I’ve always argued that I was one of the lucky ones. They say (where they is everyone that speaks in adages) that you don’t get to pick your family you only pick your friends. This was not true in my case. I was one of those kids that came from a wholesome family with a dad, a mom and a set of living grandparents at one time or another in living memory. I had two half-brothers and half-sister. And then I transplanted my existence somewhere 3,000 miles north from home where no one knew me.
Enter a problem surrounding operations and the basic lie that Friedman told us: the world is flat. Yes, it might be flat, but it’s large enough for us to see the curvature of the earth – or small enough for us to be able to hug a model globe.
If I broke my legs, needed immediate hospitalization or simply required the warm presence of my family or friends in a moment of dire emergency the following would occur. I would call them – assuming I was in a condition to do so.
1) 2007 was the year Guadalajara stopped having direct flights to Philadelphia. 2007 was my freshman year.
2) To get from Guadalajara to Philadelphia you have multiple options. You can have layovers in Atlanta, Dallas, Chicago and Houston. All those flights leave GDL early in the morning.
3) If the call back home happened any time after 11am local time, my family would have to wait at least till the next day.
4) At which point anywhere between 9-12 hours of travel time would have to occur baring any major delays or the weather being its usual cooperative self or my parents avoiding being put on some sort of list because they didn’t speak English.
That was my reality.
And so before discussing something that I would later look at in morbid retrospect with warmth and melancholy – pledge – I should say that before I left home I promised my dad I would never join a fraternity.
Enter a lost in translation moment. Fraternities in Mexico are secret societies that handle all the power – they are the prototypical skull and bones type societies except they operate in a country where rules are easier to bend and money truly speaks. Where money is your name and it doesn’t require a last name. You kill people to sign the pledge and get a ring and never speak of it again until someone in your organization decides to break out, write a book about the secret society and gets killed 2 months after publishing.
Or you know, whatever.
I came back from Winter break with a new haircut, a suitcase packed with a variety of alcohol, a saxophone and a stark determination to avoid the winter blues no matter how much indigo my life felt like. And campus greeted me with a 10 day rager.
This is when I began to rage.
Admittedly my preparation over break had involved reading Pledged – the underbelly to sororities or something like that and though I always wanted to talk to my parents about it, it never seemed real.
On the first night of closed rush – past the first two awkward days of house jumping looking for the best free food and impossible conversation – brothers put us on a bus. I sat near the front perhaps as homage to the many years I enjoyed seating up near the front of the bus with the teachers and the good kids. The word boat race started being thrown around. Two gallons of beer were handed to either side of the bus and people were tasked to drink as much as possible and then hand it down. The goal was to kill the boat. So I did. All of it, the gallon full, to the (for some reason) admiring eyes of rushes and fratters alike. I then sat down and enjoyed a comfortable buzz for the rest of the night.
The week progressed in a similar fashion except that with each drunken revelry I felt more and more engaged with the people around me. They had something inexplicable between them – they cared about each other and obviously enjoyed their company terribly.
Most fraternities have a final dinner as part of the rush process. This dinner is a little more formal than the rest of the nights – though heavy drinking is not only allowed but highly encouraged – but it also has the premise as the last time to have a serious or meaningful conversation. That night a brother sporting a white suit and a backwards, flat-rimmed Phillies hat told me he wanted kids like me running his fraternity years from now. I was sold.
I was offered a bid and after a bit of crying and screaming – both coming from me – my parents supported my decision.
Then pledge came.
No details of course for those are the secrets of the fraternity but what I failed to realize at the time was the purpose and its effectiveness.
The idea of pledge or as nationals insists on calling it – new member education – is to provide a set of strangers with a shared background and childhood. It’s the school of thought that claims that bonds are develop edwhen the individual is subjected to high levels of physical and mental distress. When the two god-given legs you have are no longer enough you have two choices: crumbling to the ground or reaching out and hoping your new brothers will catch you.
At first it feels weak and artificial and I still wonder why not one of us walked out. We do not know each other and the only thing those 24 kids had in common was that a large group of guys thought we were cool, or interesting, or hung out with the hottest girls or had a great set of hair. But by the end everyone cracks and once that’s done it’s easy to rebuild yourself in the image that they want you too.
I’d often tell stories of pledge and realize how silly or futile our little acts of heroism sounded when voiced out loud. When you were down in the hazement though, we were no longer 18 years old, we were men wiling to do battle with whatever was thrown against us and nothing was going to stop us. The vice of mob mentality was overpowering and you truly believed that what you were doing had a higher purpose and that the young man I was holding in my arms as he convulsed and his eyes rolled to the back of his head would be fine not only because I hurriedly and passionately whispered – “it’s ok, it’s ok, it’s ok” – into his ear but because he had to get through. He simply had to.
The same reasons why when handed a gallon to chug I would decide to do not as much as possible but all of it so that other wouldn’t. Staring up from the ground as everything around me blurred and my body shivered uncontrollably with the loud “WOARGHHH” I thought not – “I’m crazy” but “I’m doing it, they can’t touch me”. I’d drank nearly a gallon of it and through the tears I could see the plastic bottle empty lying only a couple of feet away from me. My brothers would try to pick me up but my weakened body would do little more than melt in their arms before another surge from within forced me to the ground, crying and heaving.
And sometimes we drank. The idea was that whatever you did not drink your brothers would have to. In that the nights were finite – no matter how long they felt.
During pledge you rarely see anyone outside the people you pledge with. You go to class, have dinner and then go pledge for anywhere between 3 and 12 hours a night. On your spare time the expectation is that you’ll clean the house, be in the house or hang out with the brothers. The idea of coming back form pledge and doing work never jelled with me. My mind would be gritting its teeth analyzing every little part of it and swearing to quit tomorrow only to end by seeking a drink with my pledge brothers.
You go to the parties you organize for the house or that the house sends you to. Other relationships and friendships go down the wayside and I found myself, for the first time in my life, in the difficult situation of attempting to evolve a booty call into a dating thing. I was exhausted half the time and all I could do was seek a little warmth and company from whomever was willing to offer it. It was only about a month and some change later I realized she had a boyfriend.
That ended things.
With Spring Fling came the end of pledge and I went home for some much needed recuperation.
The semester ended with finals that I barely passed because I’d spent the majority of my time focusing on learning things from a little black book and knowing which brothers had swam the red river of rage or who had thrust his nipple into an unwitting girl’s mouth.
My grades suffered. So did my sanity and other important things like my health and my friends. But I had finally developed a family that was just down the hallway or half a block away at worst. Artificially initialized, it was now solid enough to carry me, I thought.
Four years later the fraternity has been through a lot but for the first time in my life I've known the pleasures of having a little brother and an older brother who was actually involved with my life. I've enjoyed toasting to the sunrise as I overlook the Philadelphia skyline and a desolate campus. And I've learned to appreciate the idea of being Greek despite being Mexican. It might just be a unified approach to dealing with race relations.
Thursday, March 31, 2011
Monday, March 14, 2011
Chapter 3. In which a Mexican discovers what American college is like and finds himself at a formal
I showed up to college early. Usually a punctual guy, I showed up to college 3 days early. I was tricked, conned really. The admissions office is a whimsical little wench that invited me to ISO. An international student orientation that precluded the New Student Orientation that is famous at the University of Pennsylvania.
NSO is a staple in Penn-ite? Culture. A weeklong revelry that Bachus would celebrate by ringing the bar bell announcing a last call.
ISO was a lonely affair.
The freshman dorms have a capacity for something like 2400 students. Only a couple hundred come to ISO. Some internationals, apparently, were smarter than me. It felt like the scene in those tragic movies where most of the human population has been exterminated by a plague, a horde of zombies, or a combination of the two. The fact that the few humans remaining always seem to find themselves in the whole word is the only thing that felt out of place. I didn’t see anyone for the first 24 hours – except a bathrobe clad individual who checked me in.
I had a schedule, a campus map and a still sparse looking room in desperate need of artwork, or at the very least posters telling people what I liked, or what I thought they would like and identify with. Or simply one that told a story about how much I liked to pound shots.
At the first event I was told to never try to bribe a cop. I was also told that in AMERICA (all caps, yes) it wasn’t polite to ask people how much money they made. You were also not supposed to cough up loogies on the street.
I was obviously flabbergasted.
(Note the sarcasm)
It dawned upon me, and not the administrators, that while this ISO was supremely helpful for those who had never been in the United States, ever, it would not be useful for anybody else.
Here’s a fun fact – one that might suggest at the fact that I am rich beyond your wildest dreams, which I assure you, I’m not. People applying to school in the United States have paid for some form of international education – American or British usually.
This form of education is expensive. It requires not only tuition but sufficient savvy and culture on the part of the parents to acknowledge that such an investment might be worthwhile. So you must factor the tuition costs in their life as well.
Further, for schools to have any appeal at all required thorough research, of the first contact kind as well as reading material. An understanding, however light, of culture was required to convince them to apply for something that would set them back at least 52,000 dollars a year.
But let us pretend that those who we have accepted for their overachieving qualities and high standards would not bother to look into the country they are moving to.
Or that the Mexican who wrote about his travels – including the U.S. – might be wildly unfamiliar with the concept of personal space…
I still like to kiss people for greetings for the record.
Eventually NSO rolled around and I got my first experience of COLLEGE friendship when I held peoples hair back while they lost it. That first week I didn’t touch a drink. I was after all from Mexico and drinking had never been a big deal. You could do it because your society approved. And I wanted to make a statement that many doubted – you can have fun without alcohol.
That and I think that getting drunk with strangers is not only dangerous but stupid. It leads to stories of freshman girls waking up, face down, in a frathouse with the sweet aftertaste of Jaeger bubbling up. It also leads to guys walking home with crusty eyebrows and a fist caked in blood from punching a wall. Of course these are !hypothetical scenarios.
I started probing. Exploring not only my high school “passions” like model U.N. but also diving into a culture of business that I had never thought about before. The former I would discover was no longer called Model United Nations but we covered it under the guise of the International Affair Association. A place for those interested in the higher art of diplomacy, world development and coercion to gather. The latter was a pleasant surprise.
Coming out of High School I knew very little but was convinced that I was wise beyond my years. I had to be an engineer, my “passion” for physics and math said that. Forget about the fact that I loved creative writing and enjoyed Social Studies during what I now consider the beginning stages of Mexico’s civil war.
These business types had passions about finance pronounced feenance. They had dreamt about running Goldman or using their engineering savvy to develop the next big Google or Facebook. They were ripe with possibilities and I wanted it.
I learned that a “single” was a great thing. It allowed me to invited friends whenever I wanted as well as entertain… My neighbor and I developed close friendship and had a knocking system. I would scream at my wall asking for milk and the wall would scream back saying YES! And voila milk.
The girls across the hall would constantly come up with new dorm adventures. The type that involve learning the lines in mean girls, jamming to Oasis or playing midnight football. And I loved them. One of them would become one of my junior year roommates and I would see the other compete my senior year during a gymnastics meet.
Down the hall was British man with more style than I could ever wish for and a Jewish man from Massachussets with more style than I could ever wish for. Together we were a trio – eventually we would become a package deal. The Brit taught me of thirsty Thursdays and the Sox fan of the all-American game called Beer Pong.
I told him in a faux-shocked tone that Mexicans did not play with their food. And then I found something I was better at – quincy (chandelier).
Going into November my winter wardrobe consisted of a single green hoodie. It was my favorite sweatshirt and it only recently went into retirement in my girlfriends closet. It didn’t dawn on me that I was wildly unprepared and that madras shorts, boat shoes and hoodies were not going to cut it. That a single cover was not the way to go if you heating broke.
A couple of sniffle sessions later I had a thick, fluffy jacket. I wouldn’t receive my standard Northeastern government issued black North Face fleece until much later in my college career. I also obtained a pea-coat. What a concept! A formal wear attire that can also be casual, warm but not sufficiently so on its own requiring the wearer to layer up. And layers had only been the metaphorical kind to me before that. The kind that you talk about when comparing a person to an onion you unpeel. Now I had to get shirts and sweaters and sweatshirts and jackets and peacoats.
I got a trenchcoat too and would wear it only occasionally lest I be confused for a flasher. Being 6ft6 and Mexican didn’t help I thought.
When the first snow I was ready. The thought: “Bring it cold” ran through my mind a couple of times as I tried to act casual about the fact that the heaven were raining beautifully shaped snoflakes and I attempted to catch only one out of every 30. What I wasn’t ready for was the utter darkness.
I’d get out of class at 5pm on most days and the day would be gone. I’d get home and feel like it was 10 and I should be cuddling up to a movie or dressing up to party (I was not quite at the “rage” stage yet).
The winter blue colored themselves indigo for me.
The way around that I would find is to keep your room hyperilluminated, keep your head down and do your work but allow yourself the dorm room life break cleverly provided by those around you.
That’s who I found my friend around the corner who told me all about her life in California and I told her about my life in Mexico. Shower battles ensued where cold water was periodically dropped in the midst of a cold shower to sharp shrills – often from me.
Co-ed shower. Ha! I came from Catholic country that would have outdoor protests and sit-ins to denounce the perverted admins who would allow that to happen. I had also only met one Jewish person in my life.
The University of Pennsylvania campus has an urban legend which might very well be true – 7 out of 10 white males on campus are jewish. Something close to that applies to girls. This I say from my empirical evidence. The first 6 girls I talked to at Penn were Jewish and once it became apparent that I was not a part of the tribe they began looking past me, not for someone more interesting, but someone more appropriate.
Enter the Jewish American Princess. This concept along with the idea that if you are not from Jersey you must hate on it and that if you are from Jersey you must defend it like a rabid dog on its last leg in a pit fight – were brand new to me. The first principle I understood, we had an equivalent principle at home called “fresas”. Literally put they were strawberries but pragmatically they were daddy’s girls who got what they want if it meant they drove a Benz or a BMW while mommy had to settle for the RAV4. Mommy rarely did for she had been one of them at one point too. I went to a high school full of them. But my high school had princes too.
The latter concept was confusing. In my short adventures into the Jersey countryside I’d found nothing but fun and pretty forests and bocce ball (the Spanish version of petanque that wouldn’t you know it, the Northeast had adopted as a fun backyard game). Sure the Jersey shore would eventually come on and my refusal to watch would be focused on the fact that it was on MTV and I was done with trashy reality TV. But what was so bad about Jersey other than the uber competitive public school system? And the fact that Governor school left kids with a tight sense of community because it was a summit of the nerds. (Let’s just look past the fact that I was expected to know what Governor school was).
Then I was going to a formal at the Castle. Truly the southern name – fratcastle – hadn’t migrated up here yet and I was none the wiser. But the idea of a classier affair, one with champagne, suits and potentially a chocolate fountain appealed to me. They had spotlights! And an ice sculpture! And it was perfectly pretentious because the champagne was little more than Andre. Standing in line to get checked in by the bouncer that night a Penn security guard approached me and the two friends I was with.
“What’s going on here tonight?”
The two girls turned around leaving me to field the question.
“Not quite sure, I’m trying to figure that out myself!” – I felt like a tool. I was dressed in a suit, the blush of a pre-game still warming my cheeks and I was playing dumb.
“All right, you guys take care then”
I got a pat in the back for my cool and cavalier attitude. That was my second con.
And then before I knew it it was final and I started fretting about not being a straight A student anymore. How was this possible? How could I have fallen so deep into my sword? How many rethorical questions could I fit into a chapter?
The thing about writing something like this is that you get to voice all the questions you have to keep to yourself all those years not because you don’t have anyone that can bounce ideas around with you, but because being able to do so requires an understanding from the other party. They have to understand that you weren’t just the typical big fish in a small pond but that you were frustrated, to the core, at the apparent level of mediocrity that passed as excellence in your country. You were frustrated not only with classmates and teachers but with the larger governments’ inability to finance the country and incredible skill at stealing from it. They needed to understand that nobody back home knew what it was like to live and breathe a campus and become a loyal follower of your mascot (a man I would later befriend). They did not know or could not begin to know the idea of dorms and frat parties and an education system that, as a norm, required student input and wasn’t simply reliant on heavy handed professors imparting their lessons to a mute audience. Most of my family members wouldn’t, and still don’t understand the idea of a liberal arts education, or that studying two majors in 4 years is feasible.
On my graduation night a friend’s mom came up to me and congratulated me on going to the U.S. for college.
“What school are you going to?”
“Penn”
“Awesome! What’s that?”
This was one of the positive interactions.
So finals season came and went and as I tried running a MonteCarlo simulation to try to determine what my GPA would be and how I would explain to my parents my fall from the heavens.
They didn’t care. They understood what I would not understand until senior year – that I was to learn more from my peers and my classroom experience than I could learn from a single letter grade. That the strength of the American education system relies heavily on the fact that the learning is done experientially and puts the student face to face with a challenge that they might not be successful at. That it lets you fail and feel like you failed but also leaves a door open that will let you climb back to your feet. And all the while I worried about the “curve” – a pretty little notion that we should, as humans, behave, given a large enough n, as statistics prescribes we should. And I worried about what my friends would think, what my parents would think and I forgot to think about myself.
I learned from that mistake pretty quickly.
NSO is a staple in Penn-ite? Culture. A weeklong revelry that Bachus would celebrate by ringing the bar bell announcing a last call.
ISO was a lonely affair.
The freshman dorms have a capacity for something like 2400 students. Only a couple hundred come to ISO. Some internationals, apparently, were smarter than me. It felt like the scene in those tragic movies where most of the human population has been exterminated by a plague, a horde of zombies, or a combination of the two. The fact that the few humans remaining always seem to find themselves in the whole word is the only thing that felt out of place. I didn’t see anyone for the first 24 hours – except a bathrobe clad individual who checked me in.
I had a schedule, a campus map and a still sparse looking room in desperate need of artwork, or at the very least posters telling people what I liked, or what I thought they would like and identify with. Or simply one that told a story about how much I liked to pound shots.
At the first event I was told to never try to bribe a cop. I was also told that in AMERICA (all caps, yes) it wasn’t polite to ask people how much money they made. You were also not supposed to cough up loogies on the street.
I was obviously flabbergasted.
(Note the sarcasm)
It dawned upon me, and not the administrators, that while this ISO was supremely helpful for those who had never been in the United States, ever, it would not be useful for anybody else.
Here’s a fun fact – one that might suggest at the fact that I am rich beyond your wildest dreams, which I assure you, I’m not. People applying to school in the United States have paid for some form of international education – American or British usually.
This form of education is expensive. It requires not only tuition but sufficient savvy and culture on the part of the parents to acknowledge that such an investment might be worthwhile. So you must factor the tuition costs in their life as well.
Further, for schools to have any appeal at all required thorough research, of the first contact kind as well as reading material. An understanding, however light, of culture was required to convince them to apply for something that would set them back at least 52,000 dollars a year.
But let us pretend that those who we have accepted for their overachieving qualities and high standards would not bother to look into the country they are moving to.
Or that the Mexican who wrote about his travels – including the U.S. – might be wildly unfamiliar with the concept of personal space…
I still like to kiss people for greetings for the record.
Eventually NSO rolled around and I got my first experience of COLLEGE friendship when I held peoples hair back while they lost it. That first week I didn’t touch a drink. I was after all from Mexico and drinking had never been a big deal. You could do it because your society approved. And I wanted to make a statement that many doubted – you can have fun without alcohol.
That and I think that getting drunk with strangers is not only dangerous but stupid. It leads to stories of freshman girls waking up, face down, in a frathouse with the sweet aftertaste of Jaeger bubbling up. It also leads to guys walking home with crusty eyebrows and a fist caked in blood from punching a wall. Of course these are !hypothetical scenarios.
I started probing. Exploring not only my high school “passions” like model U.N. but also diving into a culture of business that I had never thought about before. The former I would discover was no longer called Model United Nations but we covered it under the guise of the International Affair Association. A place for those interested in the higher art of diplomacy, world development and coercion to gather. The latter was a pleasant surprise.
Coming out of High School I knew very little but was convinced that I was wise beyond my years. I had to be an engineer, my “passion” for physics and math said that. Forget about the fact that I loved creative writing and enjoyed Social Studies during what I now consider the beginning stages of Mexico’s civil war.
These business types had passions about finance pronounced feenance. They had dreamt about running Goldman or using their engineering savvy to develop the next big Google or Facebook. They were ripe with possibilities and I wanted it.
I learned that a “single” was a great thing. It allowed me to invited friends whenever I wanted as well as entertain… My neighbor and I developed close friendship and had a knocking system. I would scream at my wall asking for milk and the wall would scream back saying YES! And voila milk.
The girls across the hall would constantly come up with new dorm adventures. The type that involve learning the lines in mean girls, jamming to Oasis or playing midnight football. And I loved them. One of them would become one of my junior year roommates and I would see the other compete my senior year during a gymnastics meet.
Down the hall was British man with more style than I could ever wish for and a Jewish man from Massachussets with more style than I could ever wish for. Together we were a trio – eventually we would become a package deal. The Brit taught me of thirsty Thursdays and the Sox fan of the all-American game called Beer Pong.
I told him in a faux-shocked tone that Mexicans did not play with their food. And then I found something I was better at – quincy (chandelier).
Going into November my winter wardrobe consisted of a single green hoodie. It was my favorite sweatshirt and it only recently went into retirement in my girlfriends closet. It didn’t dawn on me that I was wildly unprepared and that madras shorts, boat shoes and hoodies were not going to cut it. That a single cover was not the way to go if you heating broke.
A couple of sniffle sessions later I had a thick, fluffy jacket. I wouldn’t receive my standard Northeastern government issued black North Face fleece until much later in my college career. I also obtained a pea-coat. What a concept! A formal wear attire that can also be casual, warm but not sufficiently so on its own requiring the wearer to layer up. And layers had only been the metaphorical kind to me before that. The kind that you talk about when comparing a person to an onion you unpeel. Now I had to get shirts and sweaters and sweatshirts and jackets and peacoats.
I got a trenchcoat too and would wear it only occasionally lest I be confused for a flasher. Being 6ft6 and Mexican didn’t help I thought.
When the first snow I was ready. The thought: “Bring it cold” ran through my mind a couple of times as I tried to act casual about the fact that the heaven were raining beautifully shaped snoflakes and I attempted to catch only one out of every 30. What I wasn’t ready for was the utter darkness.
I’d get out of class at 5pm on most days and the day would be gone. I’d get home and feel like it was 10 and I should be cuddling up to a movie or dressing up to party (I was not quite at the “rage” stage yet).
The winter blue colored themselves indigo for me.
The way around that I would find is to keep your room hyperilluminated, keep your head down and do your work but allow yourself the dorm room life break cleverly provided by those around you.
That’s who I found my friend around the corner who told me all about her life in California and I told her about my life in Mexico. Shower battles ensued where cold water was periodically dropped in the midst of a cold shower to sharp shrills – often from me.
Co-ed shower. Ha! I came from Catholic country that would have outdoor protests and sit-ins to denounce the perverted admins who would allow that to happen. I had also only met one Jewish person in my life.
The University of Pennsylvania campus has an urban legend which might very well be true – 7 out of 10 white males on campus are jewish. Something close to that applies to girls. This I say from my empirical evidence. The first 6 girls I talked to at Penn were Jewish and once it became apparent that I was not a part of the tribe they began looking past me, not for someone more interesting, but someone more appropriate.
Enter the Jewish American Princess. This concept along with the idea that if you are not from Jersey you must hate on it and that if you are from Jersey you must defend it like a rabid dog on its last leg in a pit fight – were brand new to me. The first principle I understood, we had an equivalent principle at home called “fresas”. Literally put they were strawberries but pragmatically they were daddy’s girls who got what they want if it meant they drove a Benz or a BMW while mommy had to settle for the RAV4. Mommy rarely did for she had been one of them at one point too. I went to a high school full of them. But my high school had princes too.
The latter concept was confusing. In my short adventures into the Jersey countryside I’d found nothing but fun and pretty forests and bocce ball (the Spanish version of petanque that wouldn’t you know it, the Northeast had adopted as a fun backyard game). Sure the Jersey shore would eventually come on and my refusal to watch would be focused on the fact that it was on MTV and I was done with trashy reality TV. But what was so bad about Jersey other than the uber competitive public school system? And the fact that Governor school left kids with a tight sense of community because it was a summit of the nerds. (Let’s just look past the fact that I was expected to know what Governor school was).
Then I was going to a formal at the Castle. Truly the southern name – fratcastle – hadn’t migrated up here yet and I was none the wiser. But the idea of a classier affair, one with champagne, suits and potentially a chocolate fountain appealed to me. They had spotlights! And an ice sculpture! And it was perfectly pretentious because the champagne was little more than Andre. Standing in line to get checked in by the bouncer that night a Penn security guard approached me and the two friends I was with.
“What’s going on here tonight?”
The two girls turned around leaving me to field the question.
“Not quite sure, I’m trying to figure that out myself!” – I felt like a tool. I was dressed in a suit, the blush of a pre-game still warming my cheeks and I was playing dumb.
“All right, you guys take care then”
I got a pat in the back for my cool and cavalier attitude. That was my second con.
And then before I knew it it was final and I started fretting about not being a straight A student anymore. How was this possible? How could I have fallen so deep into my sword? How many rethorical questions could I fit into a chapter?
The thing about writing something like this is that you get to voice all the questions you have to keep to yourself all those years not because you don’t have anyone that can bounce ideas around with you, but because being able to do so requires an understanding from the other party. They have to understand that you weren’t just the typical big fish in a small pond but that you were frustrated, to the core, at the apparent level of mediocrity that passed as excellence in your country. You were frustrated not only with classmates and teachers but with the larger governments’ inability to finance the country and incredible skill at stealing from it. They needed to understand that nobody back home knew what it was like to live and breathe a campus and become a loyal follower of your mascot (a man I would later befriend). They did not know or could not begin to know the idea of dorms and frat parties and an education system that, as a norm, required student input and wasn’t simply reliant on heavy handed professors imparting their lessons to a mute audience. Most of my family members wouldn’t, and still don’t understand the idea of a liberal arts education, or that studying two majors in 4 years is feasible.
On my graduation night a friend’s mom came up to me and congratulated me on going to the U.S. for college.
“What school are you going to?”
“Penn”
“Awesome! What’s that?”
This was one of the positive interactions.
So finals season came and went and as I tried running a MonteCarlo simulation to try to determine what my GPA would be and how I would explain to my parents my fall from the heavens.
They didn’t care. They understood what I would not understand until senior year – that I was to learn more from my peers and my classroom experience than I could learn from a single letter grade. That the strength of the American education system relies heavily on the fact that the learning is done experientially and puts the student face to face with a challenge that they might not be successful at. That it lets you fail and feel like you failed but also leaves a door open that will let you climb back to your feet. And all the while I worried about the “curve” – a pretty little notion that we should, as humans, behave, given a large enough n, as statistics prescribes we should. And I worried about what my friends would think, what my parents would think and I forgot to think about myself.
I learned from that mistake pretty quickly.
Tuesday, March 8, 2011
Chapter 2. An introspective note
This will hopefully go down as my first attempt at the pseudo-autobiographical novella. That means there will be many attempts to re-write this book and my life.
One of the first things I did when I got off the plane was procure a phone – a cute off-the-cereal-box model that would allow people to reach me. I didn’t know any better and got a Sprint phone and got limited texting and no data plan. This, along with the fact that smaller, thinner towels work better than the big, luxurious ones I craved. (That last bit turn out to be entirely pragmatic – the thing, smaller towels dry faster and are less prone to smell of humidity)
The phone was to be my landline to America. For my parents and friends back home I had MSN messenger and Skype. The former I would learn was a relic of times never had in the U.S. where people preferred the then outdated AIM messenger. I tried convincing them that the rest of the world used MSN and hotmail. That AOL and Yahoo were a thing for those who weren’t in the know. That Hotmail was known as hucchimail in Brazil and that it had proven to be effective in keeping me in touch with my summer friends from Europe and South America long before facebook ever became a thing.
So I was limited to calling my parents via VOIP on Skype and the occasional splurge – calling them from my cell phone. My friends and I emailed, email still. We often chatted at night. It is a matter of time however before you start letting go of those late night text-driven conversation in favor of going out with your new friends.
For the first time ever I was exposed to 2500 new individuals pre-selected for the interesting qualities or incredible smarts or both or something I’d never even heard of. I was no longer a slave to having gone to the same school for 12 years with the same 75 people.
The friends I keep – Sarah, Ingrid, Sergio, Carlos and Odette – those were just happy coincidences of faith. All of them were happy souls that happened to find as many smiles with me as I did with them.
But I had the potential to meet new people.
To do things I’d never done before like go to my first BYO, eat a cheese steak or go to a Frat party. Wait around, feigning interest, around a keg until I could get my hands on that nozzle and pour myself a cup of Beast or Fratty Light.
I tried to understand things like the three-point stance, the idea that a guy and a girl could both be texting while trying to meld together on the dance floor. How two guys would sandwich a girl and both ignore the fact that they were using a warm body between them as the only line between straight and no-homo. The way people moved between parties at nights – migrating in packs, flocking on the streets like birds – from one crowded party to the next, was worthy of an anthropological study and something I might still consider looking into.
I’ve learned about the hook-up culture. I’ve learned that here you make-out with someone. You do this a couple of times and you might be bumped into regular booty call. If you perform well you can move into a thing. No complications (or so the theory goes), just having fun, crazy kids in college doing their thing. Then maybe you get asked to a formal or a date party and that pushes things up a notch. It might be time to have the conversation. And the conversation is had, no formal date in the traditional archetype yet. No dinner and a movie, no formal way of asking her to be your girlfriend. Simply a let’s be exclusive talk. And you hope she’s on the pill and your RA is stocked.
I pledge a fraternity and though I will discuss that later I will say this now: it was one of the best things I ever did. My frame of reference was based around movies like Animal House and American Pie. To compare my fraternity to movies like Band of Brothers or the story in Atonement would be a stretch. But I learned a fair amount about the human condition and the capacity for good and evil in unexpected places.
Learned that the best time to do laundry is 3 am on a Monday morning and that the conversations had there can lead to everything from a dinner at a Japanese sushi bar to discovering that the three-in-one sheets are much easier to handle than bulky bottles of detergent. You can never have too many quarters.
In short I’ve learned a lot, I think. And I haven’t even begun to discuss the things that happened in the classroom where the learning was supposed to happen..
But that has been lost to all but a few of my friends. My parents, as much as I love them, have a skewed version of what my life is here. It’s not that I meant it to be that way, it’s just that it happened.
Most college kids live in fear of their parents finding out that they drink or smoke in college. Reputations change from nerdy girl with the cute classes to smart girl, make-out slut. No longer the smart-kid in the football team. Simply jock.
That wasn’t my case. I knew I wouldn’t be a big fish here that I’d struggle to be more than a canned sardine tossed into an ocean of North Eastern and Californian prep-schoolers. I just wanted to tell them about my life here. And I wanted to tell my friends.
But nobody had a reference point. Most kids I grew up with stayed in school in Mexico like I almost did. You go to school in the same city, you live with your parents until you’ve gotten some sort of promotion and then maybe you marry the girl you’ve been seeing for 4 years. And you do this by formally going to ask for her hand in marriage before you propose. You go out with the same friends you did in high school, to the same clubs and bars. It’s a tightly knit community that easily forgets outsiders but welcomes those ready to not change the order of things. You belong to the same country club your parents did.
If I had to, I would describe it as an interesting place where the aristocracy of the American South meets the back-roads of middle of nowhere Mid-West – combining these stereotypes leads to my city.
There are no college dorms. No frats. No international body of students and professors.
So how was I supposed to describe a picture or a color to those who couldn’t see? Who at best would see a hung-over version of me on a weekend visit. Phone calls and chat screens do very little in the way of providing understanding. That’s why video chat was invented, and even then, it was limited to the back of my room as the camera framed my face well with a bookcase and a fridge in the background.
Details went by the wayside. My friends here often didn’t even have names because the English versions of them would go in one ear with people at home, and out the other. My stories seemed petty and inconsequential at times, especially in the later years where the violence became widespread and everyone had heard of Ciudad Juarez and nobody was going to “Pulco” for Spring Break. The idea of doing an “Econ Scream” (Penn’s tradition before the first economics midterm of first semester in which midnight is marked by a vociferous and collective scream supposed to vent out frustration and stress though really it’s just another opportunity for free food) has little worth in people who can’t even begin to comprehend the stress. Who still worry about the cliques and groups they never rose above of in high school.
So the truth as I am about to depict it is a new truth for those who knew and know me.
One of the first things I did when I got off the plane was procure a phone – a cute off-the-cereal-box model that would allow people to reach me. I didn’t know any better and got a Sprint phone and got limited texting and no data plan. This, along with the fact that smaller, thinner towels work better than the big, luxurious ones I craved. (That last bit turn out to be entirely pragmatic – the thing, smaller towels dry faster and are less prone to smell of humidity)
The phone was to be my landline to America. For my parents and friends back home I had MSN messenger and Skype. The former I would learn was a relic of times never had in the U.S. where people preferred the then outdated AIM messenger. I tried convincing them that the rest of the world used MSN and hotmail. That AOL and Yahoo were a thing for those who weren’t in the know. That Hotmail was known as hucchimail in Brazil and that it had proven to be effective in keeping me in touch with my summer friends from Europe and South America long before facebook ever became a thing.
So I was limited to calling my parents via VOIP on Skype and the occasional splurge – calling them from my cell phone. My friends and I emailed, email still. We often chatted at night. It is a matter of time however before you start letting go of those late night text-driven conversation in favor of going out with your new friends.
For the first time ever I was exposed to 2500 new individuals pre-selected for the interesting qualities or incredible smarts or both or something I’d never even heard of. I was no longer a slave to having gone to the same school for 12 years with the same 75 people.
The friends I keep – Sarah, Ingrid, Sergio, Carlos and Odette – those were just happy coincidences of faith. All of them were happy souls that happened to find as many smiles with me as I did with them.
But I had the potential to meet new people.
To do things I’d never done before like go to my first BYO, eat a cheese steak or go to a Frat party. Wait around, feigning interest, around a keg until I could get my hands on that nozzle and pour myself a cup of Beast or Fratty Light.
I tried to understand things like the three-point stance, the idea that a guy and a girl could both be texting while trying to meld together on the dance floor. How two guys would sandwich a girl and both ignore the fact that they were using a warm body between them as the only line between straight and no-homo. The way people moved between parties at nights – migrating in packs, flocking on the streets like birds – from one crowded party to the next, was worthy of an anthropological study and something I might still consider looking into.
I’ve learned about the hook-up culture. I’ve learned that here you make-out with someone. You do this a couple of times and you might be bumped into regular booty call. If you perform well you can move into a thing. No complications (or so the theory goes), just having fun, crazy kids in college doing their thing. Then maybe you get asked to a formal or a date party and that pushes things up a notch. It might be time to have the conversation. And the conversation is had, no formal date in the traditional archetype yet. No dinner and a movie, no formal way of asking her to be your girlfriend. Simply a let’s be exclusive talk. And you hope she’s on the pill and your RA is stocked.
I pledge a fraternity and though I will discuss that later I will say this now: it was one of the best things I ever did. My frame of reference was based around movies like Animal House and American Pie. To compare my fraternity to movies like Band of Brothers or the story in Atonement would be a stretch. But I learned a fair amount about the human condition and the capacity for good and evil in unexpected places.
Learned that the best time to do laundry is 3 am on a Monday morning and that the conversations had there can lead to everything from a dinner at a Japanese sushi bar to discovering that the three-in-one sheets are much easier to handle than bulky bottles of detergent. You can never have too many quarters.
In short I’ve learned a lot, I think. And I haven’t even begun to discuss the things that happened in the classroom where the learning was supposed to happen..
But that has been lost to all but a few of my friends. My parents, as much as I love them, have a skewed version of what my life is here. It’s not that I meant it to be that way, it’s just that it happened.
Most college kids live in fear of their parents finding out that they drink or smoke in college. Reputations change from nerdy girl with the cute classes to smart girl, make-out slut. No longer the smart-kid in the football team. Simply jock.
That wasn’t my case. I knew I wouldn’t be a big fish here that I’d struggle to be more than a canned sardine tossed into an ocean of North Eastern and Californian prep-schoolers. I just wanted to tell them about my life here. And I wanted to tell my friends.
But nobody had a reference point. Most kids I grew up with stayed in school in Mexico like I almost did. You go to school in the same city, you live with your parents until you’ve gotten some sort of promotion and then maybe you marry the girl you’ve been seeing for 4 years. And you do this by formally going to ask for her hand in marriage before you propose. You go out with the same friends you did in high school, to the same clubs and bars. It’s a tightly knit community that easily forgets outsiders but welcomes those ready to not change the order of things. You belong to the same country club your parents did.
If I had to, I would describe it as an interesting place where the aristocracy of the American South meets the back-roads of middle of nowhere Mid-West – combining these stereotypes leads to my city.
There are no college dorms. No frats. No international body of students and professors.
So how was I supposed to describe a picture or a color to those who couldn’t see? Who at best would see a hung-over version of me on a weekend visit. Phone calls and chat screens do very little in the way of providing understanding. That’s why video chat was invented, and even then, it was limited to the back of my room as the camera framed my face well with a bookcase and a fridge in the background.
Details went by the wayside. My friends here often didn’t even have names because the English versions of them would go in one ear with people at home, and out the other. My stories seemed petty and inconsequential at times, especially in the later years where the violence became widespread and everyone had heard of Ciudad Juarez and nobody was going to “Pulco” for Spring Break. The idea of doing an “Econ Scream” (Penn’s tradition before the first economics midterm of first semester in which midnight is marked by a vociferous and collective scream supposed to vent out frustration and stress though really it’s just another opportunity for free food) has little worth in people who can’t even begin to comprehend the stress. Who still worry about the cliques and groups they never rose above of in high school.
So the truth as I am about to depict it is a new truth for those who knew and know me.
Monday, March 7, 2011
Ch. 1 – Life Before Illy
It must first be clarified that I, Diego Hernandez Diaz, of sound mind and body (kind of – I’m slightly overweight), do hereby decree the following a more or less factual account of my past four years. There is embellishment and considerable artistic license that must be acknowledged but only as it involves the events relating to myself. That is to say, the whole book, and particularly this chapter is the kind of truth you would swear to your parents, not the kind of truth you would swear to in a court of law.
I haven’t been Mexican for a long time. That is to say I am proud to be a Mexican born and raised. I grew up in a city called Guadalajara. To those outside of the United States of Mexico that’s often a meaningless piece of information. Perhaps that’s why I’m prone to making up stories about my background when talking to my disposable in my trips up and down the continent. That’s why I tell them that I’m a Philly native travelling from Guadalajara only on business – it keeps things simple if I have them believe the verbal diarrhea that spills from my mouth rather than fill them in on my life. Tell them how my parents don’t speak English- how despite the fact that they both have Ph.D.’s in Pharmacology they speak a little French and considerable Spanish. They were the first in their family to attend college.
People would wonder why my English is so good. People do wonder. And every time I come up with a kitschy and smart-alecky response to it.
“I watched a lot of American sit-coms that wouldn’t run on American TV you know? Like Reba!”
And then they’d wonder why I don’t have a southern accent. So I’d explain that my parents, with incredible foresight, bought a great deal of English books so I would have material to dig into once I learned to read ingles. Of course that would only mean that I’d have to explain to them two things. One – I went to an American School that threw in an extra year between kinder garden and first grade appropriately termed pre-first. This was a year meant for to teach us how to read English. And two – I showed them that I could read English about two weeks into the year. My mother was summoned to the principals office and offered the following:
Principal: “Your son can read”.
Mother: “Spanish. Yes, his father and I taught him. Or is that his father and me?”
Principal: “English.”
Mother: ”English?”
Principal: “English”.
Mother: “That’s not possible. His father and me can’t speak English”.
Principal: “We’re moving him up a grade”
And so off I went to the first grade and you can easily how this story gets complicated.
So I stick to other truths. But not this time, an it’s not because I’m finally “of age” in this putative country but more so because I’m in the right state of mind to write it. Even if it takes me all night or simply a couple of hours a night till the end of the school year.
The story that followed was not one filled with years of bullying as the youngest kid. I was a big kid. Not big in the mid-west type of big but simply massive. I was taller than any other kid in my grade – boxy, chubby almost but not quite. It was the kind of size that affords you the luxury of never having to be violent because sheer magnitude of potential repercussion avoids you a scuffle. Instead I developed two things – a hard work ethic (though I’m sure any psychologist worth her two cents could prove was deeply ingrained in me by my parents) and a larger than live personality.
Blitz through the next 10 years. I was a shark in a pond full of guppies and felt damn good about it. My friends and I fancied ourselves the kings of our high school. The same school, down to the plot of land, we’d attended for over 12 years now. From different walks of life we had a jock, the future lawyer (the pre-law stereotype in American cynicism), an artsy type who’d belong in Brown (and did go to Brown) and a computer maniac who chose to got to MIT because he could. Somewhere in there I fell into my niche. I fell in the middle of all of them. With a little bit of each and my own passion for people. At the time I didn’t realize that my friends at Wharton would help me identify my gregariousness as a positive attitude called “good at networking”.
On one infamous occasion we convinced the headmaster to let us out early on a Friday afternoon to go study physics on air hockey tables. We went to Peter Piper Pizza and behaved like we were in middle school. We did the same for the rest of the year.
On another occasion we shot a film for our film festival and convinced the headmaster we needed to go to the mall to get the soundtrack that was going to win us the prize. We left, got the soundtrack and soft serve and returned to win the prize.
I know it sounds like suburban victories and they were. Even though Guadalajara was nothing like Suburbia and my friends were not your average valley-boy types. We were nerds with ideas of grandeur at a school that didn’t have seniors hazing freshmen or people that skipped school.
We had bodyguards who kept our walls safe and a security force that could overtake Paris.
The American School Foundation of Guadalajara was a place where an American Football team would have had a hard time finding traction except for the few consulate kids who were both athletic and inclined to believe in a half Mexican team’s ability to memorize plays called quarter and dime.
This was my school, a place where choppers would land in the middle of the soccer field and where bomb threats would have FBI agents from the consulate show up at our school and scan our rooftops. It was also a place where a Math teacher, a former proctologist in the U.S. seeking asylum in Mexico after a few sketchy sounding cases in his home country, could propose building a solar oven using the old satellite antenna atop the school library. The soup we warmed using that was fantastic and we learned nothing except that it takes a lot of sweat and tear to build a solar oven.
When I was going into the 10th grade I considered switching schools. The Mexican schooling system works in a 6-3-3 schedule unlike the American 4-4-4. 10th grade was my last chance to get out – and I almost did. I applied to a different High school, rocked their admittance test and was set up to go.
Diego gets pulled into a meeting with the principal and the headmaster. Diego is interrogated about his future and he starts referring to himself in the third person.
I explain that the other school is offering me a larger scholarship, that the other school is cheaper and financially speaking, for my parents at least, it is better. They mention that getting into an AMERICAN (all caps) university will be infinitely more complicated that way and I need to be smart. The thought of attending university somewhere in the United States not of Mexico first pops into my mind. They ask me to stay. They tell me I need to stay. I tell them I can’t do.
I launch into an allegorical story of the kid who attempted to buy candy with his weekly allowance. In the story he attempted to buy the Mexican version of caramel chews but they were a dollar and his allowance was 50 cents. In the story education was the caramel chew- something that you desperately crave but immediately regret as it sticks to your teeth and palate in noxious ways that keep you tongue clicking like a horse for an hour afterwards. In the story I portrayed myself as Romeo. I was merely a captain of the ship I’d been given to command from the outset. I had no control over it.
It was my first con worth telling about. They bought it and got to ride their train for the next three years on the exclusive deal that they’d benefit from my accomplishment and I’d benefit from their lower? Education.
And so I stayed and played the game. Took the PSATs and saw a counselor who told me all my schools were reach schools.
Let me clarify a notion quickly. We, that is to say, Mexican children (and families) do not have a concept of what a counselor is. In Mexico you guesstimate what your college choice is and you apply to one. And by apply I mean you take a test that 2nd graders can take and pass and as long as your check does not bounce (and even then) you are enrolled in the pursuit of higher education. A counselor is about as useful as an alternate religion in a catholic country. We already have priests, you better promise something better.
I explained to Ms. Spiesel that I was only going for gold and that if I was to stick to silver or bronze I’d stay with Mexico’s gold and go from there. Financially speaking it made sense. Get paid to school here or pay a fortune to go abroad.
And I got in. I got into my dream school – Stanford. And other smaller schools like Penn, USC, Notre Dame, and Yale.
It came down to Penn, Yale and Stanford. At Yale I was irked by the tour guides constant references to Harry Potter – he seemed to fail to understand that bringing my imagination to the earthly constructs of his university made Yale fall short. At Stanford I saw rats on Palm Drive and found issue with being referred to as either a fuzzy (liberal arts) and techie (engineering) – they didn’t seem to get that I was a fuchie. That neither label truly applied.
In the end – as you will see – hopefully and only if I still have you, I chose Penn. Not because I knew anything about the dual degree Engineering/Wharton thing I was signing up for but because they had a transparent a simple attitude.
“Yes, we work hard. But we play our hardest”.
It wasn’t some slightly surfer bro approach to life who just happened to stumble into life by accident and be successful. It also wasn’t a thing where parents could pay for my weed addiction and English major simultaneously.
It was pragmatic. It was exciting. It was the home of the Phillies.
We used to get grades by quarters in high school. My second semester senior year, the time where the inflammation of the senior is formally known as senioritis hits – I missed 6 weeks of class in a 10-week grading period.
My chemistry teacher was a middle-aged crisis filled neurotic who would hit on me. My principal I had already seen drunk once. He was sitting outside the school, smoking a cigarette – he looked up to me and asked: “what’s the point?”. Two of my classes were independent study and my Spanish teacher was terrified of me. I was the only kid who actually read the books and calls him out for taking the spark notes quizzes, translating them and administering them. I had nothing to fear.
I came back and had my highest average ever.
So I chose Penn.
On my graduation night, when I introduced my girlfriend to my parents formally for the first time, I was smashed.
Prom looks like this. Everyone comes, family and friends. We all have dinner at a castle we rent. No limos required, just suits and lots and lots of intoxicating material – preferably liquid. We have a toast post dinner to say buen provecho. The families leave. And then the open bar hits for the next 4-5 hours. We then go to another open bar after party.
My parents hired a driver for me that night. I packed 17 people into my Honda CR-V that night.
A summer followed that I compared, in my graduation speech, to terminal patients on their last few weeks of doctor prescribed life.
I tried taking advantage of my last moments with my family, friends and loved ones. Or so I thought. Forgetting that I would be back at every chance, and that it wouldn’t be until senior year that I would realize that I needed to stop coming back.
When I said I wasn’t Mexican for while I didn’t mean it. It just means I drink scotch more than tequila now.
And then I boarded a plane to Philadelphia, PA.
I haven’t been Mexican for a long time. That is to say I am proud to be a Mexican born and raised. I grew up in a city called Guadalajara. To those outside of the United States of Mexico that’s often a meaningless piece of information. Perhaps that’s why I’m prone to making up stories about my background when talking to my disposable in my trips up and down the continent. That’s why I tell them that I’m a Philly native travelling from Guadalajara only on business – it keeps things simple if I have them believe the verbal diarrhea that spills from my mouth rather than fill them in on my life. Tell them how my parents don’t speak English- how despite the fact that they both have Ph.D.’s in Pharmacology they speak a little French and considerable Spanish. They were the first in their family to attend college.
People would wonder why my English is so good. People do wonder. And every time I come up with a kitschy and smart-alecky response to it.
“I watched a lot of American sit-coms that wouldn’t run on American TV you know? Like Reba!”
And then they’d wonder why I don’t have a southern accent. So I’d explain that my parents, with incredible foresight, bought a great deal of English books so I would have material to dig into once I learned to read ingles. Of course that would only mean that I’d have to explain to them two things. One – I went to an American School that threw in an extra year between kinder garden and first grade appropriately termed pre-first. This was a year meant for to teach us how to read English. And two – I showed them that I could read English about two weeks into the year. My mother was summoned to the principals office and offered the following:
Principal: “Your son can read”.
Mother: “Spanish. Yes, his father and I taught him. Or is that his father and me?”
Principal: “English.”
Mother: ”English?”
Principal: “English”.
Mother: “That’s not possible. His father and me can’t speak English”.
Principal: “We’re moving him up a grade”
And so off I went to the first grade and you can easily how this story gets complicated.
So I stick to other truths. But not this time, an it’s not because I’m finally “of age” in this putative country but more so because I’m in the right state of mind to write it. Even if it takes me all night or simply a couple of hours a night till the end of the school year.
The story that followed was not one filled with years of bullying as the youngest kid. I was a big kid. Not big in the mid-west type of big but simply massive. I was taller than any other kid in my grade – boxy, chubby almost but not quite. It was the kind of size that affords you the luxury of never having to be violent because sheer magnitude of potential repercussion avoids you a scuffle. Instead I developed two things – a hard work ethic (though I’m sure any psychologist worth her two cents could prove was deeply ingrained in me by my parents) and a larger than live personality.
Blitz through the next 10 years. I was a shark in a pond full of guppies and felt damn good about it. My friends and I fancied ourselves the kings of our high school. The same school, down to the plot of land, we’d attended for over 12 years now. From different walks of life we had a jock, the future lawyer (the pre-law stereotype in American cynicism), an artsy type who’d belong in Brown (and did go to Brown) and a computer maniac who chose to got to MIT because he could. Somewhere in there I fell into my niche. I fell in the middle of all of them. With a little bit of each and my own passion for people. At the time I didn’t realize that my friends at Wharton would help me identify my gregariousness as a positive attitude called “good at networking”.
On one infamous occasion we convinced the headmaster to let us out early on a Friday afternoon to go study physics on air hockey tables. We went to Peter Piper Pizza and behaved like we were in middle school. We did the same for the rest of the year.
On another occasion we shot a film for our film festival and convinced the headmaster we needed to go to the mall to get the soundtrack that was going to win us the prize. We left, got the soundtrack and soft serve and returned to win the prize.
I know it sounds like suburban victories and they were. Even though Guadalajara was nothing like Suburbia and my friends were not your average valley-boy types. We were nerds with ideas of grandeur at a school that didn’t have seniors hazing freshmen or people that skipped school.
We had bodyguards who kept our walls safe and a security force that could overtake Paris.
The American School Foundation of Guadalajara was a place where an American Football team would have had a hard time finding traction except for the few consulate kids who were both athletic and inclined to believe in a half Mexican team’s ability to memorize plays called quarter and dime.
This was my school, a place where choppers would land in the middle of the soccer field and where bomb threats would have FBI agents from the consulate show up at our school and scan our rooftops. It was also a place where a Math teacher, a former proctologist in the U.S. seeking asylum in Mexico after a few sketchy sounding cases in his home country, could propose building a solar oven using the old satellite antenna atop the school library. The soup we warmed using that was fantastic and we learned nothing except that it takes a lot of sweat and tear to build a solar oven.
When I was going into the 10th grade I considered switching schools. The Mexican schooling system works in a 6-3-3 schedule unlike the American 4-4-4. 10th grade was my last chance to get out – and I almost did. I applied to a different High school, rocked their admittance test and was set up to go.
Diego gets pulled into a meeting with the principal and the headmaster. Diego is interrogated about his future and he starts referring to himself in the third person.
I explain that the other school is offering me a larger scholarship, that the other school is cheaper and financially speaking, for my parents at least, it is better. They mention that getting into an AMERICAN (all caps) university will be infinitely more complicated that way and I need to be smart. The thought of attending university somewhere in the United States not of Mexico first pops into my mind. They ask me to stay. They tell me I need to stay. I tell them I can’t do.
I launch into an allegorical story of the kid who attempted to buy candy with his weekly allowance. In the story he attempted to buy the Mexican version of caramel chews but they were a dollar and his allowance was 50 cents. In the story education was the caramel chew- something that you desperately crave but immediately regret as it sticks to your teeth and palate in noxious ways that keep you tongue clicking like a horse for an hour afterwards. In the story I portrayed myself as Romeo. I was merely a captain of the ship I’d been given to command from the outset. I had no control over it.
It was my first con worth telling about. They bought it and got to ride their train for the next three years on the exclusive deal that they’d benefit from my accomplishment and I’d benefit from their lower? Education.
And so I stayed and played the game. Took the PSATs and saw a counselor who told me all my schools were reach schools.
Let me clarify a notion quickly. We, that is to say, Mexican children (and families) do not have a concept of what a counselor is. In Mexico you guesstimate what your college choice is and you apply to one. And by apply I mean you take a test that 2nd graders can take and pass and as long as your check does not bounce (and even then) you are enrolled in the pursuit of higher education. A counselor is about as useful as an alternate religion in a catholic country. We already have priests, you better promise something better.
I explained to Ms. Spiesel that I was only going for gold and that if I was to stick to silver or bronze I’d stay with Mexico’s gold and go from there. Financially speaking it made sense. Get paid to school here or pay a fortune to go abroad.
And I got in. I got into my dream school – Stanford. And other smaller schools like Penn, USC, Notre Dame, and Yale.
It came down to Penn, Yale and Stanford. At Yale I was irked by the tour guides constant references to Harry Potter – he seemed to fail to understand that bringing my imagination to the earthly constructs of his university made Yale fall short. At Stanford I saw rats on Palm Drive and found issue with being referred to as either a fuzzy (liberal arts) and techie (engineering) – they didn’t seem to get that I was a fuchie. That neither label truly applied.
In the end – as you will see – hopefully and only if I still have you, I chose Penn. Not because I knew anything about the dual degree Engineering/Wharton thing I was signing up for but because they had a transparent a simple attitude.
“Yes, we work hard. But we play our hardest”.
It wasn’t some slightly surfer bro approach to life who just happened to stumble into life by accident and be successful. It also wasn’t a thing where parents could pay for my weed addiction and English major simultaneously.
It was pragmatic. It was exciting. It was the home of the Phillies.
We used to get grades by quarters in high school. My second semester senior year, the time where the inflammation of the senior is formally known as senioritis hits – I missed 6 weeks of class in a 10-week grading period.
My chemistry teacher was a middle-aged crisis filled neurotic who would hit on me. My principal I had already seen drunk once. He was sitting outside the school, smoking a cigarette – he looked up to me and asked: “what’s the point?”. Two of my classes were independent study and my Spanish teacher was terrified of me. I was the only kid who actually read the books and calls him out for taking the spark notes quizzes, translating them and administering them. I had nothing to fear.
I came back and had my highest average ever.
So I chose Penn.
On my graduation night, when I introduced my girlfriend to my parents formally for the first time, I was smashed.
Prom looks like this. Everyone comes, family and friends. We all have dinner at a castle we rent. No limos required, just suits and lots and lots of intoxicating material – preferably liquid. We have a toast post dinner to say buen provecho. The families leave. And then the open bar hits for the next 4-5 hours. We then go to another open bar after party.
My parents hired a driver for me that night. I packed 17 people into my Honda CR-V that night.
A summer followed that I compared, in my graduation speech, to terminal patients on their last few weeks of doctor prescribed life.
I tried taking advantage of my last moments with my family, friends and loved ones. Or so I thought. Forgetting that I would be back at every chance, and that it wouldn’t be until senior year that I would realize that I needed to stop coming back.
When I said I wasn’t Mexican for while I didn’t mean it. It just means I drink scotch more than tequila now.
And then I boarded a plane to Philadelphia, PA.
Sunday, March 6, 2011
Stick it
Great movie. Even better sport scream out. Unlike D-FENSE and OLE (after every precise pass in football which some of you will call soccer) it works on a lot of levels.
It's stick it to the other team.
Stick the jump.
Stick it for your teammates.
Stick (to) it. Because you don't get to be 21 and competing on an NCAA level without sticking to long hours, countless lounges and a myriad of different cheers for your team.
I went to my first gymnastics meet since I was six. When I was 4 my mom had me place on the early development team. At 6 she pulled me out because her growing concern for my knees and my development won her over.
Standing at 6ft6 nowadays I can see she probably made the right call though I am jealous of the graceful dismounts I saw off of the vault.
I did understand a lot more about the male gender by going to a girls gymnastics meet and saw an aspect of teamwork I hadn't truly appreciated.
There is a phenomenon in game theory called group think. It's the idea that the collective begins to think for the benefit of the team rather than the individual when the squad evolves into a cohesive team. The type of ensemble the wins because it has fantastic players and incredible cohesion. They rack up assists. It's not the pleasure of knowing, not that your teammates have your back but that you have there.
In basketball we see this when player number 33 does a no look pass to 23. He throws the ball into a space he knows/hopes will be filled with his teammate.
In gymnastics it was about trusting your teammates, sans communication, to set your vault jump right. That despite the fact that those who are fixing the springs, or the mats or simply cheering you on by yelling "GET UP ON THIS BOARD!" - know what you need. And the gymnast starts sprinting, face of determination, making the 40 yard sprints being run next door like kids during color war at camp, and then a resounding BANG. Springs compressed. She's in the air. One. Two. Stick it. Nailed to the matt - a quick smile to the judges and the teammates rush the mat no matter what happened. No matter the quality.
Something you don't see very often in men's sports.
There isn't that constant support. That hug from the coach if you end up eating it or missing the crucial 3 point kick. There are suicides to run and you are out of the game. I'm not saying you don't pay for it in practice either way - but for a second, no matter how upset you are, you know your teammates are on your side. Individual prowess and team accountability.
So stick it.
It's stick it to the other team.
Stick the jump.
Stick it for your teammates.
Stick (to) it. Because you don't get to be 21 and competing on an NCAA level without sticking to long hours, countless lounges and a myriad of different cheers for your team.
I went to my first gymnastics meet since I was six. When I was 4 my mom had me place on the early development team. At 6 she pulled me out because her growing concern for my knees and my development won her over.
Standing at 6ft6 nowadays I can see she probably made the right call though I am jealous of the graceful dismounts I saw off of the vault.
I did understand a lot more about the male gender by going to a girls gymnastics meet and saw an aspect of teamwork I hadn't truly appreciated.
There is a phenomenon in game theory called group think. It's the idea that the collective begins to think for the benefit of the team rather than the individual when the squad evolves into a cohesive team. The type of ensemble the wins because it has fantastic players and incredible cohesion. They rack up assists. It's not the pleasure of knowing, not that your teammates have your back but that you have there.
In basketball we see this when player number 33 does a no look pass to 23. He throws the ball into a space he knows/hopes will be filled with his teammate.
In gymnastics it was about trusting your teammates, sans communication, to set your vault jump right. That despite the fact that those who are fixing the springs, or the mats or simply cheering you on by yelling "GET UP ON THIS BOARD!" - know what you need. And the gymnast starts sprinting, face of determination, making the 40 yard sprints being run next door like kids during color war at camp, and then a resounding BANG. Springs compressed. She's in the air. One. Two. Stick it. Nailed to the matt - a quick smile to the judges and the teammates rush the mat no matter what happened. No matter the quality.
Something you don't see very often in men's sports.
There isn't that constant support. That hug from the coach if you end up eating it or missing the crucial 3 point kick. There are suicides to run and you are out of the game. I'm not saying you don't pay for it in practice either way - but for a second, no matter how upset you are, you know your teammates are on your side. Individual prowess and team accountability.
So stick it.
Tuesday, March 1, 2011
Won
Also spelled one.
She found it on my head yesterday. A gray hair. No big deal. I am distinguished because of it apparently - not for anything more merit worthy - yet.
I could go on about just how much it means to me, how it reminded me of my own mortality or how it was a wake up call to relax and enjoy the sun despite the frigid weather. Instead I'll write about something else and say have a good day.
I want to write about my concern regarding business school learning. It's not that we don't learn, we do - I promise. There are cases to be discussed in class, diagrams and structures to place management styles and excel models to value anything from a stock to the value of going on the Cavs making it to the playoffs. We are also taught how to work in groups with classes that are high-touch, experiential and bottom up.
This is all well and good.
But I'm taking a class in the engineering school that teaches the basis of programming an app for the android phone. The class is not concerned with teaching us the android sdk (the programming environment and language) or how to program. It's concerned with the bigger problem of coordinating group programs and multiple people working on the same program. We are simulating the writing of Unix, MSDos and Snow Leopard in a micro-environment. The presumption is that the students can teach themselves whatever they need to or rely on each other and the web to resolve the technical issues. The class itself is a seminar style class but the end product is a potentially marketable app.
The programmer deals with an intractable matter - the stuff of thought. Whatever we will a computer to do, can, in one way or another (sometimes simplified) be hacked together.
Nothing in business school can teach you that.
An English professor of mine who wrote my favorite book about Mexico - Mexican Mornings - once said that the great scholar is not the one that knows all the answers, it is the one that knows where to find them.
Under this definition the Wharton education prepares us to read the markets and analyze marketing strategies as well as the pulse of equity and fixed income beasts of our days. You can google facts for business school. You can't google knowledge. That one is generally limited to group work or cathedratic teaching.
The moment the Engineers realize just how capable they are - business school might not have a future except as a collection of cute little electives the engineers can master.
It should be said that I am a student of both schools and identify more closely with the Wharton subject matter. That I understand what the engineers are talking about and their potential is what scares me. I have found equally successful and high potential individuals everywhere from the College to Nursing to Wharton. But when this is the case it's not about the classes they take but the individually motivated curiosity to push the edges of learning. Of their knowledge and their capacity to deliver.
That's what we need to learn.
She found it on my head yesterday. A gray hair. No big deal. I am distinguished because of it apparently - not for anything more merit worthy - yet.
I could go on about just how much it means to me, how it reminded me of my own mortality or how it was a wake up call to relax and enjoy the sun despite the frigid weather. Instead I'll write about something else and say have a good day.
I want to write about my concern regarding business school learning. It's not that we don't learn, we do - I promise. There are cases to be discussed in class, diagrams and structures to place management styles and excel models to value anything from a stock to the value of going on the Cavs making it to the playoffs. We are also taught how to work in groups with classes that are high-touch, experiential and bottom up.
This is all well and good.
But I'm taking a class in the engineering school that teaches the basis of programming an app for the android phone. The class is not concerned with teaching us the android sdk (the programming environment and language) or how to program. It's concerned with the bigger problem of coordinating group programs and multiple people working on the same program. We are simulating the writing of Unix, MSDos and Snow Leopard in a micro-environment. The presumption is that the students can teach themselves whatever they need to or rely on each other and the web to resolve the technical issues. The class itself is a seminar style class but the end product is a potentially marketable app.
The programmer deals with an intractable matter - the stuff of thought. Whatever we will a computer to do, can, in one way or another (sometimes simplified) be hacked together.
Nothing in business school can teach you that.
An English professor of mine who wrote my favorite book about Mexico - Mexican Mornings - once said that the great scholar is not the one that knows all the answers, it is the one that knows where to find them.
Under this definition the Wharton education prepares us to read the markets and analyze marketing strategies as well as the pulse of equity and fixed income beasts of our days. You can google facts for business school. You can't google knowledge. That one is generally limited to group work or cathedratic teaching.
The moment the Engineers realize just how capable they are - business school might not have a future except as a collection of cute little electives the engineers can master.
It should be said that I am a student of both schools and identify more closely with the Wharton subject matter. That I understand what the engineers are talking about and their potential is what scares me. I have found equally successful and high potential individuals everywhere from the College to Nursing to Wharton. But when this is the case it's not about the classes they take but the individually motivated curiosity to push the edges of learning. Of their knowledge and their capacity to deliver.
That's what we need to learn.
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