Noel Duan

    25 Apr 2012

    If I’ve learned one thing from my experience at the Spectator, it’s this: The grand majority of people at Columbia (and everywhere else) don’t give a shit about anyone’s experience at Spec.

    So I’ll be brief about that part (thank me later). I had a lovely time at The Eye, Spectator’s weekly magazine, first as editor of the cover story and then as editor in chief. I made wonderful friends—the true kind—ones I’ll keep, and nourish, for as long as I can. Anyone involved in a team creative project experiences a high-voltage round-up of emotions: I laughed and cried, ate and slept, kissed and told, mourned and rejoiced.

    Those memories are mine to keep.

    The Eye did define my college experience, and there’s something a little wrong with that. Spectator is an independent group of students with no official tie to the University. Had I not found this group, I likely would have become lost here, without a support group, without close friends.

    Actually, I know I would have—another thing I’ve learned is that Columbia largely doesn’t care about the well-being of its undergraduates. This is not a place for those who want a close-knit community where they can learn without the added stress of wondering how they’re going to have enough money to eat dinner AND pay for a MetroCard to get to their internship. Columbia throws its undergrads into the thick of the city with a tenuous support network at best—for better or worse.

    For me, it was exactly what I needed.

    After being in a small town for a year at Middlebury College, I was convinced that I was one of those for whom college is not the best four years of her life. I was very depressed, and my kind of depression was the kind where I thought everyone around me was watching, and judging. Every person in the dining hall who smiled at me actually pitied me. Of course, we all know that’s never the case: Everyone is too concerned with themselves to watch others. I didn’t know that then. I was too deep inside of it.

    I needed to be alone, and Columbia gave that to me wholesale. My favorite memories of my time at Columbia are the ones I spent by myself, getting to know and love this city, and—as the story has always gone since Joan Didion said goodbye to all that—myself.

    The rest of the world interprets the signature trait of New Yorkers—to focus only on the task at hand, not stopping to acknowledge others—as cold. But this signature trait allows people who live here a brand of freedom that you can’t get anywhere else.

    I can walk down 23rd Street slowly, looking up at the buildings like a tourist; or with a Skrillex wig; or with a low-cut shirt and a coy smile; or all in black and with the hardened gait of someone who knows her shit. I can do all of that here, and of course, people won’t judge me—that’s the city’s trademark. The even better part? People won’t notice me at all. I can try it all on, with no consequence whatsoever. I don’t have to participate.

    I can’t write in public or read in public, but I like watching. Witnessing the simultaneity of the human experience without participating. Many times in the past few years, I would choose a destination—Sunset Park for banh mi, Brighton Beach for babushkas, the Cloisters for old people and silence—and spend a day by myself, watching people.
    The city happens around me. Someone is having an orgasm and someone is crying and someone is dying and someone is being born and someone is experiencing the pinnacle of human joy, all within a very limited radius from where I stand.

    This penetrated through my depression, somehow. I guess my thinking was: if everything around you is moving, well, you can’t just lie there.

    So now I walk and watch.

    I’m not sure who I want to be yet, so it helps to watch it all happen. To learn about what kind of person I want to be by listening to the city. That’s what makes me feel at home. Never lonely.

    The author is a Columbia College senior majoring in English and comparative literature. She was a Spectrum daily editor, lead story editor for The Eye for the 134th volume, and editor in chief for The Eye on the 135th managing board.

    (via Columbia Daily Spectator)

    Amanda is an amazing writer and friend, and this is one of my favorite pieces from her yet. She’s graduating this year, and I thought this piece was especially relevant for the incoming freshmen, if they stumble upon this article. You don’t come to Columbia to be nurtured. You come to Columbia to struggle. You have the world’s resources at your fingertips, but don’t expect it to come easy.

    And of course, you learn from it and grow…right? But I don’t know — I still have another year to figure it out. Congratulations, Amanda!

    P.S. To be honest, I’m convinced that the people who thrive the most at Columbia are the ones who have a little pool of solitude deep inside.

    23 Apr 2012

    “Flint-knapping Exercise (a.k.a. Dangerous Optional Exercise 1): Less a field trip than an opportunity to bleed for your education, the flint-knapping exercise will take place on campus on one or two (depending on interest) Friday afternoons during the first half of the term. Students will have the opportunity to use Paleolithic tools to hammer away at chert cores in an effort to create a simple biface. This is an optional exercise in humility, designed to build respect for the technological accomplishments of our hominid ancestors. (Band-aids will be included.)”
    — From the syllabus of my archaeology class next semester. I am so excited.

    15 Apr 2012

    These K Jacques St Tropez sandals from Net-A-Porter are perfect for summer. Adding to my shopping cart.
However, I still have about three weeks to go before I can start dreaming about beaches doing research for my senior thesis. I have two papers to write and two presentations to prepare/give. And then, I’m off to New York for three days, before I come back to Paris for the rest of the summer. In addition to intense research (oral history! participant observation! archives! being productive!) and some interning (in Paris! be jalouse.), I have plans for a Mediterranean cruise, Barcelona, Rome, the Amalfi Coast, Naples, London and (maybe) Geneva.
Fact: I have more friends than I can count on my fingers (and I have ten fingers! if that wasn’t clear.) who tell me that as long as they don’t screw up their summer internship this year, they’re guaranteed a contract and a full-time well-paid job immediately after graduation. It sounds pretty sweet, and somehow I didn’t choose that path. If my parents are reading this, they’re probably shaking their heads right now. I’m going to be a senior in college very soon, and yet I wouldn’t say I’ve secured my graduation prospects by any means, like some of my friends have.
I have another friend who is graduating early from an extremely prestigious business school to start a company.
I went through an extreme sophomore slump last year in which I felt so much uncertainty about the future (and present), and I’m still feeling uncertain about everything.
But 365 days later, uncertainty feels pretty great. I have no clue if I’m going to get into graduate school. I have no clue if any place is going to offer me a job in a year. Maybe I’ll regret this in a few months when no one returns my calls.
But hey, I’m really lucky in that I have a beautiful few months ahead of me. And that I’ve had the privilege of having all the opportunities I could dream of, and that there’s no point in worry anymore. What more can I do? Get A+’s instead of A’s? Do two internships during the school year at the same time instead of one? Run a marathon every weekend instead of training for half of one? C’est pas possible. (Nor is it healthy.)
And while things rarely happen according to plan, things do…happen. So, while I’m not sure where I’ll be in a year from now, I’m hoping I won’t be in the same place, at least.

    These K Jacques St Tropez sandals from Net-A-Porter are perfect for summer. Adding to my shopping cart.

    However, I still have about three weeks to go before I can start dreaming about beaches doing research for my senior thesis. I have two papers to write and two presentations to prepare/give. And then, I’m off to New York for three days, before I come back to Paris for the rest of the summer. In addition to intense research (oral history! participant observation! archives! being productive!) and some interning (in Paris! be jalouse.), I have plans for a Mediterranean cruise, Barcelona, Rome, the Amalfi Coast, Naples, London and (maybe) Geneva.

    Fact: I have more friends than I can count on my fingers (and I have ten fingers! if that wasn’t clear.) who tell me that as long as they don’t screw up their summer internship this year, they’re guaranteed a contract and a full-time well-paid job immediately after graduation. It sounds pretty sweet, and somehow I didn’t choose that path. If my parents are reading this, they’re probably shaking their heads right now. I’m going to be a senior in college very soon, and yet I wouldn’t say I’ve secured my graduation prospects by any means, like some of my friends have.

    I have another friend who is graduating early from an extremely prestigious business school to start a company.

    I went through an extreme sophomore slump last year in which I felt so much uncertainty about the future (and present), and I’m still feeling uncertain about everything.

    But 365 days later, uncertainty feels pretty great. I have no clue if I’m going to get into graduate school. I have no clue if any place is going to offer me a job in a year. Maybe I’ll regret this in a few months when no one returns my calls.

    But hey, I’m really lucky in that I have a beautiful few months ahead of me. And that I’ve had the privilege of having all the opportunities I could dream of, and that there’s no point in worry anymore. What more can I do? Get A+’s instead of A’s? Do two internships during the school year at the same time instead of one? Run a marathon every weekend instead of training for half of one? C’est pas possible. (Nor is it healthy.)

    And while things rarely happen according to plan, things do…happen. So, while I’m not sure where I’ll be in a year from now, I’m hoping I won’t be in the same place, at least.

    9 Apr 2012

    Senior Fall Course Schedule

    Greek Art and Architecture: Obligatory Mediterranean art course for my art history concentration, but luckily I’m thoroughly going to enjoy this lecture, since I designed togas for myself as a child, right?

    North American Art and Culture: Really excited for this, since we tend to overlook North American artists in art history classes. I know basically nothing, which is a perfect start, in my opinion.

    The Origins of Human Society: An archaeology course in the anthropology department. This will only have been my second archaeology course, but I definitely wanted to be Indiana Jones as a child. I see college as (potentially) my last chance to live out my ultimate childhood fantasy.

    Honors Seminar in Anthropology: In which I write my senior thesis and spend my entire year rambling to my friends about my thesis. Thesis, thesis, thesis.

    Masterpieces of Western Music: Mandatory music fundamentals class, as part of the Core Curriculum. I’m actually kind of worried because I may be tone deaf. And my most-played song on iTunes may be by Justin Bieber.

    French: I should probably continue studying French, since I would have just come back from seven months in Paris, right?

    Self-Paced Running: I still don’t understand why we have PE requirements. At least this class isn’t too different from what I already do.

    What classes are you taking next year? Anything particularly interesting?

    Edit: I just realized I signed up for seven classes. The maximum I’ve ever taken is six. That doesn’t include interning for two whole days, and going to yoga teacher training on the weekends. Oops. At least PE isn’t a “real” class?

    I didn’t feel this before, but I’m starting to get that bit of senior year anxiety about how everything I do will be for the “last” time at Columbia.

    2 Apr 2012

    Eleven people who inspired me immensely in 2011 and have no idea (for the most part).

    questlucem:

    So, to ring in the New Year, I figured I will finally honor the absolutely wonderful people who inspired me the most in the year 2011 and will continue to do so for a very, very long time. Over the past year, I traveled a great deal, came to terms with whom I would like to be, figured out my dreams, became a finalist for this super awesome scholarship program, realized that I’m actually kind of good at writing and taking pictures and making pretty things, became Editor-in-Chief of my school newspaper, stood up for myself and my beliefs, wasted a whole lot of time, applied to some wicked awesome schools (the fact that I applied is just an accomplishment in it of itself, to be honest; I don’t really mind where I end up because I know that I have no regrets!), and became a much more compassionate, confident young woman. 

    Okay, I’m working on that whole ‘confidence’ shindig, but I figured I might as well pay tribute to (some of) the women and men who have inspired me a great deal - some in big ways and others in much smaller ones, but nonetheless, I owe them the recognition they deserve. 

    1. Noel Duan: First and foremost, I’d like to recognize Noel Duan. Once, a bit over a year ago, at about 2 AM on a Saturday night, I wrote a really long and embarrassing email to Noel basically telling her how much her blog(s) have helped/inspired me. I also gave her far too many irrelevant details about my life. The very next day, she decided to resume posting on her old blog, Miss Couturable. She never responded to that email, but she recognized all the emails she was getting from many other girls like me, and I knew that she must have read my email (or at the very least skimmed it), and that made me feel like the happiest girl alive! I’ve been reading her blog since I was in eighth grade, and as a current high school senior, hearing about her life and watching her overcome her struggles has been immensely inspirational to me over the past four years. It’s nice to know there is someone else out there who has people tell her she’s “too smart” for fashion and journalism, and keeps going for her dreams anyway. 
      I’d also like to add that once Noel sent me a message on here, and I squealed and jumped up and down for about five minutes after realizing that she had indeed visited my blog, gave me unsolicited advice, and was actually aware of my existence. My level of enthusiasm is slightly concerning, I know, but she’s truly been one of my role models for the past four years, and, my goodness, she’s just. so. cool. I know she’s going to do amazing things, and I wish her the best of luck in Paris. Oh, and Noel, if you do happen to come across this - thank you, from the bottom of my heart. Thank you so much for being exactly who you are. 

    This is so sweet! Thank you so much for these undeserved kind words. Also, congratulations on getting in Yale and Columbia (from what I can tell from a brief glance at your Tumblr)! Both are great schools and you’re going to have a fun and unforgettable experience at either place, but as a proud Columbia girl, I’m rooting for Columbia. I’ll even take you out to lunch next semester. Frankly, I see Columbia as for the high-achieving misfits who seem to do everything “right” but don’t quite fit into the rest of the Ivy League (can I use Obama as an example?). This place changes me every day.

    In any case, I hope you and all the high school seniors reading this will find peace with your decisions in a few weeks, and try to hold onto that hopeful self for as long as you can.

    27 Oct 2011

    “Many students dress in a way that immediately identifies them as American. It’s important to realize that this can bring you unwanted attention. College or fraternity sweatshirts, baseball hats, carrying water bottles and wearing sneakers will highlight the fact that you are American – and some people may resent you for that fact.”
    — My Paris study abroad program handbook

    28 Sep 2011

    As the icing on the cake, I found out today that Columbia will be funding my summer of research in Paris, which is exciting because even after the spring semester is over, I will still be spending three more months in Europe and I won’t be paying from my own pocket. I feel extremely lucky that I get to spend an extra summer doing academic research in Europe, and I truly intend to turn this into something that will ultimately become my senior thesis.
I go to yoga a lot, no matter how much homework I have, because I’m so tired of making excuses for myself. I think I’ve changed for the better since I began doing yoga daily. There are a lot of exterior things in this world that could make me a hateful person, but instead I’ve found an inner peace and forgiveness that cannot be shaken. I’m making it a goal to become a certified yoga teacher by graduation (I’ll fund the training myself…somehow), because I want to someday teach yoga to domestic violence victims, especially battered women. I don’t think yoga substitutes for religion or therapy or is an excuse to be passive, but I do think it’s a reminder to be kind to yourself.
Almost every morning, I run a 5k, which isn’t much (about 3.11 miles), but all these little things have helped me take control of myself. I’m not quite sure about who I want to be, but I’m quite sure about who I don’t want to be.

    As the icing on the cake, I found out today that Columbia will be funding my summer of research in Paris, which is exciting because even after the spring semester is over, I will still be spending three more months in Europe and I won’t be paying from my own pocket. I feel extremely lucky that I get to spend an extra summer doing academic research in Europe, and I truly intend to turn this into something that will ultimately become my senior thesis.

    I go to yoga a lot, no matter how much homework I have, because I’m so tired of making excuses for myself. I think I’ve changed for the better since I began doing yoga daily. There are a lot of exterior things in this world that could make me a hateful person, but instead I’ve found an inner peace and forgiveness that cannot be shaken. I’m making it a goal to become a certified yoga teacher by graduation (I’ll fund the training myself…somehow), because I want to someday teach yoga to domestic violence victims, especially battered women. I don’t think yoga substitutes for religion or therapy or is an excuse to be passive, but I do think it’s a reminder to be kind to yourself.

    Almost every morning, I run a 5k, which isn’t much (about 3.11 miles), but all these little things have helped me take control of myself. I’m not quite sure about who I want to be, but I’m quite sure about who I don’t want to be.

    25 Sep 2011

    I have been bombarded by emails from seniors from my high school

    and they’re applying to Columbia. They all want to know what it’s like, what sort of opportunities are offered there, and how much time students spent in the city and how much time students spend on campus.

    The funny thing is, these are all questions to answers you can find on Google or in one of those guidebooks that our college counselors tell us to buy. I answer them anyway because I was once a high school senior too.

    I don’t think they want to know about my school as much as they want to find the magical answer to “Where should I go to college?” They want to find the one reason that Columbia or any other school will change their life.

    Story time:

    When I applying to colleges, I emailed a girl who had graduated from my high school and was currently studying here. She was my idol and I thought she was absolutely perfect. The first thing she said to me? “Don’t come to Columbia. You’ll be miserable here.”

    Well, I’m not miserable here. At all. But I sure as hell thought I would be, all because of what one student had told me.

    The truth is, these high school seniors won’t find the magical answer in my responses. They’ll find it in their hearts after admissions decisions come out.

    3 Apr 2011

    “He is known for his intelligence, wit and charm, and being possibly the most attractive professor on campus. Students fight to make a decent seat to his CC class, showing up to class up to 30 minutes in advance to snag the seat closest to him.”
    — This is my school’s Wikipedia entry on my professor. Sadly, It’s kind of true.

    30 Mar 2011

    Dearest Columbia,

    You admit the weirdest and most random people. And that is why I love you. I don’t even know what you see in us half the time. But I knew it was true love when you wrote, “Can’t wait to discuss fashion week with you on campus” on my acceptance letter.

    Congratulations, class of 2015! You just beat a 6.9% acceptance rate. Now, go forget about college and enjoy the rest of high school.

    Love,

    Proud Lion ‘13

    28 Mar 2011

    Juniors from my high school are on college tours this week

    This is what I remember from my college tour three years ago:

    • My number one hero from high school, who attended Columbia and won multiple writing awards, sat on the steps with me and told me not to come to Columbia if I wanted to be happy.
    • I thought Yale was the perfect school for me. Gosh, I’m even more Blair Waldorf than Blair Waldorf herself.
    • I met Jane Keltner (de Valle), fashion news director at Teen Vogue, for the first time.
    • I fought with my parents because they didn’t think Vassar was prestigious enough.
    • I didn’t even bother visiting Harvard. But I did visit Wellesley.
    • I took extensive notes which I never read again. I was the college admissions geek who walked with the tour guide and took notes on a notepad. Did I really need to remember how many libraries there were on campus? I guess I thought so, at the time.

    Looking back, my college tour didn’t have much impact on me in the end. If anything, it left me more confused than ever.

    The thing is, you can change a lot in a year, especially in high school. And that’s what happened to me.

    Edit: Also, I thought there would be soul searching involved, but not really. By the end of my college tour, every single tour and information session sounded the same to me. Libraries! Community! Dorm living! Really smart people! Tour guides who can walk backwards without tripping! We’re just like Hogwarts!

    Good times.

    26 Mar 2011

    Sophomore slump

    “You’re so cynical today,” said my friend from high school at brunch today.

    “I swear she’s not usually this cynical,” he told his friend from college.

    Before sophomore year even began, I promised myself that I would not experience “sophomore slump,” which is characterized by a drop in GPA, a feeling of disconnection from college life, and the idea that the second year of college fails to live up to the first. I made a five-year plan for myself, mapped out my class schedules until graduation, made a spreadsheet of graduate school scholarships and fellowships I wanted to apply to, and kept a list of running achievements and honors I could ever potentially boast about in my life. It was my supposedly fail-proof plan to keep myself on track. Freshman year was good, but sophomore year would be better, I decided.

    And so, it didn’t make sense for me to be up at 4am last night, feeling all sorts of misery, and blasting Selena Gomez’s “Who Says” on repeat. Honestly, did I need a Disney Channel star to tell me that I “have every right to live a beautiful life?” Apparently, yes I do. Seriously. Listen to the song. The lyrics aren’t that much better than Rebecca Black’s “Friday.”

    Anyway, I decided that next summer in 2012, I’m going to spend my entire summer in Paris, studying French at the Sorbonne, and studying creative writing and French with the Columbia program at Reid Hall (if I get in). If I can fit in an archaeological dig to participate in for a few weeks (and get into a program), I’m going to do that too.

    It’s not a particularly practical decision to make for the summer before senior year of college. French isn’t the most thriving or useful language nowadays. Writing with great French writers will not make me a great writer. I probably couldn’t last forever in an archaeological dig — unless they let me bring an air mattress. Before the senior year of high school, everyone I knew was scrambling to find an internship or research opportunity that appeared impressive on paper. In college, most people are trying to find an internship that leads to a job.

    I had planned to give everything up for the pursuit of a career in fashion magazines. Study. Intern. Graduate. Work.

    When I was little, I dreamed of writing novels in Paris and discovering ancient ruins in swamplands. I wrote terribly simplistic poetry after school every day, and read National Geographic voraciously, way more than I read any fashion magazine. There was a world beyond that I could not comprehend. The truth is, I couldn’t even comprehend the world I was living in.

    This summer, I’ll be at Vogue and Teen Vogue, being a good career girl because working at a fashion magazine has been my dream since forever.

    But I had other dreams too. Some dreams will never into fruition — like being Aaron Carter’s backup dancer (hey Bieber, I’m still available for hire). But why not spend a summer in Paris? Why not be an archaeologist for a few weeks? Why not overload on baguettes? I’m only young once. Do I not feel an inexplicable joy in my anthropology and art history classes? Didn’t I dream of Pompeii and Giza and Babylon? That must mean something.

    Today, I spend the day with some friends from high school. Apart from eating really good food (croissant French toast from Danal, linguine with sea urchin from Basta Pasta, Momofuku Milk Bar crack pie, gelato at St. Mark’s — I will gladly eat instant ramen for the next two weeks), we talked about sophomore slump.

    People from our high school were failing their classes in college. They were taking the year off to find a break from academics. They were panicking about summer plans, study abroad programs, and the awful notion about finding a calling in life.

    Let’s be real. We have it pretty good.

    But instead of trivializing everyone’s problems, I’m going to admit that we’re all struggling inside.

    I don’t really know what I’m trying to say here (wow, I can’t even write anything with a point anymore), except I remember how hopeful we were when we graduated high school.

    And here we are halfway through, and we just figured out that there may be nothing to figure out.

    13 Mar 2011

    45% of Columbia graduates enter finance

    That’s a depressing statistic.

    I don’t think we need 45% of some of the supposedly brightest students in the world to become consultants and bankers.

    Once upon a time, there was this brilliant girl from my high school. She was so brilliant and motivated that I thought she was going to find the cure for cancer or something. She was also really kind, and I’m convinced that the people who truly change the world also have a warm heart. She ended up attending one of the best colleges in the country, and then she gave up her dreams of becoming a researcher because “biology became too hard in college.” She wanted to work in a sector of finance instead, where people wore crisp designer suits in skyscraper offices.

    I didn’t think much of it at the time, and I still don’t think I have a right to make judgment of the situation, since I want to work in fashion publishing, most likely wearing designer clothes in skyscraper offices. Fashion is a lot about the fantasy and the aspiration, and plenty of finance insiders have told me that Goldman Sachs only hires attractive people (Let’s not airbrush the realities of the fashion or finance industries here.).

    But I just hope our hearts are pure when we decide what we want to do “when we grow up.” We don’t have to hold onto our childhood dreams of becoming an astronaut, ballerina, or paleontologist. We have to make a living somehow.

    I don’t know. I’m only 20. I’m being very idealistic here. We’re all motivated by different things.

    I think one of my friends once mentioned this point: In high school, important and inspirational speakers were brought in to motivate us and teach us that we all had the potential to somehow change the world. These speakers were never investment bankers or consultants. Investment bankers were not the people we aspired to be as we sat in the auditorium, musings about last weekend’s dance and pop quizzes running through our heads.

    But funny enough, many of the “top” students end up working in finance.

    And I’m scared that most of us eventually stop believing that we could change the world for the better.

    P.S. Power to you if you want to work in finance. As someone who wants to work in fashion, we both know what it’s like to be judged to be superficial for what we want to do in life. But I still have trouble believing that 45% of us need to work in finance.

    15 Jan 2011

    The funny thing about everything that I’ve learned at Columbia so far

    is that it both affirms everything I stand for and questions everything I had ever taken for granted as part of my identity.

    I want to elaborate on this, but I have quite a bit of work to do before the semester begins. Lazy blogger, aren’t I? Point is, college changes things. That’s something my high college counselors forgot to tell me.