3 January 2012
Categorised as Personal, Rants & tagged with celebration, law, lists, uni.
Year 2011 has been — to say the least — the most horrible year of all the years in my memory. The best of the worst is, of course, having neglected my blog for almost 10 months, and not finding the time nor motivation to redesign it.
But since it’s already three days into a brand new year, let me not dwell on the past and instead write a summary of what has given me the greatest joy amongst the bad:
- In January, I turned 21.
- In June, I completed all my LLB exams, one semester ahead of expected completion date.
- In July, I received confirmation that I satisfied all requirements for my BCom/LLB degrees.
- In September, I officially graduated from the University of Auckland with conjoint BCom/LLB.
- In October, I completed my Professional Legal Studies course, and the New Zealand All Blacks team won the Rugby World Cup 2011 yay!
- In November, I got my first ever smart-phone — iPhone 4S, baby!
- In December, I was admitted as a Solicitor and Barrister of the High Court of New Zealand, received my practising certificate, and received LLM offers from both universities I applied to.
I mean, how could that sound like a bad year, right? But at each and every step to attaining an achievement in 2011 I was met with a challenge, an obstacle, and (what seemed like at the time) the biggest headache of my life. Even when signing the contract for the new iPhone plan I became the victim of a muck-up that has less than a one-in-thousands chance of happening. The bigger the achievement, the bigger the headache. *facepalm*
But hey, the year is now behind me and I am ready to face what may be the last 12 months of the human history. Happy (belated) New Year!
9 March 2011
Categorised as Literature, Personal, Rants, School & tagged with language, law, uni, writing.
Team work, creative solutions… has uni (law school at least) been forgetting this? Out of five years’ worth of courses in Law, Finance and Economics, I have come across one class with a strong group work element. It’s true that law lecturers always encouraged creative thinking, yet did they ever endow us with the skills to properly develop our creativity? Not in my classes. We all know that in the real world we will need to cooperate with one another (even if grudgingly for some of us), but for most of the past four years I’ve gotten nothing but an individualistic, competitive vibe from my environment. 90% of you responsible and academic-oriented ones may enjoy this, because all if not most of you would have experienced having to cover three other group members’ work in the last minute. And I was indeed one of the 90% who stood by individualism yet shamelessly stressed how much of a team worker I am in job applications. Was.
The dispute resolution paper I took over January-February involved a group presentation, with seven students in each group. When this course requirement was introduced in the first class, I cringed. By the end of the course, I have made six new friends, allowed my creativity to soar, and experienced staying so late in law school that we got locked in the building. The group presentation deprived me of a golden A, but was nonetheless the most rewarding experience I have had throughout my years of uni.
By fifth-year in uni, most law students tend to think of themselves as working individually in small cubicles, little to do with other “lowly dumb commoners”. When people are put in groups whether it be during class or in a co-curricular activity, the ambitious ones are fighting to be the only one to present all the ideas for the group (as if they did all the work), the less-ambitious ones are as quiet and non-contributing as they were five years ago, and the “leaders” are bossing other people around without ‘please’ and ‘thank you’s.
Creativity-wise, I used to create admirable artworks and designs. Recently, I’ve struggled to create an averagely-attractive blog design for even the simplest blog.
Stories and poetry used to flow out of my head any time, anywhere. These days I’m hitting walls trying to come up with any decent descriptive language to write average quality fiction. After all, I’ve written five-years’ worth of research essays in a strictly professional tone about nothing but law and economics.
Those studying in the creative fields may not be able to sympathise, but I’m dying to finish this semester so I can escape this rigid cage, confinement, whatever. Of course, while at work I’ll still be referring to statutes and regulations, but at work I support and am supported by a team of amazing colleagues and I can once again bring back the daily usage of Adobe Photoshop and flowery adjectives after 6pm without a trace of guilt.
9 December 2010
Categorised as Personal, School, Work & tagged with beauty, body, fitness, health, love, relationships, uni, work.
At least for the next few years.
Academically, my grades have improved a whole lot over the past year since I started dating Stephen. I totally disproved the traditional-Asian-parents theory that boyfriend = distraction = fail grades. I’ve also sorted out the rest of my papers in uni and will graduate in just half a year!
After graduation, I have a job lined up for me. I’ve worked part time there for the past two years and did not want to leave. Fortunately, my boss did not want me to either.
For years I hoped and hoped for a long-term relationship that would last for at least a year. I’ve reached that goal and just based on the fact that Stephen has gotten me an iPod and a Wii so far for these two Christmases I think I made an awesome choice.
And now… just one most challenging goal: sexy body.
It’s so easy to gain weight working full time in an office with a boss that loves food just as much as I do. So what I’m starting to do now is:
- Working out or going swimming just about once every other day;
- Home exercises almost every night; and
- Reduce consumption of fatty, oily and sugary foods.
I have to look good for my sister’s wedding in November next year! Any tips from anyone who has been there and done that?