Tuesday, January 17, 2012

This Will Almost Certainly End Well

Had an excellent and epic weekend in Williamsburg with Kelly, Cohen, Mayer, Kylie, Andrew, Stephen, and Kelsey.  Highlights included a marathon game of Boom (which is a game that should not be marathoned) and a triumphant return to mug night at the Leafe.

But I don't have time to talk about the weekend.  Because real classes started again today, and somehow they are already making me feel as busy as I was at the end of last semester- which is not good.  That's okay, though.  I can handle this for one month (really? Can I?) until R&G is over and then I get some breaks.  I will NOT (I repeat) NOT try out for The Mikado.  If I say it and write it down enough times, perhaps it will be true.

Other things I should not do:

Try out for LawCappella, even though one of the songs they will be singing is Africa by Toto and I love that song and want to sing it.

Try out for Moot Court/Mock Trial.

Attempt to refill printer ink manually ever again.

Try to sit through Property class without a Monster energy drink (I attempted this today because it was the first class.  The professor started out by saying "most students think Property is boring and the worst class they had during their first year."  Let's all synchronize our self-fulfilling prophesy countdown timers.)

The good news is that my other professors (haven't had their classes yet) have much better general ratings on the rate-my-professor site and are teaching more inherently interesting classes.  So I'm hopeful.

3 comments:

  1. LawCapella is an awesome name. But you should probably not do it. Because you might die. And, as David told us, you are already doing law school wrong. You should try not do any more fun stuff or you might get wronger. =)

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  2. I agree with Kay. We are the same person.

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  3. I concur with the above statement that you are doing law school wrong and that to take on more will, in fact, mean you will be wronger.

    I tentatively agree with Abigail that she and Kay are the same person. I have also been reading SCOTUS decisions for the past 2-3 days and feel the need to concur or dissent on every piece of minutia, whether or not it is relevant, using 10,000 words when 100 would do, in order to confuse the issue further.

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