Dear bloggers,
I know this is going to sound completely nerdy.
But that's fine by me.
So, earlier this afternoon I stumbled across an episode of the new show, Glee. Yes, I've heard about it. Good things too. So, it being Friday and all, I thought I would start off watching the pilot episode and see what I thought. One word: amazing. By the way, sorry I keep talking in dramatic short sentences. That must be my mood right now.
But really, I love my TV shows and it's pretty hard to get me hooked on one. The top picks on my list have deserved it, worked for it, and have earned to be called my television addictions. Glee instantly won me over. It could possibly be my love for music programs in high schools and how I felt at the bottom of the social ladder being in band my entire middle school/high school career. Glee spoke to me and I love it. I then proceeded to watch three episodes of it when I really needed to be working on homework. Yikes.
In fact, I really need to be working on homework now but I had a thought about my poor abandoned blog and I realized I needed to fix the fact that I haven't written on here in for. ev. er. Name that movie.
Anyway, I totally feel like an extreme nerd expressing my advocacy for Glee. That and the fact that I just heard and recognized "Bella's Lullaby" playing in the apartment above mine.
I better get to work on all of the huge piles of work I need to finish for my classes this weekend and although this probably appears like some random rantings from a crazy college girl, it was only really me trying to say that I still care about my blog and I'll be working on some really cool and interesting stuff for the near future. Keep checking in and happy blogging.
Love, me.
P.S. I just re-read this entry and I am so sorry. So very random. Oh well! :)
Friday, September 18, 2009
Sunday, May 3, 2009
April 28, 2009
So...I'm bored. Simple as that. Today is my first day of my economics class. Actually, it's my second economics class. Oops. I'm really hoping this one goes better than the last one.
When I saw my grade posted this past Wednesday, I wanted to curl up in a ball and not think about anything. Surprisingly, that reaction was better than I expected. I've never done so awful in a class....ever! Well, I guess it's time to move on.
So, I'm hoping I'll do better than I did in Prof. *Unknown*'s class. (That's right. Let's keep it anonymous.) Not that I didn't love *Unknown* as a professor, but everything went right over my head. It honestly felt as if he was throwing a jumbled mix of food at me and all I had to catch it with was this huge jar...and even when I could get it in the jar I just looked at the thing, couldn't make any sense of what was inside, and in all honestly it just made me want to hurl.
I'm just wishing this go-around my professor will have some magical ability to hand me a plate of catalog quality looking food. Okay, I really have no idea why I'm making this an obscure food analogy. Maybe I'm hungry (It is a 7:00 p.m. class...downtown) or maybe that's just how detrimental my last semester of econ was to my brain.
I'd better sign off for now ya'll. Class is about to start and I'm sitting here writing about food...and economics. Let's not fry my brain into uselessness so that I can use it for the next 2 and a half hours.
Thursday, April 30, 2009
Once Again...
Hey Guys,
I've got another awesome giveaway link for you to check out. This week on Anne Bradshaw's blog, LuAnn Staheli is giving away her book "When Hearts Conjoin" about Kendra and Maliyah Herrin's story. They were conjoined twins who had a successful separation surgery. Sounds like a touching book! Check it out!
By the way, I'm still working on my next post. Just to give you a hint it will have to do with just some daily experiences I've been having and basically just me putting them to writing. I guarantee that there will be several odd analogies. I guess it's how I work things out in my head...haha. So, check out the above link and still be on the lookout for my next post.
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
A Little Something Awesome
Hey Everybody,
Sorry I haven't posted anything for a while, but don't worry. I've been working on something that's going to be good. So you all better be ready!
But as for now, I've got an amazing link I want to share with you and I really think you should all check this out.
http://annebradshaw.blogspot.com/2009/03/contest-two-give-aways-cd-book-from-c-s.html
After all, you might just enjoy it ;) Anne Bradshaw is an accomplished writer and awesome person. On her blog this week, there's a contest going on with a C.S. Bezas giveaway. So please check it out!
Well I'm signing off for now, but keep an eye out for my upcoming post. You'll laugh, you'll cry...okay maybe it won't be quite that dramatic, but it will be good. I hope you all have a fantastic day.
Sorry I haven't posted anything for a while, but don't worry. I've been working on something that's going to be good. So you all better be ready!
But as for now, I've got an amazing link I want to share with you and I really think you should all check this out.
http://annebradshaw.blogspot.com/2009/03/contest-two-give-aways-cd-book-from-c-s.html
After all, you might just enjoy it ;) Anne Bradshaw is an accomplished writer and awesome person. On her blog this week, there's a contest going on with a C.S. Bezas giveaway. So please check it out!
Well I'm signing off for now, but keep an eye out for my upcoming post. You'll laugh, you'll cry...okay maybe it won't be quite that dramatic, but it will be good. I hope you all have a fantastic day.
Thursday, March 26, 2009
Wind Art
Considering I hadn't written much on here for a while, I thought it was about time. This will just be a quick little update about my day. Nothing fancy.
Aside from the insanely cold wind nearly ruining my day, it did feel as though I had a very cultural and artsy day. I ate lunch for the first time at the MOA cafe at BYU. So many of my roommates and friends have eaten there and I couldn't believe I hadn't gone yet. So I did. It was utterly amazing. I may be in danger of addiction, it was that good. Now I definitely count that as artsy, wouldn't you say? Being in such close proximity to the actual art in the Museum of Art must count for something.
Then, later this evening, I was able to attend Living Legends. It's basically a big production done by students here at BYU and contains song and dance from different cultures around the world combined to tell an old legend. It had a good message and the talent was superb. There are seriously so many gifted performers here!
Anyway, I realized that I need to be including some more art in my life seeing as I love, love, love it and I miss it too. I actually did the Utah Foster Care Foundation's Annual Chalk Art Festival a few years ago and I've been thinking I should do it again. It's an awesome experience. I really recommend it!!
First, I just want to say how ridiculous the weather is being. I mean, really? More than half of the day I felt like my face was going to fall off. In fact, I think it might have. I definitely know I left my ears behind somewhere. It just seems surreal that just last week I was getting a sunburn from sitting outside and today I was getting freezer burn. Ha ha corny joke, I know.
Aside from the insanely cold wind nearly ruining my day, it did feel as though I had a very cultural and artsy day. I ate lunch for the first time at the MOA cafe at BYU. So many of my roommates and friends have eaten there and I couldn't believe I hadn't gone yet. So I did. It was utterly amazing. I may be in danger of addiction, it was that good. Now I definitely count that as artsy, wouldn't you say? Being in such close proximity to the actual art in the Museum of Art must count for something.
Then, later this evening, I was able to attend Living Legends. It's basically a big production done by students here at BYU and contains song and dance from different cultures around the world combined to tell an old legend. It had a good message and the talent was superb. There are seriously so many gifted performers here!
Anyway, I realized that I need to be including some more art in my life seeing as I love, love, love it and I miss it too. I actually did the Utah Foster Care Foundation's Annual Chalk Art Festival a few years ago and I've been thinking I should do it again. It's an awesome experience. I really recommend it!!
Well enough of my ramblings for the day. Thanks for listening and just remember...MOA cafe: good. Living Legends: good. Utah Foster Care Foundation's Annual Chalk Art Festival: good, plus you get to help raise money for the foundation at the same time. What could be better than that?
Monday, March 2, 2009
My Night at the Museum
The musty smell of old taxidermy is prevalent as jaguars and cheetahs frozen in defensive poses come into view. The walls are adorned with many protruding animal heads. A young boy somewhere in the distance is exclaiming “whoas” and “holy molys.”
Besides the occasional exclamation, the Monte L. Bean Life Science Museum on the Brigham Young University campus remains still and quiet in the early evening darkness.
Walking into the center of the main display room I instantly flashed back to ten years earlier and the last time I took in the same view.
Circling around the room stood displays of habitats with small animals staring back blankly from behind the glass.
Within the maze of displays, the classic museum feel was not lacking as the quiet was slightly filled with educational videos played in the background as the sound of waves hitting the shore and birds cawing were quickly followed by the male voice-over describing seagull feeding habits.
There are not very many life science museums that would have a quote from 1 Nephi plastered on one of the exhibit walls, but the Bean Museum would be one of them.
The scripture is located near the insect exhibit and the butterfly wall. From afar, the wall looks like a simple diagram of a large butterfly with the heading “Butterflies,” but upon moving closer there are hundreds of little butterflies of a variety of colors shaping the larger image.
Not only does the museum provide displays of taxidermy, but the most impressive aspect to visitors, according to museum workers, is the daily shows with live animals.
Museum worker Elise Evans sets a turtle, Otis, on the ground as three young children gather around and crawl across the floor following the animal’s example. She talks to the children teaching them about the turtle. Apparently, turtles can live anywhere from 70 to 100 years.
“My favorite part is talking with the kids,” Evans said. “I was one of those kids that was like ‘whoa!’ so it’s cool that I get to be the one teaching now.”
Another animal is requested and it happened to be a boa constrictor. I instantly recoil and the children, just as quickly, rush up to it. My learned fear has caught up with me as I remember reacting just as the children did ten years previous.
As the children’s mother led them past the rows of posed animals following the show, the young boy turns around and looks at Elise.
“Now, I want a pet turtle for Christmas,” he said.
Besides the occasional exclamation, the Monte L. Bean Life Science Museum on the Brigham Young University campus remains still and quiet in the early evening darkness.
Walking into the center of the main display room I instantly flashed back to ten years earlier and the last time I took in the same view.
Circling around the room stood displays of habitats with small animals staring back blankly from behind the glass.
Within the maze of displays, the classic museum feel was not lacking as the quiet was slightly filled with educational videos played in the background as the sound of waves hitting the shore and birds cawing were quickly followed by the male voice-over describing seagull feeding habits.
There are not very many life science museums that would have a quote from 1 Nephi plastered on one of the exhibit walls, but the Bean Museum would be one of them.
The scripture is located near the insect exhibit and the butterfly wall. From afar, the wall looks like a simple diagram of a large butterfly with the heading “Butterflies,” but upon moving closer there are hundreds of little butterflies of a variety of colors shaping the larger image.
Not only does the museum provide displays of taxidermy, but the most impressive aspect to visitors, according to museum workers, is the daily shows with live animals.
Museum worker Elise Evans sets a turtle, Otis, on the ground as three young children gather around and crawl across the floor following the animal’s example. She talks to the children teaching them about the turtle. Apparently, turtles can live anywhere from 70 to 100 years.
“My favorite part is talking with the kids,” Evans said. “I was one of those kids that was like ‘whoa!’ so it’s cool that I get to be the one teaching now.”
Another animal is requested and it happened to be a boa constrictor. I instantly recoil and the children, just as quickly, rush up to it. My learned fear has caught up with me as I remember reacting just as the children did ten years previous.
As the children’s mother led them past the rows of posed animals following the show, the young boy turns around and looks at Elise.
“Now, I want a pet turtle for Christmas,” he said.
The Student Saga: Pink Cheek Moments
Last week I was apparently out to discover how many times one person can become embarrassed in a single day, whether I knew it at the time or not.
Embarrassment is bound to happen to everyone. It’s the inescapable enigma that leads us to an awkward happening and subjects us to the scrutiny of those nearby; however, I was under the impression that moments like these were few and far between. For the most part, I guess they are, but that generalization did not hold true for me.
The day started off like any other Thursday. I had been sitting through an enriching economics lecture, but when it came time to leave I had my first glimpse of what the rest of my day would entail.
Maybe it’s what I get for calling the lecture “enriching,” but I opened the classroom door right into a guy coming from the other direction. It wouldn’t have been a problem if he hadn’t have given me a nasty look and stormed off followed by the giggle fits from the girls behind me that I had to endure all the way out the building.
Okay, no big deal. That was just something that happens once in a while, right? Wrong. Within the next fifteen minutes I had an awkward encounter with a cute boy, a full-blown hair episode (and I mean fully windblown), and a misspoken phrase that left me looking like I should be back in elementary school instead of in college.
Things only got worse as the day continued and by the time all was said and done, I counted eight situations leaving me with pink cheeks and a wish to disappear.
I don't want to go into too much detail, so that I can at least retain some dignity. However, I will say that I did gesture my hands a little too excitedly hitting someone in the process, have a chair I was sitting in (in the midst of 300 people, mind you) make a humiliating noise, and my brain couldn't even stop my mouth from allowing this horrible "whoo, whoo" yell to escape very loudly in the middle of the Cougareat. (That one's a long story, but by far my favorite)
I’m not sure if that day conflicted with the laws of physics in any way, but I personally think something was awry with nature. There’s no other explanation.
My Blogging Journey Begins...
After spending basically forever coming up with a name for this blog, it's finally here! The Megna Doodle (a clever play on the name of the magnetic writing toy in case you never were a child) will be a place where you can read a mix of things. I'll be posting stories I write, updates on my life, and pretty much anything I'm thinking about. Enjoy!
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