College vs. What Matters

Five years ago, I was rooting against Colorado State in the “Rocky Mountain Showdown”, the annual CU vs. CSU game that draws a crowd so large that they often hold the game at Mile High Stadium in Denver so that it can hold all 76,000 fans. I was in Fort Collins against my will, viewing it as a stupid hick town to which I would never return after my upcoming move to Arizona.

Three years ago, I started taking classes at the Peggy Paye Academy, a program designed to cater to “gifted” students. Almost from the start, pretty much everyone has college in their sights- PPA “nerdlings” (I think credit for that quite fitting phrase goes to Vicki, though I’m not positive) take classes or AP exams for college credit as early as their freshman year, start looking at colleges and majors soon after, and many graduate at age 16. For some, the worry is not over whether or not one gets into an Ivy League school, but over which Ivy they get into. Though it isn’t a problem for everyone, all of this collegiate preparation comes at the cost of actually enjoying and experiencing the high school years.

During my time at PPA, I spent countless hours engrossed in the college selection process. I enjoyed it. (And it gave me a semi-acceptable excuse to procrastinate my daily assignments.) I pictured myself becoming a master programmer at Carnegie Mellon, a drumming guru in New York City, a hippie intellectual at UC Santa Cruz, and a man of my own terms at Brown. I liked thinking about all of the places I could live, the things I could study, the different people I could become. In retrospect, I think I liked the idea of finally being in control of my destiny. It was an exciting feeling, but also a great burden: I had to be sure that I was making the right decisions for myself.

Eleven months ago,  I graduated from McClintock High with PPA’s white cords on my robe. I had taken so many dual credit, AP, and community college classes that I had sophomore standing and most of my core classes waived. I was done with science, history, and English forever.

Eight months ago, I ignored all of those dreams and came back to the stupid hick town, to the university with the crappy football team.

And I couldn’t be happier.

You see, while I was making all of these grandiose preparations for my own future success,  other stuff was going on. I started to observe situations that contradicted PPA’s self-driven world. I realized that the people I admired most were in fact doing things very differently. My best friend had pulled down a great apprenticeship as a machinist, and his college plans were secondary to those of becoming a firefighter. Another friend wanted nothing more than to touch others’ lives as a long-term missionary in Turkey. And my father, probably the most creative person I know, didn’t seem to lose his touch by dropping out of college. But probably deepest impact on my perspective came from these wise words:

Look at the birds of the air: they neither sow nor reap nor gather into barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not of more value than they?
And which of you by being anxious can add a single hour to his span of life?
And why are you anxious about clothing? Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin,
yet I tell you, even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.
But if God so clothes the grass of the field, which today is alive and tomorrow is thrown into the oven, will he not much more clothe you, O you of little faith?
Therefore do not be anxious, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’
For the Gentiles seek after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them all.
But seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be added to you.
Therefore do not be anxious about tomorrow, for tomorrow will be anxious for itself. Sufficient for the day is its own trouble. (Matthew 6:26-34 ESV)

I think that somehow, despite my self-absorbed ego and thirst for wordly success, it was revealed to me (probably more like “drilled into my stubborn cranium”) that there isn’t as much to the one life I have to live as the world would like me to believe. Such a realization kills a lot of anxiety and self-doubt.

So now I’m going to the cheapest school I could find. I’m studying something of moderate interest to me, in hopes that it will prepare me for a career that can hopefully support a family and keep me from getting too bored. My other serious pursuits are music, which I enjoy most, and practicing self-sacrifice as a way of worshiping.

A lot of my good friends are graduating from high school this year. They’re all going in many different routes, and I wish them all the best. Like me, some went through a crazy college selection process. This Sunday’s New York Times had a great article titled, “Young, Gifted, and Not Getting Into Harvard”,  which reminds me of many people I know who will do quite well, even if they aren’t going to the Ivy of their dreams.

So to my friends who are graduating this year and going off into the fray, I have these less-than-authoritative words:
Whatever you do, make sure you do what you love. Don’t get distracted, and don’t settle for less. Practice and perfect that which you love, and in the process, you will learn the discipline and responsibility that, in turn, will give you true success.

A Pleasant Surprise

So a little while back, EMI and Apple announced the rollout of DRM-free songs on the iTunes Store. This means complete customer freedom to actually use their music in the way that they want- choose their music playback software, MP3 player, back it up, play it on another device, without any restrictions treating the customer like a criminal.

EMI is one of the “big four” music labels – it owns a large percentage of the record labels out there. This means that a major percentage of songs on the iTunes Store (and, presumably, others) will be DRM Free. Some of the major artists signed to the EMI label include The Beatles, James Brown, Elvis Presley, Pink Floyd, The Red Hot Chili Peppers, Coldplay, The Rolling Stones, Norah Jones, and Garth Brooks.

But the really exciting thing I just remembered is the labels owned by EMI Christian Music Group:

  • Forefront Records (dc Talk, tobyMac, Audio Adrenalinie)
  • Gotee Records (4th Avenue Jones, John Reuben, Relient K)
  • Sparrow Records (David Crowder Band, Newsboys, Switchfoot pre-Columbia)
  • Tooth & Nail Records (Emery, MxPx, Showbread) includes sub-labels:
    • BEC Recordings (O.C. Supertones, KJ-52)
    • Solid State Records (Haste the Day, He Is Legend, Norma Jean)

So basically almost all of the good, progressive and actually creative Christian artists will now be sold DRM-free. EMI Christian CDs for a while came with a really paranoid message:

This recording and artwork are protected by copyright law. Using Internet services to distribute copyrighted music, giving away illegal copies of discs or lending discs to others for them to copy is illegal and does not support those involved in making this piece of music – especially the artist. By carrying out any of these actions it has the same effect as stealing music.

This message really turned me off. I had just gone to a store, plopped down upwards of $20 for an album that I wanted – instead of getting it on any number of illegal filesharing networks where it is easily available – taken off the shrink wrap, put the CD in, and felt good about supporting creative music. Then I get confronted with a message that guilts me for something I didn’t do.

So I decided not to support those labels as long as they treated their customers like criminals. But now that their parent company is going DRM-free, I can now support them again.

My wallet is in trouble.

Hmm.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=palbo-ilalU]
13 years can change a lot. I have said in the past that if Hillary got the Democrat nomination, that I would vote McCain. Senator, you’ve just lost my vote.

Summer Kickoff Festival

CSU’s Housing & Dining Services department put on a “Summer kickoff festival” today. They shut down the dining halls and made everyone eat outside. It was about a 5 on the “Hey, at least I’m not eating in the dorms” scale.

Coincidentally, it was absolutely beautiful outside today. Some grey clouds threatened to pour buckets on us like they did earlier this week, but they just barely missed us. Stuff is flowering all over the place. We have freaking purple trees outside:
Crazy purple trees

Corn for dinner
Gallery – CSU Summer Kickoff

(I posted this album to Flickr. I haven’t decided between Flickr, Picasa Web Albums, and my own self-hosted image gallery yet 😛 )

On an Island

A friend of mine recently asked for some suggestions of good music to add to his library. I gave him some of my current favorites, which are far from classics. But I got to thinking about my own music… My iTunes library has over 8,500 songs containing music from about 1934 to March 2007. If I were to hit “play” right now, it would keep playing for 31 days without stopping or playing the same song twice. I’m impulsive, so that’s why I carry an 80GB iPod on me so that I can listen to any of it on demand. Before such technology was available to me, I was just as impulsive, so I would take a huge 250-CD wallet with me on roadtrips.

But there’s no way that I’m listening to that much on a regular basis. I will bet that I listen to less than 5% of my music library in any given week. So I started thinking about how I could simplify my collection. I have a lot of stuff that’s just “so-so”, and I wouldn’t buy today were I given the choice. So what is the good stuff? What do I listen to all the time?

What would I do if the tables were turned and I didn’t have an 80GB iPod, 500GB external hard drive, or a 250-CD wallet?

What would I do if I were stranded on an island with only 12 CDs in a tiny case, and that music had to be so good that it wouldn’t make me go crazy or get bored of it? What is the most significant music created in the last 85 years that we’ve had recording technology?

Easy.

Kind of Blue
Kind of Blue– Miles Davis (1959)

A Love Supreme
A Love Supreme – John Coltrane (1964)

Highway 61 Revisited
Highway 61 Revisited – Bob Dylan (1965)

Tommy
Tommy – The Who (1969)

Abbey Road
Abbey Road – The Beatles (1969)

Dark Side of the Moon
Dark Side of the Moon – Pink Floyd (1974)

One From the Vault
One From the Vault – Grateful Dead (Live show 8/13/1975)

Aja
Aja – Steely Dan (1977)

Metallica
Metallica (aka the Black Album) – Metallica (1991)

Crash
Crash – Dave Matthews Band (1996)

Californication
Californication – Red Hot Chili Peppers (1999)

Frances the Mute
Frances the Mute – The Mars Volta (2005)

Yes, I skipped the ’80s. Yes, I am biased towards classic and prog rock. And music between between 1964 and 1977. But it’s just my opinion, it’s not definitive, and had I stuck with it, I would have saved hundreds by not buying crappier music.

AHAHA WHO’S LAUGHING NOW?!!

April 23 (Bloomberg) — Whether it’s $50 to fill up your Prius or $130 for the Ford Expedition, $4-a-gallon gasoline is coming to a pump near you.

That’s right. $4 a gallon.

My Trek 4500’s fuel efficiency is about 20 miles to the Chipotle burrito.

Best part about it is, if cost of living goes up and income rises to match it, I will make more in real income by having a gas-free vehicle. It’s like everybody who drives a car giving me a tiny little raise!

I had One of Those Moments in the shower this morning

When I was 17, I read a quote that went something like: “If you live each day as if it was your last, someday you’ll most certainly be right.” It made an impression on me, and since then, for the past 33 years, I have looked in the mirror every morning and asked myself: “If today were the last day of my life, would I want to do what I am about to do today?” And whenever the answer has been “No” for too many days in a row, I know I need to change something.

–Steve Jobs, 2005 Stanford Commencement Address

As Rafiki the baboon says, “Change is good!”

Yaaaaaay for vagueness. Actually, I was going to write a big long post about perspective on my life and stuff, and then I realized that it was just self-reflection that I’ve already done. And I’m tired. And lazy. So I won’t elaborate.

Can we please be done?

I hate the last weeks of school. Why must the weeks where you care the least about your classes be the same weeks where you do the most work for them?

I’m ready for summer already. I’m ready to take just two classes, actually get stuff done at work, and to move out of the dorms into the new house. I’m ready to play acoustic drums again.

And I’m ready for the temperatures to get out of the 40s and 50s already.

Keeping us scared

I’m tired of how everytime a large-scale disaster takes place, the only tangible change is a temporary state of paranoia, and nothing really is done to prevent the situation from happening again.

Example: Columbine High School shootings. For a few months, there was a big deal about school violence. I remember suddenly doing lockdown drills and a lot of workshops on not alienating kids.
Point of failure: Things went back to normal. I haven’t done a lockdown drill since fifth grade. And the Virginia Tech murderer directly referred to the actions of Harris and Klebold.

Example: 9/11. Remember the terrible initial fear we all felt? All of a sudden, nobody wanted to travel or go to a public place. A bunch of supposed fixes went into effect: a color-coded terrorist threat paranoia advisory system, the Transportation Security Administration, et cetera.
Point of failure: We used 9/11 for other stuff, and didn’t bother with actual protections. Somehow, in five years, we went from an attack from Muslim radicals in Afghanistan to a failed war on a country that had no connection to the attacks. It took Congress until 2007 to act on all of the 9/11 Commission’s reccommendations. I was at the airport last week, and heard over the intercom, “THE DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY HAS RAISED THE THREAT ADVISORY LEVEL TO ORANGE. PLEASE REPORT ANY SUSPICIOUS ACTIVITY.” But nonetheless, I had hastily packed and didn’t remember that there was an aerosol in my backpack. Security at DIA didn’t care, they let me through. I didn’t even know it was in my backpack until Phoenix security found it on my return flight. When they searched my bag and found the aerosol, they didn’t even bother to check the rest of the compartments of my bag. I could have walked on with materials to blow up a plane on either flight. But the important thing was that the advisory level was “Orange,” whatever the heck that means. Unfortunately, our current leadership is more worried about keeping us as scared as possible to push their unrelated agendas, instead of actually keeping us safe. If that isn’t terrorism, I don’t know what is. Don’t believe me? Believe Merriam-Webster:

ter·ror·ism
Pronunciation: 'ter-&r-"i-z&m
Function: noun
: the systematic use of terror especially as a means of coercion

Example: Virginia Tech Massacre. The murderer turned out to be a deranged loner, just like the Columbine shooters. Campuses nationwide are reacting to the situation, and most are being caught with their pants down in terms of handling such a problem. At CSU, there is supposedly a system in place, which is kept secret for security purposes. But what we do know is that RA’s and building proctors have received no training or instructions of how to act in such an event. And even after the Virginia Tech incident, campus officials are saying that instead of revising their current procedures, the best thing for people to do is call 911 and let them handle it.
Point of failure: This, too, will be forgotten. Everyone is paranoid and articles are being published in the school paper this week, but we’ll all forget about this once the NBA playoffs heat up. At 4:30 AM yesterday, some lunatic got on the roof of Edwards Hall and tried to commit suicide. CSU Police evacuated about 100 students from the dorm, and dealt with the situation, but no e-mail was sent about the situation until 9:30 AM, well after it was over. Had it not been for VT, no e-mail at all would have been sent.

Example: The holocaust. Some consider it to be the most horrific event in modern history, and much time is spent trying to make sure that it happens “never again.”
Point of failure: It’s happening again. As many as 450,000 have died in the Darfur conflict, but what gets news attention? The fight over a dead porn star’s child. What gets military attention? A troop surge for a war whose death toll has exceeded the deaths under the dictator it saught to dethrone.

All of these events are terrible, and since man is fallible, they will happen again. No form of government, economy, or religion will ever solve this problem. Only when Christ reigns over this world again will we be free from such tragedies. (If you’re confused as to how I can say religion will never solve the problem, but Christ will, here is what I mean: religion is man’s acts of spirituality. Manly manifestations of this will always be imperfect- every church has its faults. We can only trust someone who is not subject to our own shortcomings will be able to effectively rid us of our own imperfections.)

So these problems are gonna be around ’till Jesus returns. Does that mean that we shouldn’t try to fix these problems? No – that would accept and endorse evildoing. But just getting scared about it doesn’t fix the problem. Doing something about it does.