By Randy Thoms
I digress, much like a blog should
do, right? Let me get back to this week’s blog, which, unfortunately, was late. Last week was Fall Break, in the sense that
the calendar said so, but an outsider would not have known that by the other
deadlines imposed on all the Master students.
I guess the Professors have not looked up the term “Fall Break” in the
sense it means, an escape, a vacation, a break from responsibilities, but that
was not how they saw it. But all joking
aside, Mid-term review boards were due on Wednesday, the day after break. Yes
we are all doing a fast track Master’s program, so I guess we all should expect
it, but when it actually happens, it was just tough but it was not that bad as
one might expect.
This is
where the “hard” part comes into play.
All the hours spent staying up late, for other never going to sleep, (us
“Non-Traditional” folks cannot do the all-nighters, all the time…anymore) only to
have the presentation be proposed to Friday, or have only 12 minutes to spill
you guts about a project you have labored over for those so many hours. But
this is also where “liberation” comes in as well. If you are one of the lucky ones to go first,
and I do mean lucky as in grateful, in the since you are done, and then just listen,
discuss and enjoy (is that too touchy-feely?) all the other presentations, and stop
worrying about what you are going to say.
Then over the next few days, I can concentrate on other coursework, like
writing a blog, and get caught up.
Another
aspect of all those hours spent developing a board and what to present, is the “hard”
part of generating all those diagrams and sketches. While using a computer is easy, working
through all the programs, switching between formats, reworking designs and all
the headaches that go into them, sometimes, just drawing on a piece of paper is
“liberating”. When sketching, expressing
ideas as fast as you can brings about all the iterations in design. Especially using color ink. As you use a permanent type medium, it allows
one to throw caution to the wind, once you start you cannot stop and it frees
up the creative process.
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