2004-04-26

kryptonitemonkey: (Default)
2004-04-26 08:25 am

Babble pie.

Monday morning. I feel like yelling incoherently, but I doubt very much I'm awake enough to raise my voice to any sort of yelling pitch. This is my last week of regular classes before finals next week. I'm not sure whether I should be panicked or not. Two of my five finals aren't going to be cummulative, so that's a plus. But I'm not sure how great my grades are going to be. Definitely not high enough to keep my nice scholarship, that's for sure. I didn't get nearly enough of what I wanted done this weekend, but there's not very much I can do about it now. Well, there's complaining, but that only works when I have someone other than myself to blame. Stupid Argentinian Beaver-Weasels.

Okay, I hate this. I wake up, and I'm feeling rather awake, and then as the morning progresses, I get sleepier and sleepier. My internal clock is all whacked out. I should really stop going to bed after midnight.

Ugh, and I still haven't filled out any other applications besides the one for Gamestop, and the summer is fast approaching. "Bother! Botherbotherbotherbother...."
Hehe.
kryptonitemonkey: (Default)
2004-04-26 03:23 pm

Although I doubt anyone cares...

I was wondering, as I tend to do, which is the nicest way of two choices when saying goodbye to someone to go to class. By these, I mean saying that you will let them get back to whatever work it is that they're doing, or that you have to go to class. I know there really isn't much of a diff between the two, but I like to analyze the phrasing of things and whatnot, and it occured to me to wonder of the two, which sounds nicer to the person being bid adieu. Does a person feel it's nicer to have to go, or is it nicer to say that you realize they may be busy and you wish not to bug them anymore (regardless of whether you may be or not). *ponders*