Happy Dancing!
I just had the most superfantabulous conversation with my niece, in which I realized that things are coming along quite nicely in the Heo family, thank you.
* Eldest niece is returning to college to be a teacher like me.
* Second eldest niece completed her Associate's, and liked it so much she may try another degree.
*Eldest nephew is registering for classes next year despite a difficult and troubling freshman year, because if Aunt Heo can do it, he can.
*Sisters 1 & 2 are both openly discussing quitting smoking. Because if baby sister can do it, they can too. (You can't even imagine how astonishing this is. Both have had minor cancers, and continued to smoke, because they wouldn't be told what the hell to do by anyone, especially know-it-all doctors.)
You see, I've been following my own heart. To the extent I have the courage (snerk) to do so, anyway. But I've also been engaged in social engineering in the micro sense. A college graduate in the family begets more college graduates, because she shows it is possible, or perhaps just activates the competitive streak in others. And it's working! Wait until they see me after I finish all this !#$@^& working out. (In this case they'll be the product of social engineering in the third generation. Courtesy of Bardiac, Dr. Virago, and Ancrene Wiseass in the generation before mine. Because if Bardiac can ride a bicycle around the North Woods in the winter, and Dr. Virago can run a marathon, and Ancrene Wiseass can learn martial arts while writing a diss, I can get off my butt and go to the gym in my building once in a while.)
Hooray!
However...
Can somebody please explain to me why I, who spent nearly all of my time in grad school having emotional breakdowns because I had to write, and it wasn't good enough, and I wasn't good enough, and everybody else thought of it first, and all the other writing block-inducing stuff one can imagine now want nothing more than to research and write about something. I've had some odd cravings in my life, including craving information, but I have never craved the whole research project.
2 comments:
Aw shucks, I inspired someone! That's nice to know!
And hooray for you having inspired your family!
As for the research cravings...well, the research part is really fun -- it's like solving a mystery or something. Maybe that's what drawing you?
I'm so pleased to hear about your family!
My family did the same sort of thing, just a generation before. My dad went to college (finishing on the GI bill), and one of his sister's became a nurse; both firsts in the extended family.
Years later, in the next generation, almost everyone has gone to college AND my dad's other two sisters have both finished degrees as adults. Amazing, isn't it?
Congrats again.
And yep, the research and learning part is fun; the writing it down to make an argument, less so.
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