my chemistry books cost HOW much!?!

$271.50 for a giant book, a solutions manual and an online access code to do homework.  Seriously.

That is, of course, ECC’s price.  So, I’ll be looking elsewhere for those and the rest of my books.  Unfortunately, I won’t have my labs or my psych class until later this week, so I think I’m going to have to do multiple orders online.  I already feel behind and it’s just the first day!

Going back to school has been a bit of an adventure already, and thankfully the butterflies in my stomach were only minimal this morning as I walked into class.

Back-to-school shopping, once a treasured, looked-forward-to event from my childhood, was (as I said earlier) anti-climactic at best last night.  At worst, it was a bit of an argument with Andrew and almost didn’t happen!  I don’t know why I left it for the last minute, but I did, and come on?  I’m almost 30; I didn’t want to make more out of it than I needed to, so I figured we’d pick up some paper and a binder at Target.  It’s not like they wouldn’t have them.

Well…  They didn’t.  The school section was pretty picked-over and Andrew (the almost perpetual student) is picky about his school supplies, and mine apparently.  He wasn’t happy with the selection and my out-of-practice, fighting anxiety self was along for the ride at this point.  We headed to Office Max.

Unfortunately, not every store in America keeps Target’s fantastic business hours, and when we arrived at Office Max, it was closed.  I was feeling pretty lousy at this point, thinking I might have to go to school with an empty backpack.

We headed to Wal-Mart.  I should add here two things:

1. Earlier in the day, Andrew suggested going to Wal-Mart for school supplies.

2. I responded, “I like to enjoy myself when I shop and Wal-Mart just ruins it for me,” or something to that affect.  Andrew laughed, out loud, called me a snob and said I should put that quote on the blog.

I walked into Wal-Mart that night, never quite so happy to be eating my words.  Thankfully, their school section was relatively impressive and only in mild disarray.  At least we went to the newer Wal-Mart in town.

Andrew schooled me (haha, get it?) in the art of school supplies.  He demanded I use notebooks and binders and proceeded to fill the cart with goodies.  I think I only picked out my assignment book, and since I asked his opinion about it, too, I really can’t take much credit for doing any of the school-supply shopping.  What would I do without my engineer?  I guess since he was his high school valedictorian and has THREE degrees to his name (all with minimal effort while typically achieving one of the highest, if not THE highest GPA in the class), it wouldn’t hurt to take his advice about school.  OK, that was pretty gratuitous bragging on Andrew, but I realized this morning I don’t do enough of it.  Love you honey and so glad you actually read my blog 🙂

ANYWAY…

I woke up this morning at the same time I normally do: 5:50-something. Between my internal clock and the dog, I rarely hear my alarm, which was set for 6:15.  I was supposed to be on the treadmill by 6:30, so I didn’t have time for my usual pre-run coffee.  For those who are runners, you know that this threw me off schedule.  Must get up earlier Wednesday; I love the solitude of my mornings and I’ll sacrifice a little sleep for some coffee, a chance to check the email and use the facilities.

Having packed Andrew’s lunch and my snack the night before, as well as my bookbag, all I had to do this morning was run, shower, make breakfasts and blog.  I had plenty of time for all of that, especially since I don’t have to leave until 8:30, a full 45 minutes after Andrew does.  Yet I felt rushed the whole time!  I blame it on nerves.  We’ll see how Wednesday goes.

On to class.  ECC’s South Campus, where I’m taking all my classes this semester, is less than 15 minutes away.  I arrived in plenty of time for my first class, CHEM 180, which is equivalent to CHEM 111, or university chemistry.  Believe it or not, I was actually good at chemistry in high school.  Seriously.  As in I got the highest grade in the class.  I know, right?  I barely believe it, too.  It was only because I had a fantastic teacher and I wanted to do well to impress him.  (Not in a crush kind of way, in a no-one-thinks-I-can-do-well-so-I’m-going-to-show-them kind of way.  Whatever works…)  So, I’m hoping to channel a little of that attitude this time around since the class is going to be CRAZY BUSY/HARD and the teacher seems awesome.  I’m definitely going to need to brush-up on the Periodic Table…I don’t remember a thing and there are practice problems and quizzes and homework assignments all over the place!

My Intro Bio class is next, in the same room (how convenient!) but it’s a whole other story.  The teacher is a short, old, VERY soft-spoken Indian man who seems nice but isn’t nearly as authoritative as he should be.  Especially since there were some loud teeny-boppers chattering away behind me… It was all I could do to not turn around and say something really snarky and rude (yet clever with an ‘older and wiser’ feel), except that I couldn’t think of anything and I’d be afraid they’d make fun of me for the rest of the semester, and that’s when I realized I’m just not cut out to make snarky, rude comments anyway.  But I seriously might say something in the future if they don’t keep it down; we can barely hear the man as it is!

Oh, and the drunk girl!  At least I think so.  Or I hope so.  She basically answered all the professor’s rhetorical questions, out loud, in a sleepy voice with majorly glazed-over eyes.  If that’s her normal behavior, this semester is going to be a long one.  But, I did kind-of make a friend.  I ended up chatting with a guy in front of me who is going to school to be a physical therapist (I think, or a personal trainer…).  He’s not right out of high school (but still much younger than I), so it was a breath of fresh air to talk to someone who didn’t look like they were in pain just being there.

Next up, and last for my Monday schedule, was Anatomy and Physiology.  The teacher is an older, gray-haired lady who obviously has a lot of experience teaching the subject.  She seems like the ‘tough love’ type; she threatened to take anyone’s cell phone she sees, yet included smiley-faces and “You can do this!” notes on her syllabus.  I liked her.  The class will be a lot of work, but it’s not terribly hard.  Mostly just memorization, and I’m interested in learning more about the body.  I mean, it’s my body–shouldn’t I know what the bones are actually called?  Shouldn’t we all, at least to some degree?

So, I’m both overwhelmed and uplifted.  It felt neat walking into school this morning wearing my (new!) backpack, taking my first steps toward something unknown and huge and exciting.  I’ve spent all afternoon scouring the internet for cheap textbooks, when all I really want to do is start reading them!

Andrew and I had planned to go to fancy-schmancy (I LOVE that word) dinner to celebrate my weight-loss and my going back to school, but it’s a bit windy here and our destination involves a table outside, so we’ll postpone that.  Instead, we’re heading to his parents’ house for pizza to celebrate something else: Carolyn got a job!  For those who don’t know, Carolyn is Andrew’s middle sister who got a degree in a teaching and has been unable to find an actual teaching position since graduating a couple years ago….  She’s done pre-school, she’s subbed, she’s worked at Gap and Ulta…  And finally, today, she was offered a teaching position!  The only downside?  It’s an hour away, in Olean.  Oh well, there could be worse things.

Hurray for big days for the both of us!

first day of school!

There’s no turning back now!

While I’d love to tell you all about our school-supply shopping experience last night (anti-climactic at best) and the choosing of my outfit and all about this morning, I have NO TIME to chat now (as you can see by my lack of hair and makeup before Andrew left for work!), but will fill everyone in one how my first day went later today!!  I’m really excited and a lot nervous, but confident at the same time.  Maybe this is what growing up is all about…

Bottom line:  must. get. up. earlier. Wednesday.  I got a run in this morning, but only four miles, so I think I’ll need to tweak the schedule a little.  I HATE rushing in the morning.

Wish me luck!

p.s.  I DID do my hair and makeup before I left…just so everyone knows.

i’m going back to school!

Get comfy, people, this is a LONG one!

This post was supposed to be entitled, “What am I doing with my life?” because when I decided to write about the quandry I was in, I didn’t know what I was going to do with my life.  Hence the question mark.

Boy, can things change in a week or two.  (Speaking of changes…  Be sure to check out the “Meet Holly” tab above.  In honor of my “new” self and future, I updated/changed the “About” tab and gave it a new name.  Let me know what you think!)

I am, in fact, going back to school.  I’ll be pursuing a B.S. in Dietetics from Buffalo State University, and then plan to become a Registered Dietician.  I start classes at Erie Community College Monday to get the core classes, like BIOs and CHEMs, out of the way.  I’ll probably spend two semesters there before heading to Buff State to take the nutrition classes.  This isn’t going to be a short process; I’ll be lucky to finish all the academic work in three years.

My dream job is to be a health food writer.  Ultimately, I’d love to get published in something like Shape or Men’s Health or the like, but would be happy just helping people eat healthier food!  I’ve always seen myself writing long-term, but never quite knew what about.  It’s important to me to have a flexible job/career; we plan on having kids one day and I want to be able to be home more than I’m away.

It all started about three weeks ago when Kath revealed the “R.D. Me” section on her blog, which was basically how she decided to become a Registered Dietician and then how she did it.

Actually, let’s back up.  It started some time in college.  The truth is that it didn’t take me long to realize news writing wasn’t my passion.  (And to be a good reporter, it’s got to be!)  While I wrote for the college paper, I did so half-heartedly.  I didn’t want to be a reporter then and I don’t want to be one now.  In all honesty, I got a Journalism degree because before college my dad said that’s what I should do.  I knew I liked writing and didn’t like math or science.  It was safe and I trusted my dad.  Dad, if you’re reading this, I love you.  Thank you for everything.  I just wish I’d known more about what was out there in the big, wide world before me and my “people-pleaser/I-can’t-quit-anything-self” went off to college.  Who knows where I’d be if it had occurred to me to change my major.  Or even just THINK about changing my major.

Anyway, I digress.

Shortly after graduating from Penn State with my Journalism degree, I remember wishing I’d gone to school for nutrition.  Or creative writing. I just knew writing for a newspaper (at least in the traditional start-at-the-bottom-and-cover-the-midnight-fires-and-shootings) wasn’t it for me. I spent four years in the Air Force working in Public Affairs and as an Exec, using my degree some of the time and learning invaluable professional skills as well.  After I separated (because that wasn’t my passion, either), I took a year off to just relax and enjoy myself and not jump into anything right away.  I realize not working is a foreign concept to some, perhaps most, but Andrew really wanted me to and who’s going to argue with that?  I didn’t know what I wanted to do, but I DID know I didn’t want to just jump into the first Air Force civilian job on base that came my way.  I’m so glad I took the time off; I worked out like crazy, made some great friends and spent a lot of time de-stressing.  And believe it or not, I was quite busy most of the time.  It’s just the kind of person I am.  Between working out, taking care of a husband, animals and our house, cooking, baking, reading, working occasionally at the library and having a full social calendar, I was rarely bored.

During this time (from the time I got stationed in Ohio until we left) I’d lost weight twice (both times by counting calories) and gotten more interested in health and wellness.  I started eating healthier than I’d ever before and worked out with more intensity and purpose as well.  My running improved.  I started cooking and baking as much as I could from scratch, and using only whole foods on my menus.  Making the healthiest food possible became a passion for me.  (I wish I could say Andrew was as excited about healthy eating as I was; I’m still working on him.)

One year was well on its way to two when all of a sudden we were moving.  I’d started to feel like something was missing from my life, a sense of purpose, perhaps, but I’m thankful I wasn’t working before the move from Ohio to New York.

However, after getting settled into our hotel in New York, all those feelings of purposelessness and wasted potential came back with a vengeance.  At least in Ohio I had had a house to take care of; now I was cramped in our hotel, procrastinating on getting my resume and clips together to start looking for freelance writing work.  I’d always talked about wanting to do something with my life, more than just raise our future children and be a housewife.  I wanted those things too; that’s why I always said I wanted to contribute financially without having a traditional 8 a.m.-5 p.m. (or later) kind of job.  Andrew has been pushing me to go to cooking school for years, but I don’t want to be a chef.  I don’t want to have a bakery.  (I’m a morning person, but bakery-morning is too early!)

And that brings me to reading Kath’s R.D. post.  I spent an entire afternoon reading her post (and all the links throughout!) and ended up with a bit of a headache and feeling like there was no way I could do what she did.  She spent 2.5 years going to school and doing an internship, and it just seemed too hard and scary and overwhelming.

That’s when it hit me–I wanted to be a food writer.  All that school seemed so daunting until I envisioned my name with the initials “R.D.” after it in the author’s info section at the end of an article.  I grabbed the nearest magazine, flipped to the front section featuring the bios of the contributors and shoved it under Andrew’s nose.  “That’s what I want to be,” I said to him.  I wanted to be health-food writer.  I think I always knew this is what I wanted to do, I just never knew how to say it.  I mean, who else actually READS the contributor’s bios in magazines but me?

And then I slept on it.  And kept thinking about it.  And started googling about being a nutritionist.  And then I made an appointment to speak with the Nutrition Department Head at the University of Buffalo.  At first I thought maybe getting my master’s in Nutrition was the way to go, but after speaking with Dr. Farkas at UB, I learned that to be an R.D., you’ve got to do the undergrad coursework.  I also learned that while becoming an R.D. would be a lot of “extra” work that I might not need as a food writer, it really is a good plan in terms of opening doors and being the “expert” in the field of nutrition.  Basically, once I’m finished, I can ANYTHING, from working in a hospital or with a school-lunch program to opening my own consulting practice.

And I’m genuinely interested in learning all about food, nutrition and how the body uses food for fuel.  I’m so excited to get smarter about all this stuff!  While I’m a little intimidated by all the science, I think I need a challenge at this point in my life.  I’ve been afraid of going back to school, of failure, of hard classes and rejection for too long; the new me is capable of anything!

Of course, I’m a little anxious about the future, knowing this degree will be like a full-time job for the next three years (not to mention the internship) and a lot can happen in that time.  We’re ready to start a family, at least we thought we were, so that’s something that will be on my mind.  I can’t help but think, though, that maybe there is a reason Andrew and I are here, now, near his family when I start school.  We’ll just take it one semester at a time.  Goodness knows women have done much harder things than go to school and have a baby.

And getting this degree will be a lot different than my first time around at Penn State.  I was an 18-year-old college student who lived in the dorms and had a boyfriend; this time I’m pushing 30, married with a dog and trying to get settled into our new life in New York.  I had wanted to load up on classes (think 18 credits) to get going as quickly as possible, but then thought maybe easing my way in with fewer credits might be wiser, something like 12 credits.  I ended up smack-dab in the middle with 15 credits this semester, and think that my schedule of all sciences and one night Psych lecture will be perfect.

Going back to school also honors my late-grandfather.  When he died, each of his 20+ grandchildren got a lump of money, and it was important to me to use it on something intangible, like school.  He (and his wife, my grandmother) were both Ph.Ds in Chemistry and highly valued education.  I can’t think of a better way to use the money he left behind.

And let’s not forget back-to-school shopping!  And I don’t mean the clothes–the supplies!  (Although I suppose my recent Goodwill purchases in Ohio with Susy could be construed as “new” school clothes…)  My favorite part of summer was always just before school started when mom and I went to get notebooks and paper and pens.  While not quite the same as growing up, I’m looking forward to making a Target run with Andrew to pick up a binder or two and some paper.  I already treated myself to the backpack I’ve wanted since college… (I was too cheap to spend the extra $30 to get the one I wanted and have regretted it to this day–lesson learned!)

Here’s to going back to school–this time as the older, smarter, wiser version of me who knows EXACTLY what she wants!