Unlike the majority of the population, I am not generally
afraid of Mondays. This has become especially true since starting graduate
school. When I was an undergraduate and working a part-time job I had weekends
off and, therefore, actually knew what they were. In my current life, however,
I rarely know what day it is. When you work every single day you tend to quit
keeping track, so Monday rolls around and you’re like, “Oh, I have to work
today…what is it, Thursday?” Monday must have felt like I was stealing
its thunder, because one day it was like, “Thursday?? Do I look like Thursday
to you?? Let me show you the difference between me and Thursday, babe.”
Monday commenced its attack on Sunday night by refusing to allow me any sleep. It
wanted me weak for the events to come. I settled in around 11:00, feeling quite
proud of myself for getting to bed “early”, and drifted off to sleep with the
sound of the heater humming in the background. Thereafter, I was awakened
approximately every 30-minutes by bear-like noises issuing from Taylor’s open mouth. This is normal, but can usually be remedied by a
swift kick to the leg or by a concentrated effort to roll him on his side. Not
this night, said Monday, not this night. I gave up around 2:00 and relocated to
the couch. I was trying my best to drift off when, suddenly, my body decided it
had about ten problems that needed my immediate attention. My throat began
demanding water and rasping out coughs like I was wandering the Sahara, my
lower leg got an itch that no scratch would satisfy, I had to pee about 50
times despite my throat’s insistence that it hadn’t been given water for days, my
brain wanted to revisit whether graduate school was a legitimate life choice, and
the list goes on. The last I remember looking at the clock, it was 3:30 and my
alarm was set for 7:00.
I woke up at 10:00.
I had missed three phone calls, received two e-mails around
8:00 requiring immediate responses, had six text messages blinking away on my
phone screen, and I could barely get my eyes open. I dashed (sluggishly dashed,
really) around the house, trying to get ready. One plus about graduate school
is that being late doesn’t generally get you in trouble with anyone but
yourself because no one is really keeping track of you, at least not in any
strict sense of the word. They pay you for probably half the hours you work,
and I assume they sometimes feel guilty for employing this sweatshop technique,
so they usually (in my case, at least) let you be as long as you keep the lab running and the data
rolling in (which means you can pretty much be located in the lab 20 hours a
day, 7 days a week, so who’s really winning, here?). This is one of the few
things, I believe, that keep graduate students going. If we were to follow our
dreams of quitting and getting a 9 to 5 job instead, where we would get off
work before the sun sets and have nothing to do but enjoy life, we’d get
written up for showing up to work at noon on a Monday. We’d also have
retirement plans, vision insurance, sleep on a regular basis, and a real life. But I digress.
I blessed Taylor repeatedly when I saw he had left me some
coffee, then cursed him repeatedly when I realized we had no coffee creamer
(why that is solely his fault, I’m not sure), so I left the house without
coffee because I’m not a “real” coffee drinker, I’m a “coffee-with-creamer”
coffee drinker. I ran to the store for some dinner items (and coffee creamer) because
I always shop in the mornings or else I’ll find some excuse not to do it after
work, plus I needed a cake for a fellow graduate student's birthday that day. I had intended to
make her one myself, but Monday made sure I was out of eggs,
and that I only realized that at 10:30 the night before. Monday also made sure
that everyone else was out of eggs, thereby ensuring that 50,000 people were
leaving their cart in the middle of every aisle while they thoroughly read the contents of each item on the shelf or chatted with the long lost friend they had
discovered in aisle 7. I dodged my way around the store, picked out the cake that appeared to have been sitting there the least number of days, and bought a balloon, which was nearly torn to shreds outside in the wind and rain that had arisen while I shopped. So impressive, Monday. In
an attempt to shield my $6.00, super fancy balloon from the wind, I tilted it
closer to my body and under my umbrella, thereby spilling the entire contents
of the $4.00 latte I had just purchased at the coffee counter inside the
grocery store. I loaded my groceries, balloon, and cake into the backseat of my
car, all the while getting smashed by the door because the wind kept trying to
shut it for (ON) me. I then attempted to sop up the latte now covering the entire
front of my body, and headed to the office.
Because the parking lot that I pay $400 per year to park in
is approximately an 8-minute walk from my office, I opted to park in the
pay-lot that is directly across the street from my building. I pulled in and
pushed the ticket button, but nothing happened. I pushed it 5 or 6 more times
to see if that would do anything, but it didn’t. By this time, two cars had
pulled up behind me and refused to acknowledge my reverse lights or wildly
waving hand. I huffed some really bad words and then pushed the button for the
parking attendant. He lifted the gate for me and said I’d just have to come to
the parking office for a ticket when I was ready to leave. After driving around
the lot three times, I gave up and cursed the wretched undergraduates
for taking all the spots when they clearly had more time to make an 8-minute walk than I did, and then I parked in the fire lane with my hazards on
because I had to go get my ticket. Without a ticket, the gate won’t open, and
without a parking spot, I needed the gate to open so I could get the hell out.
I ran up the two flights of stairs to the parking office, grabbed my ticket,
and ran back down. On my way out, of course, I passed an empty spot. I parked
there and decided to deal with the ticket issue later.
I walked once more through the whipping wind and rain with
the balloon and cake in tow. I entered the office, 3 hours later than I
intended to, covered in coffee and rain, complete with wind-ratted hair, and
wished the birthday girl a happy fricking birthday. Then I realized that I had
never sent the “Come to our office at noon for birthday cake” e-mail because I
was sleeping during the time that I had intended to send it. I made some hasty
phone calls and rounded up a few people to come sing the damn birthday song. I then proceeded to take my coat off and sit down for a minute and was rewarded with a
large scratch down my arm from a now somehow broken and scraggly nail on my
left hand. As you might imagine, there were no fingernail clippers in the office. By
this time, my body was airing its grievances about the lack of coffee and
breakfast in the form of a dull, thumping headache. I shoved some cake in my
mouth and went about the 50-million tasks I could tackle on my 100-million item
to-do list for the day. That stuff went okay, or at least no more annoyingly
than usual.
I left the office that
night and climbed back up to the parking office, which was – of course – now
closed. I wandered around for a bit, feeling furious, and then decided to see
what happened when I put my already stamped ticket in the pay machine. It
popped up with the new total that I owed ($7.00 for the not even full day of
parking, damn thieves) and I was relieved that I’d actually be able to leave.
But then the machine “couldn’t read my card”. I think I kicked it before
punching the cancel button to get my ticket back. I trekked out to the parking
lot, still fighting massive winds and rain (the east coast is on a roll with
the weather lately), to the other pay machine in the furthest possible part of
the lot. This one accepted my card after my numb hands were finally able to
slide it through. I walked back to my car, shoved some important papers into the grocery bags in the
back seat, and headed home. I hauled the groceries up the four flights
of stairs to our apartment, unpacked them, and realized that one of my
important papers was gone, and likely blown halfway to Nebraska in this savage
wind. I stalked into the living room, informed Taylor that I didn’t care where
I slept tonight so long as it was all by my damn self, and I went to bed. Well,
first I made a bunch of cookies and ate half of them. Then I went to bed.
According to a fellow graduate student, other people had worse
Mondays than I, so I shouldn’t complain. Monday's lesson for Karen was that socks need to be 100% cotton in order to survive a tango with the microwave. She discovered this after throwing her rain-soaked, non-cotton design socks into her lab's microwave, where they proceeded to catch on fire. Wow, Monday. Wow.
"Wow, Monday, wow" is my new mantra.
ReplyDeleteLol, careful, Monday is vengeful!
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