Sometimes I still find it hard to imagine that a few years ago, I was a student in college, dreading thesis defense and partying till the wee hours of the morning. Then the next thing I know, I’m a thesis panelist and a chaperon for a debut.
This is one of those little things in life that tell you: hey, you ARE getting older.
The icky “damn I’m getting old” feeling struck me the moment I was given the scoresheet for the students presenting their thesis last Saturday morning. I couldn’t accept the fact that just a few years back (around three or four), I was the one freaking out while waiting for my turn to have my thesis butchered into pieces. Never did it ever occur to me that I would be one of those panelists I used to dread. Armed with a pen, a scoresheet, and an incredibly bad mood—I was the students’ living nightmare that morning.
I wasn’t that hard on them really. I was in a bad mood due to lack of sleep—so yeah, they got a bit lucky I wasn’t my usual energized self. Drowsiness prevented me from being total biatch. Hehe. Besides, I felt bad about failing them on purpose just because (70% of their finals grade would be coming from me). But I think if I was wide awake, I would have really made them earn those grades I would be giving them 😛
I was actually torn between compassion and the thought that they should learn from whatever mistake they did. A part of me doesn’t want to make their lives miserable (having gone through the exact same thing myself), but a part of me also sees the need that they should be able to experience it themselves (getting your thesis butchered IS a learning experience, you know). I couldn’t believe that I would be having that dilemma, actually. To think that a few years ago, I was just bitching about the panelist who butchered my thesis—and now, they’re probably bitching about me.
I got the same “I’m getting old” feeling during my cousin’s debut party that evening. Marc and I sat with my uncles, aunts, and a few cousins around my age—we found it a bit unnerving that we were in the “chaperones’ table.” And what was more unnerving was the fact that I couldn’t resist checking up on the “kids” for signs of trouble—just like a true-blue chaperone.
Now I know what my dad meant when he told me, “you’ll understand when you get older.” I’m beginning to understand… So yeah, I think I am getting older.
I feel like a lola then if you feel old at your age. Defended my thesis 10 years ago! bwahahaha…. darn, I’m that freaking old.
Tina: wehehehe we’re getting old, but still beautiful!!! 😀
ayon sa chismax, nanggisa ka daw dun sa first class. sana hindi mo ginisa yung pangit kong flash na half-baked HAHAHAHAHA.
dapat hahabol pa ako dun sa defense nung viscomm class para makita kita pero may sorta masamang nangyari sa flash groupmate ko at hindi ako nakapunta. haha.
hello po. aaron showed your blog. isa po ako sa mga ginisa niyo nung project presentation sa viscomm class. yung Philippine Daily Inquirer project. hehe.
thank you po sa mga comments (both good and not-so-good) on our project, i learned a lot from you and the 2 other panelists. 🙂
Aaron: That was nothing 😀 I was actually NICE then you know hehe
Earl: Hehe. Glad to know that!
Age is no big deal – you just have to be patient – it comes to us all 🙂
The important thing is to live every moment in the present – not the past, not the future – the present – it’s all there is. Everything else is an illusion.
Thanks, Colin 🙂