I stand by the harbor,
scanning the horizon.
Nothing. Nothing. And nothing again.
(It is hard not to be
hyper-dramatic when there is no one to say, “Stop being hyper-dramatic.” The blessing and drawback of blog-writing: No one keeps you sensibly in check.)
Okay. (After that
italicized introduction.)
This time last year, I was packing for Oxford. A week of magical
residence at Christchurch College, housed in a venerable dorm room, going to
classes, taking thrice-daily repast in the hallowed “Great Hall,” of Harry Potter acclaim, as if it weren’t sufficiently famous, which it is.
I had gained inclusion to this unique opportunity by the
proverbial “hair.” I was originally rejected,
my inability to “scan” my Application Form during the determining first hour of
“Sign-Up” leaving its subsequent arrival too late. Despite help from a younger family member
later that same day, I received a formalized “Sorry, no”, in administrative response.
I was crestfallen. I
really wanted to go.
Finally, months after, ironically, Dr. M’s acceptance (after her original rejection)
to “Four Hundred Years of English Gardening”, I received the belated emailed
announcement that I was in. (I later discovered that, denied the
appropriate paperwork, an invitee from Myanmar was forced to drop out, my fortunate
inclusion arising from a Myanmarian stranger’s bad luck.)
(During my “purgatorial” vigil on the “Waiting List”, hoping
to draw chuckling attention with “Colonial silliness”, I had emailed them regularly,
requesting substitute placement, should some accepted candidate “drop out, die,
or decide to attend Cambridge instead.”
I like to think that that helped.
Though perhaps I was just “Next on the list.”)
An alternate storyline:
I was “Fated” to attend Oxford. Another pleasing scenario: “Fates”, displaying
personalized behavior.
“Let’s give it to him.”
“Okay.”
Here’s where my
fantasies kick in. (Though the preceding
may be fantasy as well.)
Using my rich and fertile imagination, I pretended – not
overtly, but spontaneously naturally – that I was really at Oxford.
Not as a casual
vacationer, taking “puff-ball” courses like “The Beatles” or “Great English
Murder Mysteries” but as a “serious academic”, taking “Political Thinking in
the Twentieth Century.” (My alternate
selection, after the equally meaty “Ideas of Freedom.”) I yearned to exceed the contrived trappings of
The Oxford Experience. I ached
to be actually at school!
And that’s exactly how I behaved.
I read the assigned textbooks months before classes began,
“Sharpie-ing” salient points and creasing corners of pages. When we finally convened, I asked cascades of questions. I listened.
I learned. My unearthed bias and
ignorance on glorious display. That was
valuable too. I was a student.
Studying political thinking. And my unrecognized self.
In retrospect, it is possible my Oxford Experience stemmed more from my eager imaginings than what
its providers honestly intended, taking the proceedings more seriously than they
ever conceptually had in mind.
I saw the event as “Fantasy Camp for Thinkers.” But perhaps it was, in fact, just “Disneyland
for Dreamers.”
It now occurs to me that I have, though not deliberately, over-extended
my set-up, leaving “To Be Continued” the inevitable interim result.
On second thought, perhaps I did do it deliberately. I
loved my Oxford experience so much that,
maybe unconsciously purposefully, I held back delineating the “letdown”, allowing
me to recall that memorable week a little longer the way I want to.
And not, perhaps, the way it actually was.
TO BE CONTINUED…
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