Archive for April, 2010

135. touch me with your pretty fingers

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Today I officially left NUCA, and I can’t tell you how good that feels.

I may have mentioned that I was thinking of leaving the art school, and that it was no real hidden fact that I disliked NUCA, partly down to everything else that has making me feel low, but I’ve never explained in full what made me finally decide to leave. So be prepared for possibly the longest thing I’ve ever written on here, but it will probably do me good to try and explain it as clearly as I possibly can.

Ultimately, I am the one paying to attend NUCA. It is not compulsory I am there, nor is it anyone’s choice but mine. I control if I am there or not, but I was not happy there, and I am certain I wasn’t getting anything beneficial out of it. I mean, of course, I’m learning, but I don’t think I was learning anything that was particularly beneficial to me or what I wanted to do. I am positive that amongst my peers, each one of us wanted different things out of the course, and wanted to take different routes within photography, but I was not being taught to be the kind of photographer I wanted to be, or the photos I wanted to take.

I’m not awful at photography, and there was a time when I enjoyed it, because I chose to do it as a degree course, and I had fun working the concepts and editing photos, and I couldn’t have been too bad at taking photos either because I wouldn’t have been accepted at NUCA otherwise. I was extremely motivated – in sixth form I wrote my 5,000 word essay in 2 hours because I was so into what I was doing with my creative processes, but slowly my motivation dropped whilst being at the art school.

I feel like what I’m being “taught” in classes is not only pointless, but is all stuff we could figure out ourselves anyway. Hand on my heart; I don’t feel as if I’ve learnt a single thing since being there. I am self taught in all the photo-editing programs I use, using my camera, doing my own research, retouching etc., and really does being told to go out and take photos of Norwich over and over constitute as being taught anything? If I wanted to go out and take photos of Norwich, I’m certain I could go out and do that off my own back. With my course, I feel there’s no room for creativity. You’re given an assignment, such as “take photos of Norwich for a brochure/postcard/interactive CD rom (which, by the way are obsolete in terms of modern media)”, a project which there is little to no scope for creativity or skill – these photos are to be informative, not ‘fancy’, for want of a better expression. We go and do them, and then they critique them along with my other classmates, and then give another assignment which is equally as constricting in terms of creativity.  Our tutor’s can’t literally teach us to become better photographers, all they can do is tell us how we can take better photos next time round, and being frank, I can look at my own images and critique them and think about what I could do to improve them next time around. Do I really need to pay just over £6,000 a year for this?

Of course, I acknowledge that my tutors knowledge and critique are helpful to the projects I am doing, but the projects themselves are not beneficial to me or the photographer I wanted to be, which means really that the tutors are not very helpful to me, as a photographer. If I graduated from NUCA today, I could look back and say “I still am no further in understanding or knowing more that would have helped me, career wise.”, and being two thirds into my degree, I don’t think that is going to change.

Aside from that, I don’t feel comfortable at NUCA. I have been there for almost 2 years now, and I still feel like I don’t belong. I had two very good friends there, but they have since left due to not liking NUCA also. I don’t particularly love my classmates, I only know a handful of people at the school and I can only call them acquaintances. If anything, I have a few enemies, thanks to the childish antics of one ex-student, making my 2nd year in critiques awkward. That doesn’t make for an inviting atmosphere. I don’t feel comfortable amongst my peers, so I don’t feel comfortable in my school, and I don’t feel comfortable in my class. Without sounding offensive or odd, I am not like anyone there, and I have not seen anybody there who I feel I could get on with at more than an acquaintance level. The amount of work I get in my classes, juggled with the travelling I do to get there (meaning 6:30am starts and I often go to bed around 2:30am to get work done for the next day) means I am left feeling exhausted and overworked, with no motivation to do the work I have. This leads me to procrastinate, so I can actually have a bit of a life and do what I want to do without it being consumed entirely by NUCA that is making me miserable, which eventually leads to more stress, because I have a lot of work piled up. I’ve tried for the past 6 months to try and ‘suck it up’, but there’s only so much faking you can do before you can accept that no matter how hard you try, you are not going to be happy here. Being here has sucked all the enthusiasm I had for photography, and no longer want to do this for a career. I have been thinking this for a while now.

I kind of feel like that not only am I wasting money, but I am also wasting time. Time that could be spent doing other things that make me happy. I am young enough to cut my losses and start again, career wise. But most importantly, I can then give myself the time needed to focus on and fix the other aspects in my life that are making me unhappy. The only thing I would regret more than dropping out and wondering if I made a bad decision is staying at NUCA and realising next year that I completely wasted all that time, energy and money putting myself through so much stress, anxiety and unhappiness to the point that it made me physically sick and never wanting to get out of bed.

At this point, I’m not even sure if a BA degree will make me any more successful. Realistically, if I still wanted to pursue a career in photography, I would need more than just a degree, I would also need a good portfolio. However, I don’t think I could have a good portfolio based on the fact I haven’t advanced at all. At this point I should say that I gave up on the idea of being a photographer in the summer of my first year at NUCA, but instead I thought I could improve on my hobby and also gain a degree out of it, which is what I was more interested in getting than the course itself. I wanted something to outshine just about average grades and little work experience. I felt that if I had a degree, it would excuse a lot of that, and I could say that I have achieved something. I’m not even sure if I wanted to go to a university, not completely. We had lectures in sixth form from guest speakers from other universities telling us how great university was, and it made sense to go and further my education. I did it all without really thinking about it. I applied, I got in, I started going. I never stopped to think about if it was what I wanted. Now I think I could progress more and feel more of a sense of achievement not being in school.

I no longer take photos in my spare time; there is too much pressure and grief associated with it, because NUCA is sapping all the enthusiasm from me. It’s sad to think about that when I do have free time, I no longer want to do something I once enjoyed. I feel this way about a lot of things but I know that my passion for photography was definitely flattened by the art school.

I don’t think this is an issue of changing my degree, if I could rewind the past two years, I probably would have picked a different university and course, but I’ve since learnt that it’s just not a case of changing degree, I genuinely feel that university just isn’t for me.

Most importantly, I just want to be happy, and right now I think that even if I got a small part time job so that I’m able to pay bills and keep and figure out what it is will make me happy, will make me feel a thousand times better than I would being at university. Those that I have spoken to about leaving have been very supportive towards me and I feel that there would be no pressure of disappointment from these people, which is a relief as it had worried me when I first started thinking about leaving. I wouldn’t say I regretted going, I made a really good friend there and there is a small feeling of satisfaction knowing I was smart enough to get into a dedicated art university, and I feel like I’ve learnt a lot about myself by being there, but perhaps I don’t need to be there as much as I thought I did.

University isn’t for everyone, especially an art university, but I fail to see the point of going anymore when I’ve come to hate what I’m studying. I see no point in me wasting time, money that could be better spent and fighting mountains of anxiety, sadness, stress and exhaustion every day just for a diploma, because that’s all I’m really doing it for. As nice as it would be to have a degree, I just feel physically and mentally exhausted and I don’t think I can give any more time to NUCA. The cons outweigh the pros.

So long NUCA, and thanks for all the debt.

♥: Relieved
♪: !!! – There’s No Fucking Rules, Dude

134. tilling my own grave to keep me level.

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

Over the weekend I reactivated my Facebook. I had originally decided that I was going to reactivate it, and then keep a separate account with only close family and friends on it, but apparently that’s against the Facebook rules. So my new plan was to reactivate my Facebook account… and never look at the news feed. Which worked fine for about 3 hours until I decided I wanted to read over 300 news feed stories, and of course Ben cropped up in there and I got annoyed and remembered why I wasn’t going to look at my news feed in the first place. So I’m back, but if you need my attention or want me to see an update in particular, you’ll need to let me know, as I’m not going to see it – I just go straight to my profile. :)

My antivirus also expired this week. I anticipated this happening so I installed this years version of the program I use, and interestingly when I went to boot up my PC yesterday, a notification popped up telling me that my antivirus had unpinned my current browser, Internet Explorer 8, in favour of me well, picking a better one. This put me out of joint a bit as despite the stick it gets, IE8 isn’t a bad browser, and it still holds over 50% usage share of web browsers. I like using it. But since my antivirus went to all the trouble of unpinning it from my task bar for me (:|) I’d have a look at a couple of the other browsers around, and what I decided to use ended up shocking me quite a bit… Safari. The Mac browser.

Anybody that knows me well knows that I loathe and detest Mac/Apple with a reasonable passion, so now I feel I should justify not only my reasons for picking Safari, but also how I actually feel about Macs and Apple on the whole.  My problem with Apple isn’t so much software based (I’ve used iTunes for some time now), or even with their products, it’s Mac users and the pretension that follows them. For a start, they call people who work in Mac stores ‘Geniuses’ – is that not pretension at it’s finest? I don’t believe these people are geniuses at all, and certainly not for choosing to own/or support Mac products. When they win Nobel prizes, I will consider them Geniuses. Until then, they are glorified shop assistants. When you break it down, a lot of Apple/Mac products are only bought because people think it’s the ‘cool’ thing to do, because they’re brainwashed into thinking they’re the best thing since sliced bread. One Mac freak (despite him claiming not to be) I know described a Mac as ‘miracle of modern engineering‘. Yeah. I know. But what exactly makes them so special? Macs are the only computers available at Uni because they are supposedly ‘industry standard’ and Adobe products, i.e. Photoshop supposedly runs better on them. Says who? If you have an older macbook, vs a shit-hot PC, of course it’s going to run better on the PC. All the programs available for the Mac are available for the PC and really the PC has a damn sight more available for it. I really hate that Mac always seems to beat down PC’s and make them sound awful (the Mac vs PC adverts) comes to mind, but if they are so awful, why do all modern day Macs come equipped with Intel chips? Surely that just makes them overpriced, when you think you can buy a laptop with the exact same specifications at the same price? The same applies with all Apple products really. Everybody runs to the iPod and the iPhone, thinking that because it is an Apple product, it must be the best. No. It’s got to a point now where Apple can bring out any product and people will fawn over it just because it’s an Apple product. iPad, anyone? Upgrades are no different really. You pay around £90 for Apple RAM (a quick google search tells me this, I may be wrong but I know it’s not cheap) and then you have to get one of the aforementioned “Geniuses” to get them to install it, in comparison to a PC where you can install the RAM yourself, and for about £20. Ridiculous.

Anyway. I’m not explaining my argument well (to grasp a better idea of what I mean, google Charlie Brooker’s ‘I hate Macs’ article. He shares pretty much the same views as me and that makes him a thousand times hotter to me.)

As for my browser choice. With Internet Explorer out of the equasion, for me it was down to Firefox, Google Chrome or Safari. Firefox was automatically ruled out, a) because I’ve already used it and I’m not that bothered by it, and b) It bothers me that everybody thinks I SHOULD use it, therefore I must. I downloaded both Google Chrome and Safari, and the reason why I decided against Google Chrome is because I don’t like the lack of Google search bar (I’m aware that it’s built into the address bar, but I don’t what my URL history to be hindered by my searches for ‘Michael Weston naked’ and ‘Megan Fox is minging’ etc.) plus I felt that the address bar was a bit too big and reminded me of Comic Sans MS. Safari, whilst I admit it’s not as quick as Google Chrome (but I’m in no rush. It’s only the internet! My life doesn’t depend on a fast website loading speed) it’s a lot neater in design and takes up less room, meaning I can optimise screen space. Can’t be bad.

I also joined up to FormSpring the other day. If anyone fancies leaving me a question, anonymous or otherwise, you can do so here.

My inductions start tomorrolo. Nervouuuus!

♥: Nervous
♪: Unreal Tournament OST – Strider

133. do you remember the first time?

Sunday, April 18th, 2010

Word! It’s been a pretty busy fortnight so I’ll try and recap on everything that I’ve done in the past fortnight;

So last Thursday (8th) I had my interview for the job I mentioned in my previous post. I think it went really well!  The interview was held with a different person than expected, which through me off a little bit, but overall it was okay, it felt much less like an inquisition than the previous job interview I had gone for in summer. I was told at the interview that it’s very hard to score an interview at their company, so to even have got to that stage was an achievement, which increased my confidence and I think that helped in the interview too. I left feeling very positive.

On the Saturday (10th) I met up with Emma and her friend Miyuki, who was staying with her and showing her around Norwich for the weekend. We went for lunch at a resturant called ‘Sakura’, which is a Japanese 焼き肉 (‘Yakiniku’ or Barbeque) restaurant where you are given bite sized portions of food and you cook it on a grill that is in the centre of the table. Because you’re cooking the food yourself, it’s pretty basic food (grilled meat/fish/vegetables with sides of rice, miso soup, pickles etc.) which some people may not like, but I think it makes up for that in ‘fun’ factor. It’s definitely more of a social event plus it’s fun and cheap (my meal cost £6 altogether, including a drink) so I’d definitely go again. It was nice to catch up with Emma for a bit and I’m looking forward to seeing her in June. After lunch with Emma, I had to go home as I was helping to babysit my six-month-old niece Natasha (I call her Nash for short) for the night. I was looking forward to helping look after Nash, but oh my God what an eyeopener it was. Babies are so demanding! They’re always farting, pooing, (sometimes) crying and puking. More specficially… puking on me. Up until then I’d wanted three children, all within a two or three year age gap of each other. Totally thinking otherwise, now. They are so high matainence that I would wait at least 5 years inbetween now (so whilst one is at school, I can deal with the other, ha!) and maybe only have 2 instead. I’m a very clean person and I don’t like being dirty so I don’t think I could stand being a parent in that aspect. But I suppose when it’s your own kid you don’t mind too much, do you? I still wouldn’t exactly be thrilled, though.

Now onto this week! On Monday lunchtime…. I got a call telling me that I got the job! :D So now the job is mine I can say a little bit more about it; It’s at Sainsburys, but I’m not working on the tills, it is a pharmacy position. Initially I am just a customer assistant but I will be given the oppourtunity to train up so that I can have more pharmaceutical responsibilities and I hope I will be lucky enough to be offered the oppourunity to train and learn a Pharmacy NVQ and make a career out of this as I’ve been interested in a medical career ever since I was in hospital last year. But we’ll see. It’s just early days at the moment, I am only working part time in the evenings! But that’s fine, I didn’t want to rush straight into a full time job, after having difficulties with anxiety and stress, I worry a full time would be jumping from the frying pan into the fire. At least this way I can go at my own pace, and as I build my confidence again, work my way up to more hours, full time, and then hopefully a career. It’s funny to think though, I never imagined ever becoming a (potential) pharmacist for a career! But I like the sound of it. :)  I start my induction this Friday so spare me a thought if you will!

This Thursday, I decided I was sick of my hair (again!) and I wanted it darker, so I have dyed it what the bottle described as ‘Intense Dark Brown’ …it’s so intense it’s virtually black, haha. But I like it! I wish it was my natural hair colour. :( You can see a picture of it on the left. I’ve blacked out my eyes because the photo had really bad camera shake and it made my eyes look pretty much psychotic. D: In the evening I met with Freya for a few drinks. I don’t see Freya all that often now because she goes to university at Brighton, so like with Emma I only see her when she’s back for holidays etc. But it was good seeing her; what I love most about out friendship is that we can go for months and months without speaking to each other, but we can always pick up where we left off, and theres never any need to try hard. She has been a real catharsis for me over the past few months whilst I have tried to deal with the Ben situation as best I can, and it was something she said to me which really struck a chord with me when we were drinking on Thursday – she reads this blog and she commented that she read that I felt I was alone with everything that had been going on and one of the main reasons she got back in touch is because she knew I wasn’t alone, and she wanted me to know that. And that was really, really sweet. So seeing that she reads this – I love you, and thank you for everything, seriously. <3

On Friday (getting there now!) I went shopping with my mum for her birthday presents, but also to go to have a meal to celebrate me getting my job. We went to Threeways, which is a Lebonese restuarant. Unlike most restaurants we tend to go to, it’s not a chain restuarant, and is family ran. I’ve never had Lebonese food before but OH.MY.GOD. the food is amazing! I’m so in love with Lebonese food right now. Me and my mum shared a meal for two (though it could have easily fed three) consisting of chargrilled chicken, hummous, garlic sauce, Lebonese pickles, Lebonese salad and baklava for dessert. All the food tasted so fresh, it was reasonably cheap and it was pretty healthy stuff too. TOTALLY comes first for favourite food now. If you’ve never tried it before, I’d seriously recommend it. HUNGRY I HAVE BECOME! Also I finally sorted out iTunes, like 5 months after reformating my computer. It’s nice to have my music back. :|

I think that’s all for now, finally! Haha. I should have another biggish update soon. Await it.

♥: Itchy.
♪: 2 Bullet – Pray For Me

132. constant tyrannical thought.

Friday, April 2nd, 2010

I am only updating really to mention that I have a job interview on Thursday. I don’t want to give too much away or get my hopes up too much, but it would be nice if I got it. Anybody reading, please keep your fingers crossed for me. Apart from that; I haven’t done much. I reactivated my Facebook a couple of days ago, but got extremely nervous and paranoid moments after, and put it back to it’s deactivated state. Now I’m not certain of when I will be back. I try to stop thinking by playing a lot of Left 4 Dead 2. It’s become almost a ritual now.


To end this mostly pointless post, I need to add that I am hideously infatuated with Michael Weston. If anyone is an avid House fan then they will probably know him as Lucas Douglas. His scruffy stubble/hair/blue eyes combo makes me want to strangle a mountain ox. Mmmf.

♥: Tipsy.
♪: Evanescence – Haunted