When will I ever get rid of my inferiority complex?
Wednesday, August 21, 2013
Saturday, August 10, 2013
Ardour
There's something that I've been telling myself. During my time in NS, I should be accomplishing all that I didn't get a chance to do during my school years. The initial 4 months of "rush to wait and wait to rush" has made me pretty fed up with the Singapore army. Why is it that before every activity we always have to gather 1 hour beforehand and go through all those redundant conducting briefs? I somewhat convinced myself that it was not worth the time to "make something out of my NS life" and ended up pretty satisfied with my current vocation. However, I realized that even with so much time, half of my time is spent idling and playing computer games. This is perhaps due to the fact that there are limits to the human brain. I can't read more than ~15 pages of bridge squeezes complete in 1 day. Looking back at my 5 hours of studying each day before A levels, this is still a something reasonable. However, the difference lies in interest. Even during my recruit days, I enjoyed reading the book on imaginary numbers by Nahin, which taught me a whole bunch of interesting things such as Green's theorem and contour integration. There is even the wedge product thing of dxdy = -dydx which I have yet to understand. Online sources don't explain with clarity like textbooks do. But I have little interest in reading stuff like thermodynamics and game theory (maybe a bit more of this but the author of the mathematical game theory book doesn't explain his formulas properly). Coupled with the need to do SAT practices, I hardly bother to read these books after a "tiring" (not really physical but it's annoying to wake up early) day of work.While I am still wondering if my choice to study Chemical Engineering is right, I can hardly tell that choosing mathematics would be better. No lecturer would bother to explain the ideas properly. Thus, I would probably be learning facts as magic rules rather than assessing them critically.
There's something that has been bugging after I have left school. Where did my ardour disappear to? Back then, I had to wake up early, attend lessons/CCA, leaving school at 7 and reaching home at 8.30. There were no complaints, just a conviction that everything was worthwhile. In retrospect, some additional things made a significant difference, while others didn't. It's perhaps due to a realization after watching "The Girl in a Pinafore", that I've sacrificed way too much, for a future that I never wanted. Yes, I had my egoism and grabbed whatever opportunities that were placed before me (and weren't given to the potential president scholars), but I now feel that I've been digging into a bottomless pit. There is no end to the amount of academic accolades that one can achieve, but an end to the amount of satisfaction that the achiever obtains. (Law of diminishing marginal returns XD) Perhaps I've been around smart people too often, that I see that people's lives somehow end after education. (Those esteemed gods that make it into the Ivy League somehow end up as teachers)
It is perhaps because I foresee this future that I want to seek a new path in life. I don't want my life to end here. But now that I'm given so much time, and yet still doing so little. Would I ever find something that would revive my ardour that once had such a magnificent blaze?
There's something that has been bugging after I have left school. Where did my ardour disappear to? Back then, I had to wake up early, attend lessons/CCA, leaving school at 7 and reaching home at 8.30. There were no complaints, just a conviction that everything was worthwhile. In retrospect, some additional things made a significant difference, while others didn't. It's perhaps due to a realization after watching "The Girl in a Pinafore", that I've sacrificed way too much, for a future that I never wanted. Yes, I had my egoism and grabbed whatever opportunities that were placed before me (and weren't given to the potential president scholars), but I now feel that I've been digging into a bottomless pit. There is no end to the amount of academic accolades that one can achieve, but an end to the amount of satisfaction that the achiever obtains. (Law of diminishing marginal returns XD) Perhaps I've been around smart people too often, that I see that people's lives somehow end after education. (Those esteemed gods that make it into the Ivy League somehow end up as teachers)
It is perhaps because I foresee this future that I want to seek a new path in life. I don't want my life to end here. But now that I'm given so much time, and yet still doing so little. Would I ever find something that would revive my ardour that once had such a magnificent blaze?
Posted by (For you to find out) at 11:35 PM 0 comments
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