It's Raining here in Logan.
It's been a long while since we had some weather. And us Logan-ites are loving it.
All I want to do is listen to the rain. In fact, that's almost what I have done for the past little bit. One of my favorite sounds on this earth is rain. As much as I love the party life, I am an old bookie soul at heart. The last few evenings have been pretty quiet around here.
My home boys have been Hemingway, Socrates, Uncle Walt (Whitman), York Patties, and we can't forget my tunes. Ingrid Michealson is mah girl. Mixed with some classical and the soundtrack of a certain Stephen Hawking movie.
Ah it's fabulous! You know, there is an inner romantic in all of us, and mine lives next to a rain filled window with a glass of hot chocolate, my lancer blanket, and a book. That's her hiding place. She tries not to leave this place, for it is oh so comfy.
I've been reading, "The Sun Also Rises", by Earnest Hemingway. Beautiful book. I read 4 straight chapters last night, which if you know me, it takes a great deal to make such things happen.
Last night, one of the characters posed something that I think we all contemplate in life, but that I absolutely love.
"I can't stand it to think my life is going so fast and I'm not really living it."
To which his friend replies,
"Nobody ever lives their life all the way up except bull-fighters."
You know, life feels extremely fast, but at the same time, it's evenings like these that seem endless. It's only 9:25. The night is young. I have great things ahead of me. Tonight, and many nights in the future.
So, for now, come, step into my office.
It's nothing huge, but it's cozy, and I love it.
These days I have time to keep it clean and tidy. Sir Macintosh is my buddy. He follows me around the apartment, and gives me the essential unlimited access I need as a college student.
The window is cracked open, and outside, in the courtyard, the evening shenanigans are rampant as usual. We hear blood-curdling screams on a nightly basis here. We usually worry if we don't hear them.
The lamp post outside points out the pretty water I have speckled over my window. We have the window cracked open. Which is pretty unusual for January. However, Dev was cooking. Usually she burns something. We were very proud of her for not burning anything, but she did steam up THE ENTIRE APARTMENT. So, we cracked open all of the windows, but it feels nice, and I am inclined to leave the window cracked as long as I can. Just listening.
Listening to the rain.
The Screams.
The laughs.
The flirting going on outside.
The cars from the nearby street.
The sirens we often hear.
The bustle of a college town, which never seams to cease.
The amount of pedestrians may diminish as the sun falls, but the bustle of this town never ends.
Evening walks are my favorite. I took one tonight. Walked past small houses and apartments full of college kids just like me. The street I was walking on was behind the frats. This week is "RUSH" week, where the frats recruit new members for their "secret" rowdy organizations. I could hear the shouts and historical laughter over the music I was listening to. I took an ear bud out and laughed.
The frat scene is a very different one, which is a story for another day. Maybe not even another day. That is the stuff of legends. We don't go there. Aside from that extreme example, the buzz of college life is felt around the clock. As I walked the streets, I could feel the buzz.
The buzz of in depth studying, and mad typing. This buzz which hangs over the entire city all day long. I love walking by the little shacks and dwellings in the dark of the night, and seeing the warm glow from the tiny rooms. The tiny rooms, much like my office, which people squeeze all of their belongings into for semesters at a time.
I love seeing the christmas lights hanging in the rooms, and shelves and shelves of books and clothes that all look like they are about to shatter. Miraculously, they hold for yet another year, just as they have for many years past.
I can just feel the deep conversations between roommates, ironing out life's problems for the first time with each other. Or the grossly sarcastic conversations, also held between roommates. The endless sessions of Netflix, held between crazy study sessions, and of course the parties that happen in between all of that. I love it.
Here, is a place where life moves extremely fast, but is only a series of incredibly deep, slow moments, connected in a very speedy fashion. This is the geniuses of college, and why I love it so much.
This is my sanctuary. One of them. I of course also have my designated "spot" in the library, but for nights like this, right here is the place to be.
It's the my Jess place. I even have my record player up here.
It's to the point where I prefer this room. My room back home is a very large, spacious, basement room. Which is very nice, but it's almost too big. I love my little space. This little space I occupy. This is all I need. My cozy little corner, to study, and distract myself from studying in. Anything more, and I don't really know what to do with myself.
I love my quiet evenings. Now, tomorrow, and over the weekend, my inner demons will be itching to be let out. You can't quite coop jess inside for too long. She gets restless. But her other side, her anti-social book worm, music lover side loves this place.
We read some Homer in my Great Books class. Homer gave a story of Odysseus finding an olive tree. Now this Olive tree was actually two olive trees. Both Olive trees grew from the same root. Odysseus came to the olive tree, and took a nap in the heart of the tree where both trees joined.
My Professor took it as such. Both trees represent both sides of the human soul. First, the untamed, wild side, and second, the conservative, orderly side. The idea behind this story is that we find peace when both sides of us are balanced, and find common grounds with each other. Now of course, the human soul is much more complex than merely containing just two sides, but many of our other idiosyncrasies can be placed into one of these two categories.
In my limited experience, I suppose I have found this to be very true. When we appease both sides, we are pretty happy campers. You can't be cooped up inside studying all day, but you also can't spend all day partying. That's when you run into problems.
This happy balance between our "selves" brings peace. Maybe not outer peace, but inner peace. I don't think our outer lives will ever truly find peace, because life is crazy, and throws a lot into our face. But if we can reach a fair amount of inner peace, that's when the outer craziness becomes manageable. Certainly not easy, but very manageable, and we deal with our crazy lives one slow, or fast moment at a time, and take joy in the stringing together of these moments.
I'll leave you with some Uncle Walt.
"This is thy hour O soul, thy free flight into the wordless,
Away from books, away from art, the day erased, the lesson done,Thee fully forth emerging, silent, gazing, pondering the themes thou lovest best."
-Walt Whitman.