School is going well as usual, especially considering that tomorrow is the weekend, hooray! I'm gonna spend all tomorrow night salsa dancing at higher ground and follow it up the next night by chilling with all the padres back at home! What could be better? Plus, being home means that Chuck's breakfast bar is open, which means rreeaalll maple syrup. Life is good.
Life at groovy uv is just dandy as usual. Even though it is Monday... ew. But who can complain? I believe I had a good idea for an entry earlier, but it's escaped me now. I'm just too full of other college knowledge to remember.
Now, I'm all set up in my dorm with my fabulous roommate, Kyra, and my two suitemates, Casey and Joey, and I'm working on getting back into the whole school routien.
But now to address my title. Among other things, I've noticed two themes at UVM. Firstly, there are no clocks. Anywhere. I think the only clock on the entire campus is in my Stats class, and I know because I watch it the entire time, because it turns out that statistics is not any harder at a college level than at a high school level. So, there's my A for the year. Secondly, just about every other people I meet is from New Jersey. If I compiled all the answers I've gotten to the question: "where are you from?", it might go something like this: Vermont, New Jersey, New York, New Jersey, Mass., New Jersey, Maine, New Jersey, Virginia, New Jersey, New Jersey, New Jersey. And, when one of those New Jersey-ans happens to run into another one, they have to yell out "yyyeee-ah Jeerrrsey!"
One last observation that was not noted in my title: when you ask out of state people where they're from, they always answer "oh I'm right outside of Boston," or "I'm right outside of Philly" or "I'm right outside of DC." So you think, "cool, city kids," and you ask them how far out... They're typical answer "like three hours." Um... good. Then I might as well say I'm from Boston cause I'm only about three hours away from there. I didn't ask where you're near, I asked where you're from. Worse than that though is when they tell you "oh, I'm right outside of (insert obscure town name here)." Well that helps, not only do I not know what town you actually live in, I don't know what town you live "right outside of."
So there we go, the first of many, frequent reports on my life at, as Josh refers to it, "the happiest place on earth."