nasty disease or worm in Peru and have to medically defer a semester (good thing I work in admissions and know how to do that)

Let's just hope none of these things happen.  This post was going to be a happy one when I started.  Let's end on a happy note....

Our volleyball team is now 5-0!!!!  We even played with five people instead of six.

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Time is Ticking

Have you ever thought of how time came to be?  Time in the sense of seconds, minutes, hours and days is really quite a miracle when you think about it!  Even just a few hundred years ago there was time in the Native American Americas and then separate time in Europe and another time in Africa and another time in Australia.  Heck, it was different time from Spain to Portugal or any neighboring country.  Every culture had their own way of measuring or keeping track of time.

When did the world click?  What was the point at which I, in Idaho, looked at my watch that says 5:00pm and someone in Utah looked at their watch and it said 5:00pm?  Then halfway across the world someone looked at their watch and said it's 5:00am...but on the next day?

How do millions and millions of watches everywhere tick around a little circle EXACTLY at the same time?!  How did we go from sundials to tell us what time of day it is to something that wraps around our wrist?  THIS IS DRIVING ME CRAZY!!!  Now that's you're thinking about it, isn't it AMAZING?!?!



I've just been marveling recently about how awesome man is.  How creative he is.  How inspired he must be.  There's no way man could think of all these things on his own.  He just isn't that smart.  As smart as man is, I just don't think a man alone could coordinate all those watches!