Who's this guy?

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Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
It's the story about the steriotypical struggle of a slightly dense yet dashing, young college student and the day by day trials that come with being a slightly dense yet dashing college student. Full of excitment, drama, and a hobo named Ernie. Each day new surprises that only such a tale can bring, tune in for new updates every week, or month....or whenever. So why am I now entering the wonderful world of blogging? I don't really have much to say. Im not overly opinionated, political minded or preachy. I'm just a big advocate for journal writing and keeping good memories in a place you can find them. Unfortunatly I'm also very lazy so I need to do it in a way that keeps my attention. I figure that telling my thoughts and experiences to the world every once in a while might just do the trick. That's all you need to know so don't expect too much from me, just enough.

Sunday, April 6, 2014

The Proposal


        I do realize it's been a little while but I have a good excuse I promise. I'm not one to talk about relationships openly. I like to keep those things to myself for the most part. I would even go so far as to say I passionately hate all the attention Facebook status updates get, good or otherwise, when they deal with relationships. Many people just aren't good at offering the appropriate kind of sympathy for a breakup and I don't care to hear every couple announce to the world how much they like each other routinely three times a week. Not to mention when someone says the relationship is complicated. You're either dating or you're not and settling on that explanation tends to make me not want to associate with that person.
People like attention too much these days and when they lack talent or presence they resort to some pretty depressing ways to garner it.

        All that aside it can be uplifting and healthy to hear people's support for you during big changes in your life. Everyone needs a support group and mine is pretty spectacular (which is why I chose to involve those specific people in the more personal parts of my life in the first place).
Their advice is heart felt and blunt.
They don't make the situation about them.
They distract me when I need my mind off of something.
They listen patiently to me vent but keep me optimistic.
And they are happy when I'm happy.
It's obvious why they are my confidants because I know that they care and are trustworthy. I hope I fit that bill for others as I actively try to.

        There are some things that are forced to quickly shift from the realm of personal to public whether we like it or not. Take marriage for example (I'm getting married by the way). A huge part of the marriage ceremony is a welcoming of a newly formed family into the community. The community celebrates them and they become an integral part of it. Everyone is excited and everyone takes part. It's not something you can easily and shamelessly keep a secret from all those in your life. And as I promised years ago I wouldn't let the Internet know about every relationship I've been in but I would let them know when I was engaged. So- 
I'm engaged.

        The how we met story and the proposal story are very much involved with each other so lucky we can kill two birds with one stone here. Considering the fun I have creating these blog posts and the fact that she enjoys reading them I decided to make a Walgreens picture book similar to one of my posts that I could use to ask her. Much like me she doesn't like big productions involving lots of people and lots of eyes on her so an intimate idea made more sense. I also wanted to create something that told our story in a fun way she would like. Thinking I had a couple weeks I decided to write a poem outlining the important parts of our relationship with the pictures but after working on it a couple days she unconsciously dropped a three day deadline on me because her and her family were traveling down to Utah for a funeral. Against all odds the book was finished and I traveled up there to see everyone.

        Now I know what you're thinking. No, the plan was not to propose at her grandmother's funeral. My sense of humor isn't that morbid. As we are LDS the plan was to get married in the Bountiful Temple so I thought it would be fun to ask her there. It would also be a special place that I could talk her into visiting without arousing too much suspicion. Upon arriving there we found a private place and read the book together. It was a huge relief to finally put the ring on her finger and things couldn't have turned out more perfectly. I wanted her to know how important she is to me with something that she can read often as a reminder. The wedding cannot get here fast enough. She is a miracle and I love her dearly. I wish this happiness on everyone else who is still waiting to find their perfect complement. Understand that the patience will pay off. Below are some pages from the book but the quality of the copies are low which makes the poem a little hard to read. Each segment is included below the pages.
Don't laugh (or at least don't tell me you laughed, I wouldn't know otherwise).


For most of my life
I've had one main concern.
One thought that weighed on my mind.

One thought that dictated every move
and how I carefully spent all of my time.

A desire that's disguised as a great many things
and hides behind all aspiration.

It defines our success much better than grades,
or fame, money and station.

This success can bring us happiness
more than anything we own

and perhaps the most frustrating part
is we cannot find it alone.

For this reason we search and manage our lives
to find with whom we belong

Who will give us the chance
to have that success we've wanted for so long.



At a time when the search was weighing me down
and I decided to stop and rest
I met a girl who's potential was masked,
who's value I could not have guessed.



The one thing I thought
was I might regret
not staying in contact with her.

I asked for her number
as she walked out the door,
my desired outcome unsure.

I messaged her once,
she didn't reply.
I put it out of my mind.

Until contact restored
by a misplaced text
made me anxiously want
to rewind.

For weeks we conversed
solely through text
as I worked through the Halloween season.
Hoping that this was a worthy pursuit,
optimistic but keeping to reason.

She couldn't have guessed
that this prospect
with whom she would spend her days
would be a guy who dressed like a sociopath
and worked scaring kids in a maze.




When the job ended
my nights were freed up
I took courage to see her anew.

After dinners and gifts,
conversations and games,
she saw what this was turning into.


Then came the night she gave me a scare
when she said she wanted to talk.
Until she said she liked what this was
and I was Not on the chopping block.
So many things I see every day
remind me of that minute-
where she made it so clear her intention and fear
showing her heart was in it.


When I thought for sure she'd written me off
and she thought she'd come on too strong-
We were both relieved to uncover the truth
that the conclusions we drew were wrong.


I thought the first kiss might be better received
with Nutella smeared on my face.

and the fact that we've shared many more after that
makes me think this was probably the case.

To tell somebody that you love them a lot
is not uncomfortable, weird or taboo
but for me to tell someone
I was IN love with them
was scary, unnerving and new.
The end of relations with others were hard.
They brought sadness and injured my pride,
but I never suffered a broken heart
and this made me scared to confide.
There were no doubts, I knew how I felt,
I'd held my tongue long enough.
I didn't expect her to say it back at the time
but waiting to hear it was rough.
She waited until the new year dawned
and in her own special way
Made a list of ten reasons she loved me as well.
A gift I still have today.

Despite the hardship long distance creates
it made our goals apparent,
and her humble desire to be a missionary
made her character transparent.
She fits so well into my life
I see obvious, divine intervention.
I'm grateful for her every day that goes by,
a fact I should often mention.
Love at first sight would not describe
how this all began to transpire.
She ignited a spark instead of light
a raging, fairy tail fire.
Feelings once small augmented with time
steadily, constant and sure
into a deep and honest love-
genuine, strong and secure.
That's how I hope the future will be
forging bit by bit.
A tether to bind us faithfully
and never let us quit.
As we build a future and depend on each other
to conquer pain and strife.
To this wonderful girl I offer all of my Love
Loyalty and Life.















































































Wednesday, January 1, 2014

What did you learn at school today?


           The lesson a teacher may intend to teach is not always the lesson a student will choose to learn. Such is the case when it comes to my class's labs this past semester. I've noticed certain interesting and possibly disturbing themes accompanying each one. Lets discuss them, it's not like we have anything better to do.


         There was a wide range of borderline fun experiments we were assigned to do for my Physics 106 lab. Most of which involved the behavior of light which called for many hours staring out windows through various instruments. Whether it was a make shift telescope or a hand held spectrometer it was to the windows we went to test them out. Considering the campus was still alive with students hustling around it was not uncommon to catch ourselves studying them instead of a frozen bush or a brick wall. Not to mention we were expected to record every little observation into notebook for future reference. We watched, analyzed and recorded every detail of the scenes we watched from afar.                                                                              

Lesson learned from Physics lab: 
How to be a spy





          O Chem was a bit different. As with most Chemistry labs it is fairly common sense that some of, if not all, the chemicals you will be handling will be less than healthy. Some are actually quite dangerous. You have to take and pass a safety test before you're allowed to participate in the lab for heaven sake.The funny thing was just how deadly my teacher made everything sound. Pain and cancer was around every corner. Naturally I was doubling up on rubber gloves and each lab took twice as long as it should due to being overly careful. The only time I ever had any carcinogens miss their mark was because my teacher spilled them on me during a demonstration. I have yet to keel over dead but that doesn't mean I've given up on the legitimacy of my fear.


Lesson learned from O Chem lab: How to be paranoid


         Probably my favorite would have to be my Physiology lab. Arguably it was 2 and a half hours of torture once a week, and not in the sarcastic sense. I've already talked about how rewards can change the way we feel about circumstances so at the time I didn't think too much about it but in retrospect it could easily be described as torturous. 

         Over the course of the semester they made us sweat, bleed, suffocate, drown, starve, freeze, and publicly humiliated us. We were electrocuted, stabbed by pointy things and had to eat and drink some rather unsavory things. 

In scientifically sound detail we:

-Endured breathing into a lung capacity measuring device until we were on the verge of passing out.

-Stimulated muscles until the tetanus threshold was reached with electrodes.

-Vigorously rode an exercise bike or held our breath with our head in ice water to see effects on heart rate.                                                      

-Drew blood to find hematocrit and blood type.

-Didn't eat anything all day on three separate occasions to measure fasting glucose levels or kidney filtration rates. (I like food.)

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=10152273637034622
 -Drank saline and urinated into a cup every 15 minutes until I could no longer pee until the next day regardless of how much I drank. (We had to carry our cup of urine through the halls of the Benson from the bathroom to our class. By the end there was no shame between me and my classmates.)

-Pricked my finger 6 times to measure blood glucose after eating an uncomfortable amount of dehydrated mashed potatoes.

-Had to show off our public speaking skills with a strictly judged oral presentation.

-(probably worst of all) Were forced to wait. In between many of the measurements our patience was tested as we sat hungry and bored with nothing to do.


         I'm not even going to mention the lab reports we had to write about each one or my diabetes scare but looking back the list of unpleasant things we had to do is lengthy. In the end it was all worth letting everyone know everything about the inner workings of my body and get to know all of them much more than I thought necessary. Why? Because I passed the class. And in the end that's all that matters (except for the other important parts of course, they matter too I guess).

Lesson learned from Physiology lab: How to be a sadist


       Yes I know this post doesn't have anything to do with Christmas or the new year....but I don't care. Maybe 2014 will be better. Happy new year er'body!