three (coincidentally, they're all very nice) people wished me a happy birthday today. denise, not unexpectedly, flea, not the opposite of the reverse of the negative of not unexpectedly (which is the way she thinks sometimes), and carol (most unexpectedly). never really thought she would, but she remembers me! haha. that obviously brought a smile to my face. a pleasant surprise, to say the least. other than that, a very normal day for me.
i got a slice of homemade irish cream chocolate cheesecake today and boy, was it good. denise is a master cake-maker. flea, if you're ever up to it, i'll introduce you... to her cakes. it's a world of it's own, really. i always get a taste, but because they're so rich, that's more than i ever need, actually. maybe we'll swap our biscuit for nydc next time. it's been a while since i've had an elephanccino (did i spell that right?). we'll just go see the cakes, okay? see no touch. or worse, eat.
farewell assembly's tomorrow. the last time i'm gonna see a school full of familiar faces assembled in a parade square. (except maybe during national service, when i'll be seeing a platoon full of familiar faces assembled in a parade square for many days to come.) i reckon i should miss the place, maybe even feel sad. but then again, this is the very building i've come to loathe for many many days over the last 21 months. the same people i've watched walk up and down the canteen aimlessly, searching for conversation, or at least a distraction from the monotonous chore of education. the same teachers i've mumbled curses upon, behind their backs, as they lashed hell upon my head with the fiery dance of their red pens. the same day i wished would end sooner, so that i may sooner seek salvation in the coming weekend, the sanctity of which has steadily grown in my mind. it's all the same. it's all coming to an end. is there anything to miss?
maybe. just maybe. we seldom see the magic of school, because, as usual, it comes to us in the smallest ways. school makes me laugh. at others. at the world. at myself, most importantly. i've learnt the power of humility there. laughing at one's self is fantastic. it's a liberating feeling. like freeing one's self from the shackles of society. breaking the chain somewhere and putting in your own piece. it's a great way to feel great and it's a great way to remind yourself that you're human. and that there's nothing more than nor less than you in this world. i've learnt alot about people too. what makes them tick. what doesn't. i've learnt why some people act the way they do. why they don't. why what some people do can't be explained, and for the sake of your (and maybe the whole world's) sanity/safety, shouldn't. it's amazing how many kinds of people you meet in junior college. it really is. i bet there're more types of people there than there're species of bugs in the amazon. it's really frightening, and i'm not even counting the schizophrenics with the multiple personalities that have their own multiple personalities. the insight and perspectives i get are great. i've got all sorts of friends. i've got a special one who believes people in cairo wear turbans, wonders whether sandflies can fly, and when told that i went to the UAE; Dubai once, asked me, "to buy what?" he's a nice, smart guy, but prone to asking questions that you could compile into a joke book.
by the time i get to the point that i should go back to rj to take a look around, they probably would've moved to the new campus. it'd be the most abrupt disconnection. unfamiliar surroundings once again. revisiting teachers would be like a 3rd orientation for me. things would be different. i fear that. not change itself, but the thought that i might have gotten it wrong after all. that everything does change after all. and that my memories of this place, the people and the poignancy of it all are gone, save for photographs that i regretfully i never took. hopefully, my friends have more sense than i. change, i suppose, makes memories more precious. i pray i'm wrong. i really do. i still have many things to learn. but for now, rjc has taught me well.