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On bus rides, I often see grad students suspended in their own scholastic slime or as I call it-monotony. For instance, once walking with what I presumed to be a friend, I told them I had read Rilke they had presumed that I had read it for a class-no. I read it for my own pleasure, how trivial of me. One of the most endemic pathological problems of the university is that their mindset is engrained, too rigid, too mundane. There is no funding for creativity, the only method is the paint by numbers system. No new poets in the canon, anything new is cannon fodder. The only way to cultivate a dream here is to **** it before, it can infiltrate and pollute the minds of the young. Conformity at least is the religion of the university, and life must go on as it has before -stagnating. The university masters here wield art with grand indifference. In this presumed friend eyes, no curriculum exists outside of what is assigned, their own life is vicarious- a tenthhand extension, examing the writing of a 1000 year old text. They translate these texts while learning obscure idiosyncrasies of Old Norse by heart. Little do these "academics" realize that these people who wrote these texts lived full lives: full of love, betrayal, stab wounds , and dirt. They lived more than these quibbling academics who argue on about written contradictions of texts. The irony irons on. The greatest call for me is to write, these texts were never meant to be dissected and investigated scientifically. I think for me, at least, they are meant to inspire, these works inspire me to live. The madness of Don Quixote stills boils in my blood, literature has encrazed me. I yearn to live, love, and live so much I know how to die.
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Feb 11, 2016
Feb 11, 2016 at 11:53 AM UTC
Living in a rigid method
On bus rides, I often see grad students suspended in their own scholastic slime or as I call it-monotony. For instance, once walking with what I presumed to be a friend, I told them I had read Rilke they had presumed that I had read it for a class-no. I read it for my own pleasure, how trivial of me. One of the most endemic pathological problems of the university is that their mindset is engrained, too rigid, too mundane. There is no funding for creativity, the only method is the paint by numbers system. No new poets in the canon, anything new is cannon fodder. The only way to cultivate a dream here is to **** it before, it can infiltrate and pollute the minds of the young. Conformity at least is the religion of the university, and life must go on as it has before -stagnating. The university masters here wield art with grand indifference. In this presumed friend eyes, no curriculum exists outside of what is assigned, their own life is vicarious- a tenthhand extension, examing the writing of a 1000 year old text. They translate these texts while learning obscure idiosyncrasies of Old Norse by heart. Little do these "academics" realize that these people who wrote these texts lived full lives: full of love, betrayal, stab wounds , and dirt. They lived more than these quibbling academics who argue on about written contradictions of texts. The irony irons on. The greatest call for me is to write, these texts were never meant to be dissected and investigated scientifically. I think for me, at least, they are meant to inspire, these works inspire me to live. The madness of Don Quixote stills boils in my blood, literature has encrazed me. I yearn to live, love, and live so much I know how to die.
tenthhand- more than firsthand or secondhand encrazed- ex. like enloquicido in Spanish, en-loco-ecer, en- intensive prefix like in enjoin, embrace (/n/ --> /m/ conforming to /b/);
b-wasserman
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Feb 11, 2016
Feb 11, 2016 at 11:53 AM UTC
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