November 9, 2009
The birthday begins with me trying to get away before the birthday shower, a Stanford tradition where you get carried away to the restroom and dumped into the shower on your birthday. But my attempts fail because the guy I am supposed to leave with to grab food, stalls purposefully. So, I return to my room and wait. At about 12:15, the crowd (about a third of the dorm) arrives with great fanfare at my door. I volunteer to walk to the restroom but they refuse to accept the offer and instead, insist on carrying me in a haphazard manner to the shower. I get soaking wet and then hug everybody to make them wet too.
Stupidly, I forget to change my jeans and I am freezing as we (me and two others) bike to Axe & Palm, the only “restaurant” on campus, where we have cake and I procrastinate further on homework.
∞
When I wake up the next morning, despite the beautiful California sun shining through the windows, I can’t help but feel depressed. I have no idea why anyone would want to get older (most teenagers do). 19 is extremely old. After all these years, I have accomplished nothing, and not just externally but internally too.
The second reason it sucks to be 19 is the fact that I’m almost certainly at my intellectual (and emotional) peak right now. I can’t see myself getting any better. It’s all downhill from here. And yet, all I’m doing right now is taking boring classes in college.
But, after talking to a friend, I realize that the reason for my depressed state has more to do with my romantic notions of what it means to be young than anything else. Glimpses of that notion are visible here. If my life were a movie, it wouldn’t very interesting. Of course, it’s pretty interesting at a micro-level and at a macro-level too, it’s more interesting than most people’s, but ultimately it just isn’t enough. The stakes are too low, the highs aren’t high enough, the sadness isn’t overwhelmingly painful. It’s a little too normal. I don’t want to grew up to be normal. I don’t even want to grew up.
∞
During class, I try not to look into Terry’s eyes, but he doesn’t ask me about the unfinished homework.
∞
Another reason I don’t particularly like birthdays is that people expect you to do things differently on birthdays. But then, I live every day like it was my birthday and like it was my last day on Earth.
∞
After class, I head back to my room to find a rather pleasant gift on my desk. A lava lamp! It’s only 5:30 but thanks to daylight savings, it’s already dark outside. Me and my roommate Jason turn off our lights, play Fireflies on both our computers (manually synced) while the lava lamp glows in soft blue at the center of the room.
A tiny moment of reverie.
∞
Jason and I have dinner at a Thai restaurant on University Avenue. The food’s good, the conversation better. Then, we head to Red Mango for froyo (I still haven’t figured out why froyo is so popular in America) and spend the next three hours designing Reverie, which makes today almost perfect.
∞
Just as we get back to the dorm, at about 11:30 PM, I learn that a girl from the second floor has baked cake for me. Down in the lounge, everyone sings “Happy Birthday” and then, they ask me to make a speech. I’m not prepared (to lie) so I tell the truth – that turning 19 makes me feel really old and useless. People are disappointed. You’re supposed to be happy on your birthday, which I really am but no one will beleive that, of course. (One can be happy with life and disappointed with it at the same time). I cut the cake which says something wonderfully geeky like”println Happy Birthday Abi” but no one takes a picture of this sugar-coated awesomeness (reason #1023232 I need an iPhone).
There are more hugs to be given and received (which I’m not accustomed to yet; there’s far less hugging in Singapore), mostly with people I don’t even know. A girl who I have spoken less than 50 words to in my whole life comes to me, hugs me tight and tells me, “I can’t tell you how happy I am for you today, Abi!”
Five people tell me that they read my blog. One guy tells me he’s sorry that there aren’t more smart people (in reference to this post obviously). I explain that I was making a general observation and that there’s nothing wrong with always wanting things to be better than they are.
∞
I die a little as I walk back to my room. I die a little more as I climb into bed. I keep dying as I sleep. I DON’T WANT TO GET OLD.
November 27th, 2009
by Bailey
Most of America is into hipness, choice, and being able to overindulge without having to specifically ask for more. I personally like froyo because it’s tart and full of acidophilus, and also I can get only the tiny amount I want, as often as I like.
You might consider age as honing the potential that’s oozing from your every pore but unharnessed in your wild, reckless youth? Isn’t that the classical interpretation? There may be something to it.
I’m afraid of aging for much less philosophical reasons: I’m terrified and prematurely grieving the loss of the lightness running through my limbs.
Sometimes I look forward to leaving school so that, for a small time before I have to be a real grown-up, I can build a little life for myself, helping people and abstaining from meat and wearing skirts and never straightening my hair. Essays and grades feel like outsized sinkers sewn to my clothes instead of fishing lines. Then I think that I ought not to rush toward that either, because it’s only rushing me closer to middle age, too.
Then I get stuck.
November 27th, 2009
by Blair McBride
For what its worth, my birthdays are a lot like that too. Except with a lot less people – I often shut myself in a room away from people, try not to take calls (family always calls), try to limit the number of people who know, etc. I used to hate my birthdays because my family always insisted on being around a lot (in general, I don’t get along with my family). Now that I hardly ever see family, its more about making a point that birthdays are something I don’t (and don’t want to) understand. Much like Christmas, New Years, etc.
Regarding intellectual peak – I assume you mean your capacity for learning. Technically, you’re probably already past that peak. BUT: learning capacity isn’t everything. Background knowledge and more organized/efficient brain structures (which we lack when younger) mean that learning doesn’t have to be as efficient to get the same result.
Btw, I’ll be in Mountain View from the 5th December to the 12th – should see if we can meet up somehow.
December 15th, 2009
by Sanchit Bareja
Hmm.. I thought the peak time for your brain is age 30. Still have a long time to go dude. Furthermore even if its 19, its for normal people, not for you!