This is a Journal entry by IMSoP - Safely transferred to the 5th (or 6th?) h2g2 login system
Why I don't like Things
IMSoP - Safely transferred to the 5th (or 6th?) h2g2 login system Started conversation Oct 24, 2003
For some reason, Things are currently the most ridiculously busy day of the week for me... [if that sentence doesn't seem to make sense, you'd better look at A516647]
During the day, I have a 3-hour Psychology seminar from 10:00 till 13:00, followed by another one from 13:15 till 16:15! Admittedly, they have breaks, and don't always run their full length, but ...
Then, its back for dinner in time to get to the Sci-Fi society at 19:00 (a chance to see cheesy TV series, cool films, and catch up with old mates). Alternatively, however, there's Comedy Club at the Union - which would, apparently, give me the chance to bump into some even *older* mates. And that's when there isn't an interesting film at the Film Theatre, or some kind of event in town, or...
It's jsut weird, cos the rest of the week seems to be so spread out and laid-back I sometimes wonder what to do with myself!
Actually, next weekend seems to be having the same problem - I'm going home, that's not in question: I've booked my ticket, and have entertainments arranged cos it's my birthday shortly after . But I now discover that that weekend is the Sci-Fi soc.'s "marathon" night. Plus, I just got an e-mail advertising a "People & Planet Conference" which actually sounds quite interesting - although I'm intrigued by the idea of it including "An Interactive fringe programme" [a hair-Net, perhaps? ]
Ah, well, interesting events are like (or somethursday like that...)
[IMSoP]
"You win some, you lose some; such is life..."
Key: Complain about this post
Why I don't like Things
More Conversations for IMSoP - Safely transferred to the 5th (or 6th?) h2g2 login system
Write an Entry
"The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is a wholly remarkable book. It has been compiled and recompiled many times and under many different editorships. It contains contributions from countless numbers of travellers and researchers."