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Archived entries for RCA

Clutching

I’ve been meaning to write for weeks. So much has happened, and I don’t know where to start. I’ve been listening to Tracy Chapman’s “Fast Car” on repeat. Inexplicably, the lyrics bring me to tears: “You got a fast car. I want a ticket to anywhere. Maybe we make a deal. Maybe together we can get somewhere. Any place is better. Starting from zero got nothing to lose. Maybe we’ll make something. But me myself I got nothing to prove.”

I leave London in a matter of weeks. In most ways, I’m excited to return to the US. I’m looking forward to seeing my friends, to starting grad school, to finally feeling at home. And yet, some part of me wonders what will become of the memories once I leave this place. Despite periods of loneliness and self-doubt — or perhaps because of them — I credit this year with teaching me to be more truthful with myself and less afraid of failure.

I think that it’s hard for many of us to admit that it’s natural to seek external validation. We want to be told that the things we value are as true for others as they are for ourselves. I have come to believe that I will likely always be bound — to some extent — by a need to be loved and understood. And yet, my experiences this year have helped me understand the worth of my own convictions, even as I subject them to constant scrutiny and questioning.


Edinburgh, site of the Fulbright End Cap conference. More photos here.

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The Boy in You

My mom and I have always had a strange relationship. For better or worse, I’ve inherited many of her qualities: perfectionism, sensitivity, impulsiveness, impatience. We also share a fierce sense of heart — the courage to press on regardless of how stacked the odds are against us.

Over the years, as I have deviated more and more from plans that she considers financially-secure and socially-acceptable, we have fought each other to a point past tears. Why not apply to law schools alongside design schools? Why turn down Yale for a joyride in London? Why choose a grad school that none of us have heard of before?

I have never been the ideal son, nor she the perfect mother. When I was very young, I had a weak stomach because I was born premature. She would spend hours feeding me, and I would callously upchuck it all. On one occasion, she was so frustrated that she lashed out physically, forcing me to re-ingest the vomit. It was meant to teach me shame. Though things have changed considerably, I still live with the self-same fear of disappointing her.


The Madonna and Child at the V&A

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Why She Walks

I am really angry right now. I’m hoping that writing about it will help let some of the steam out of my head. I was supposed to leave on the 5AM train from London to Paris to meet Waqas for a relaxed, wonderful holiday. However, after a massive electrical failure that left 2000 customers stranded in the Channel Tunnel for over 12 hours, Eurostar has cancelled service indefinitely.

I’ve spent the last several hours frantically rebooking my journey, which will now involve a coach to Dover, a ferry from Dover to Calais, and a train from Calais to Paris. Total travel time is estimated to be around 11 hours, and it’s going to cost just as much for the one-way trip as my original roundtrip ticket cost on the Eurostar. WTF. I hate undeserved chaos.

I’m trying to tell myself to remain calm and to be grateful that I wasn’t trapped in the Chunnel for half a day without food and water, but I feel really frustrated. The coach to Dover leaves London’s Victoria terminal at 7AM, so I’m not going to get any sleep. I feel like I should just try to write about some of what’s happened over the last weeks and (hopefully) work my way out of this mood.


The cold, wet London winter

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