DISCLAIMER: The following is not meant to be taken seriously. The author and her friends do not wish harm upon any animal. Mosquitoes and flies aside.
Anyway.
Zephy and I were on the bus today, and we passed by the dog park. I pointed out that a lot of people were walking dogs, and then I asked Zephy, "If you had a dog would you walk it in the park?"
"Depends on what kind of dog," she said.
"I don't know—a long-haired dog, say."
"Are they hypoallergenic?"
At which point I remembered that I had forgotten that Zephy was allergic to cat and dog fur. So I said, "Probably not a long-haired dog then. What about chihuahuas?"
"My cousin has a chihuahua," she said. "It's named after my other cousin, so it's really confusing when we call its name. But I don't want a chihuahua."
"Hmm. What about—what else are you allergic to?"
"Cats, dogs, and dust. That's what the allergy report said."
"So you're not allergic to gerbils?"
"No, I'm not."
"So you could get a pet gerbil and walk it in the park! In one of those wheel things, except instead of staying still it would roll forward."
"You mean like a sphere?"
"Yeah! Except a wheel would be better, if it was wide enough so it wouldn't tip over. Because you could tie a leash to the side and—uh—walk it. But you probably couldn't really walk it since well—okay, maybe you could. You could pull on the string and then the wheel would roll and uh, the gerbil would just kind of tumble inside."
I guess this is why people "walk" their gerbils in stationary wheels.
. . .
Zephy told me that three people made AIME this year, including me, Tybalt, and some other person whose name she did not hear. But the cutoff score is 93, so maybe that last person was Sonny? It would be a bit annoying if he was the one, since he half-guessed his way there, but it's not like there's a prize for qualifying for AIME, so if he likes doing more math problems then good for him.
But I guess this means I should do more math problems. Instead of reading RSS every night. Although I am very up-to-date on various things such as the pseudo-flooding in Western Ohio, the near-Oscar-sweep for The King's Speech, and the various new functions of Google Docs.
You can't win it all, I guess. Not even golden statuettes that cost $150 each to produce.
. . .
I just realized today that Mr. Wollen's website says "First page you see" when you click his name from the school site.
He also has "First day of Spring!!!" on his March calendar.
I can't wait for spring to start, and for this snow to end. But I suppose I should get used to it, because I have now received both letters of acceptance and scholarship from McGill, and that is most likely where I will be going. So snow, hurrah! Good thing I'll soon be legal to drink, right? Don't they say cider's the best way to warm up on a cold winter night?
Or maybe that was hot chocolate. I like those better anyway.
I also need to choose whether I want to major in biomath or EEE. Yes, those are actual majors. I'm thinking that I'd rather major in biomath, since if McGill hadn't offered it I would most likely have gone for a biology or math major with the other as a minor. But EEE! If I minored in English (no way, but if I were to) it'd abbreviate to EEEE! And if I picked up economics as another minor, EEEEE!
Okay. That is not a good reason.
The real reason is that engineering is a rather fast-changing field, and it's something that generally does not require being in one place for a long time, and that's tempting. Dealing with high-tech is tempting too. As well as this whole "applied" business, because after all applied math goes hand in hand with engineering.
So I will ruminate for a couple of months and decide later.
1 rants:
Hahahha, that's so funny about the 93 cutoff score. I don't remember if that's what Sonny got...
CONGRATS about McGill!!! That's so exciting!! Wow, biomath. That sounds really awesome!
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