SUMMER SCHOOL, BALANCE (HOLLY SCHINDLER)
From the summer before high school until the summer
in-between my first and second years of grad school, I was in—well—school. Summer school. I did it in high school so that I could
quickly plow through classes I hated (gym—uuugh). And in college, I did it so that I could get
through my undergraduate work in four years and grad school in two years…or
bust. (Long story short, it involved my
funds for tuition. It was imperative to
get out in that time period.)
I’d been at summer school so long that I didn’t
think anything of it the summer after my junior year in college, when I went whole hog
and took ten hours of coursework. That’s one class shy of a full load during a
regular semester. One lit class, one ed
class, bio, and—well—gym. Again. Aerobics, actually—yep, it was the ‘90s.
And while that sounds like a lot of work—and it
was—I also remember having some fantastic and very “summery” times throughout
all those years, even though I was also in school. I remember starting up a conversation with a
fellow classmate, only to have that conversation turn into my first long-term
relationship. I remember many quiet
evenings on the front porch of a house a friend of mine rented near the
campus. Going to hear a new band play at
a club downtown and meeting the bassist, who is still a friend to this
day.
The workaholic who has no time for a personal life
is, I think, an unfair cliché. I love a
challenge. I always say there’s actually
something kind of thrilling about getting through an inordinate amount of work
in a short period of time. I can’t stand
to be unproductive…I think I’m actually at my best with a full plate, because
I’m more satisfied. I’m happier with
myself. So—yes, I work a lot. But I’m pretty darn good at making sure I
connect with the people who are important in my life, too. I sometimes think that this balance is
actually the greatest lesson I ever learned in all those years of summer
school…
This summer, I’m juggling my own writing, doing some
early promo work for a forthcoming release, helping my brother with his own
antiques business, making time for Skype with long-distance friends, and still
carving out time to sit outside and watch a sunset or two…
I can definitely relate to this post. Even though I'm working a lot this summer, it's a little easier for me to find time to do things that I like to do than it is during the school year. So I'm making time to go to summer festivals and read books without any footnotes in them. It feels really good.
ReplyDeleteBooks without footnotes! (Also, reading a book without a pen in hand to take notes is a COMPLETELY different experience...)
ReplyDelete