Here's a short list of things I plan to do during the course of my life.
Number one goal:
Finish Medical School and become licensed.
Other goals:
Pass the bar
Write a book worth reading
Hold a public office
Hold a church office
Play in an orchestra (even a community one, so long as its good)
Start and run an orphanage or health clinic in a place that needs it
Compete at Olympic tryouts (probably in swimming)
Learn 3 other languages
Read all the books on my ever-growing To-Read book list
Be in a play or musical (preferably musical)
Have dinner at the White House
Visit 100 countries
See the northern lights (the reds and yellows, not just that blue-green)
Visit outer space
Climb Mt. Whitney, Kilimanjaro, and Fuji
Get a private pilot's license
Run a marathon/compete in a triathalon
Go to a World Cup (soccer) game
Figure out who Jesus was so I don't confuse him with Solomon or Moses or St. Francis of Assisi or Erasmus or Thomas a Kempis or Jan Paulsen
Fail a whole lot at something but not give up (I'm hoping this one doesn't involve a woman)
Always drive a crummy car that on ego days I like to pretend I'm too good for
Give blood 100 times
Save the world (yeah, I'm one of those types)
Sing Bass solos for a performance of the Messiah
Coach a church softball team
There are many other goals I have, but some aren't quite appropriate. I can't very well go around proclaiming to the whole internet world that one day I'd like to really kiss a girl. That's just not something you put on a lifetime to-do list. I mean, that could work on a list of things to do for a day. I'm very good at making lists, by the way. Checking off each little bwat is very enjoyable for me, even if I have many empty bwats at the day's end.
Some other goals just aren't so easily quantifiable. For instance, learning to be more patient is a goal, but it doesn't have an easily identifiable endpoint, therefore, it doesn't quite belong on the above list. Even learning 3 other languages is sketchy in this regard.
Furthermore, I realize that many of the items on the list would appear on many other peoples' lists. This is a testament to the era I live in. I might have written "Meditate in the desert for five years" or "Win 10 duels," but I do not consider such things to be priorities. This, of course, is subject to change. Moreover, not all of the items on the above list are of equal priority. Their above arrangement is merely the order they came to mind.
Also, the above list is maybe a tad unrealistic. I will not be overly disappointed if I don't complete each of the tasks, but then I tend to get more done if I have a lot to do, so I don't plan on trimming the list down either.
Hope this helps. If you want to know more specifics let me know. I'll be spending a good portion of the day on the piano and trumpet (I'm giving my medical school applications a day's rest, or rather, yet another day's rest).
Monday, September 19, 2005
Monday, September 12, 2005
Confirm purchase: 1 month subscription of "Inactivity Unlimited"
Since no discernable progress has been made on the aforementioned list, I'll content myself to continue rambling about increasingly unimportant things.
I wrote a certain type of letter (my first, in fact) a month or so ago. It was nice and flowery and well metered with many a literary technique applied to it. I even took the time to revise it. Of course, I have no intention of ever showing this bit of writing to anyone, ever, save maybe a 26-year-old, heartbroken, angry-at-the-world version of myself. Yesterday, however, I discovered a set of papers that had been with my letter in a pile of my mom's stuff. The pages of the letter itself have yet to reveal themselves. I'm trying really hard not to make the connection.
Summer reading list (completed):
A Storm of Swords - George R. R. Martin
Tao Te Ching - Lao Tzu
Life of Pi - Yann Martel
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince - J. K. Rowling
Love in the Time of Cholera - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
High Fidelity - Nick Hornby
Eragon - Christopher Paolini
Eldest - Christopher Paolini
Currently reading:
Franny and Zooey - J.D. Salinger
The Brothers Karamazov - Fyodor Dostoevsky
Future reading:
The Brothers K - David James Duncan
One Hundred Years of Solitude - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
For Whom the Bell Tolls - Ernest Hemingway
Things Fall Apart - Chinua Achebe
In the Beginning - Chaim Potok
Ambitious, I know, but I've always been better at reading than doing things that actually should be done.
I strained my back the other day, so I put ice on it. I even slept that way. Now my bed smells like peas. Like the kind from the pod that you freeze.
I wrote a certain type of letter (my first, in fact) a month or so ago. It was nice and flowery and well metered with many a literary technique applied to it. I even took the time to revise it. Of course, I have no intention of ever showing this bit of writing to anyone, ever, save maybe a 26-year-old, heartbroken, angry-at-the-world version of myself. Yesterday, however, I discovered a set of papers that had been with my letter in a pile of my mom's stuff. The pages of the letter itself have yet to reveal themselves. I'm trying really hard not to make the connection.
Summer reading list (completed):
A Storm of Swords - George R. R. Martin
Tao Te Ching - Lao Tzu
Life of Pi - Yann Martel
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince - J. K. Rowling
Love in the Time of Cholera - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
High Fidelity - Nick Hornby
Eragon - Christopher Paolini
Eldest - Christopher Paolini
Currently reading:
Franny and Zooey - J.D. Salinger
The Brothers Karamazov - Fyodor Dostoevsky
Future reading:
The Brothers K - David James Duncan
One Hundred Years of Solitude - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
For Whom the Bell Tolls - Ernest Hemingway
Things Fall Apart - Chinua Achebe
In the Beginning - Chaim Potok
Ambitious, I know, but I've always been better at reading than doing things that actually should be done.
I strained my back the other day, so I put ice on it. I even slept that way. Now my bed smells like peas. Like the kind from the pod that you freeze.
Wednesday, September 07, 2005
All beginnings are difficult
If I was to prioritize my life at this moment, opening myself up for public derision probably wouldn't make the Top 100. But I was never very good with numbers, nor priorities.
Well, maybe we (as in the collective I) will jot down a few priorities, just so I don't have to explain these things verbally to every person.
- resume work on Med school applications
- contact ADRA, Greg Frykman, and that school in St. Croix to see if I have a job next year
- wait and see if the Red Cross is going to need me in Baton Rouge
- email cool people that I don't talk to enough otherwise
- read another children's book
- wear pants tomorrow
I know it all sounds very ambitious and strenuous, but I have been going about these tasks at a modest pace. Wait, I misspoke. I've been thinking about these tasks at a modest pace.
I'll leave at this; any more and I might feel compelled to check my spellings, which is not a summer activity.
Well, maybe we (as in the collective I) will jot down a few priorities, just so I don't have to explain these things verbally to every person.
- resume work on Med school applications
- contact ADRA, Greg Frykman, and that school in St. Croix to see if I have a job next year
- wait and see if the Red Cross is going to need me in Baton Rouge
- email cool people that I don't talk to enough otherwise
- read another children's book
- wear pants tomorrow
I know it all sounds very ambitious and strenuous, but I have been going about these tasks at a modest pace. Wait, I misspoke. I've been thinking about these tasks at a modest pace.
I'll leave at this; any more and I might feel compelled to check my spellings, which is not a summer activity.
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