- Coffee/Redbull (Well Just Caffeine in General) - There is really only one way to make it through a paper, a night of studying or to stay awake long enough to get extra partying in on a Friday night - caffeine. When you start to feel your eyelids weighing themselves down, attempting to force you into sleep, just drink more caffeine. Sleep is only necessary after college, there is really no way to fit in partying, video games, movie watching, concerts, football games, basketball games and homework without losing tons of sleep (studies saying loss of sleep during college can reduce life expectancy are just stupid). So there is a simple fix, fill in sleep with caffeine. Since Redbull isn't cheap and we are all broke, there is also a drink known as Rhino. Rhino is a much cheaper version of Redbull (MUCH CHEAPER) which tastes very similar and gets the job done (great for Jager bombs, since you are drunk anyway and won't notice any taste difference!).
- Spaghetti - None of us have any money, and if you do - stop reading this blog and go buy a personal trainer or something because you obviously don't need my help. Anyway, something that is perfect for college life is spaghetti. It costs like 1-2$ per box of spaghetti or linguine or rigatoni or whatever etti, ine, or oni noodles you prefer. It is also really inexpensive to buy marinara sauce to top these delicious carbohydrates. And that is also why they are such an important staple - carbs. What better way to prepare for exams and the day than cheap and delicious carbs. My roommate successfully eats like six boxes of spaghetti a day and he is always full of energy (it could just be that he is an idiot, but I am going to go with the spaghetti).
- Chicken - Spaghetti can't be the only thing in your diet because you must have some protein in your diet. Frozen chicken breasts are the perfect solution, cheap, delicious, high in protein and low in fat. The only problem is once you eat your 178th chicken breast in one semester, it doesn't seem to taste like chicken anymore - more like tofu or soy because the flavor is just blehhh. However, there is a fix for this. Hot sauce, chicken seasonings and more hot sauce. Which brings me to my next staple...
- Hot Sauce - There isn't much I really need to say about this necessity... it is just awesome. Hot sauce can make boring chicken better, pizza taste better, rice taste better... the list just goes on forever really. (Crystal hot sauce is a very good choice, not too hot and full of flavor).
- Natty Light - This beer is incredibly cheap and I like the taste (well sort of)! You really can't go wrong when you can purchase thirty of these beers for between 11.99$ and 13.99$... you really can't beat that with any other beer (except for Keystone which kind of tastes like metal). Since you can't really go through college without drinking about twelve hundred or so beers, Natty Light should become a staple in every College home, apartment or dorm. So take my word for it, once you have a few, you really won't notice the difference in taste between this and a PREMIUM!(not really, all American yellow beers are crap) Bud Light. It is also low in calories!
Tips to help you become more organized and more effective - from a student who is completely unorganized and as effective as an inkless pen.
Thursday, December 16, 2010
The College Diet
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Testing Tips - http://healthylifetips.tumblr.com
- Yoga - So I sat on my floor, yoga position, ready to "develop self-focus, control and body awareness." I lasted about 17 1/2 seconds before my ADD kicked in when I heard something funny on T.V. So I decided to try again, with the T.V. off this time. I got into position and realized that my legs just did not work quite like the lady in the picture, so I decided to give up. Yoga sucked, I decided it just isn't for everyone, much like exercise and other healthy life choices. Just kidding, everyone should exercise - yoga is just dumb.
- How to Lose Weight in Seven Easy Steps - The first step was confidence - I had that one completely under control. I just said loudly to myself, "I'M GONNA DO THIS!" Confidence - check. Step two, goal-setting. They write that setting a realistic goal is very important, something very achievable is best since you won't become discouraged. So I did just that, I set a realistic goal - lose one pound in the next week. This is very reasonable I think. Step three, limiting calorie intake. How much should I limit? So I decided removing one cookie and one beer a day would reduce my calories by almost 200. Perfect. Step four, remove junk food. I skipped this step - just not plausible. The next step was planning my meals - this is easy enough right? There is never an issue with scheduling as a College student. So i set up a schedule - Breakfast - most likely skip it, no time. Lunch - sometime between 11am and 4pm depending on classes and whether or not I skipped breakfast. Dinner - sometime between 5pm and 9pm depending on lunch. Second dinner - between 10pm and 3am, depending on whether or not Panda is having there late-night buffet and whether or not I have been drinking. The next step was reducing my portions, I decided this was also not possible - I decided to give up, this weight loss thing sucked too.
- Sauna Health Benefits - So I decided to try this sauna thing, I turned my bathroom into a sauna using the shower. This may seem implausible, but can someone please tell me where to find an actual sauna? They aren't exactly common. This seemed to be going well as I sat on a chair in my bathroom with steam swirling around me. However, three problems arose - the smoke alarms were set off outside, I got really hot, and our magazines got really soggy and wrinkly. My room mates weren't very happy about my sauna idea, so I decided to write this one off as a fail as well.
Monday, December 6, 2010
Organization - Never Necessary Until it is Necessary
- The Back-up Wallet - Okay, so you are the guy that leaves his wallet in the jeans he drunkenly wore last night. These jeans are now somewhere completely lost to all mankind (under your bed, bottom of the hamper, in your room mates room, etc.). You have no chance of finding the damn thing before your class starts or before you become so hungry that you eat your own fingers (and you can't cook dinner either because you have been too lazy to go to the grocery store for the last four days). Simple fix, the back up wallet. This guy contains the bare essentials that we need for survival as college students. Money - somewhere between the three dollars needed to buy 3 tacquitos from 7-11 and twenty dollars to buy a lot more tacquitos. This wallet also contains something like a dominoes gift card (or subway if you are the healthy type). Now if you are as bad as me, this wallet will contain another essential - the backup swipe (Student ID).
- The Back-up Swipe - Throughout my life at Maryland, I have lost somewhere around... twelve to fifteen swipes (I can't be sure because I often find lost swipes and then re-lose them). Therefore I have found it has become very important for me to have backups ready. When I am late for class, swipe is nowhere to be found and time is of the essence, I can simply grab my backup until the original is found. (and hope that I don't lose this one too).
- The Special Spot - Now for a chance to NOT lose everything in the first place. Think of this - everything that is important for daily function, is always in the same spot. Go to Target and buy one of those sticky 3M hook thingamajiggys and stick it somewhere in your room - we will name it "The Key Hook." Now whenever your keys leave your pocket or purse or man bag (I won't judge) you can put them on this hook and you will never again lose them. Now, somewhere on your desk create a cellphone/wallet/ID/(whatever else you carry) friendly environment. This could be just empty space, a spot on a shelf, or a special little station to store all of this stuff. You should also find a way to route a charger for your cell phone as well. This will help make sure that you don't lose your phone because it is off charging somewhere random in your house or apartment.
Monday, November 22, 2010
The Pre-Holiday Plan
Thursday, November 11, 2010
The Day Planner - Helping us Stay Punctual and Organized Since they Haven't Invented Teleporters
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Buy an iPhone... It Just Makes Sense
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Credit Card Debth
Credit Card Debth
The funniest thing about this scenario is that we all know it is wrong, yet we all continue to repeat this type of incident, over and over and over and over and….over. Our generation has little to no respect for the idea of cost or money, we are spenders. The clothing that we glorify costs hundreds of dollars per PIECE of clothing, for what we spend on a pair of jeans and shirt we could buy an expensive suit from Macys – something just isn’t right. Yes I admit I am guilty of this too, I spend too much as well, we all do. We spend money on so many things, food, alcohol, clothes, video games, cars, car parts, car speakers, the list goes on. Everything is incredibly expensive and since no one is spending money except for our age demographic – we are targeted, and we are losing. We are all guilty of this one as well – Log into the online banking, head to checking balance, Holy Hell WTF OMG, where did my money go? I spent that much? When? Oh… on that and that and that one thing and that dinner and at the bar and this and that. Yeah, you guys all know what I am talking about – the dreaded “check the balance the night after the bar” kind of morning.
About a year ago I decided to look into a documentary about credit cards – “Maxed Out” (http://www.maxedoutmovie.com/). The movie takes you on a journey through the battered and ruined lives of those losing the battle against credit card debt. You would not believe how many people are completely overwhelmed with debt, enough to literally destroy their families and ruin their lives. They lose their homes, their cars, go into depression and more – it is one of the saddest things I have ever seen. Then you end up learning about college students that were completely unaware of the debt they were getting themselves into – a few of them ending up committing suicide. As bad as I feel for these kids, everyone is poor in college – there is no need to open a bunch of credit cards. Seriously… we see the debt in our economy today and where our parents are, and we are still dipping into those habits? If you google “average college debt” the numbers are somewhere between twenty and thirty thousand dollars as we exit our college years. There is really no need to accrue more debt through stupid spending habits with our terrible plastic counterparts.
So I propose a simple fix, something to help in all of this ridiculous spending. Leave the cards at home, take out cash and take note of the balance in your account when doing so, create a spending habit or limit. If you go to the bar, bring what you WANT to spend, not what you are willing to spend – no credit card, no “OMG morning.” If you go shopping, bring what you WANT to spend as well, then when you find that 200$ shirt that you “have to have” you just can’t buy it… sucks, but you will thank me later. Best case scenario, create a spending plan, plan out groceries, fun, clothes, etc – you wouldn’t believe how much money you can save with a simple plan of action. Credit cards can’t put you into “debth” if you just don’t use them…
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
Just Take the Stairs Brah
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
(Imitation Post) 2+2 = 5? WTF America?!?
2 + 2 = 5? WTF America?!?
Recently I was watching Colbert and he presented a documentary titled “Waiting for Superman” – a movie about America’s failure in schooling. Basically this movie presents stats that are so sad and pathetic that it is hard to disagree with anything the man has to say. We are nowhere near the top in any of the schooling categories. The movie clip Colbert presented us with opens with a man on a motorcycle attempting to jump over a building and instead, hitting it face first – a metaphorical depiction of our students – confident, brave, but just plain stupid.
It was presented that we did however take first in one of the categorical statistics – confidence. When asked “if they believed they received good grades in math,” American students took first place – even though in reality we were far from perfect in that category. Then I began to think about our future… If most of our students are as dumb and falsely confident as these statistics show – we are in trouble. What happens when everyone from the generation ahead of us retires, or drives their car off of a cliff because we have run out of social security, who takes over these jobs? I think the Japanese and the Chinese are probably a good shoe in, seeing as they are killing us in every schooling category (minus confidence of course – that may have something to do with their very humble culture (something we are also very lacking in this generation)).
I mean numbers really don’t lie (granted they are real and gathered in a variance removing, high sample sized manner). It is okay though right, we are America – the country of bailouts and powerful opportunity. I think we also forget, this is the country that will outsource your job faster than it takes another American student to not go to school for another day in a row. (If you missed it, it doesn’t take any time at all to not go to school). The stat is something like every ten seconds or less another American student drops out of school. Really? High school isn’t hard… it really isn’t. But one thing we really have to look at is, if no one really told me that I had to go to class when I was say… sixteen – I’m driving, I just discovered alcohol, sex, well fun right? There is really nothing inviting about high school if we compare it to those exciting ideas. We have to realize that it isn’t these students are just stupid and are dropping out because of that, they are in a very crucial point of their life and it is vastly important to really grab their attention and force feed them the importance of school and life and their futures.
Parents, teachers, friends – these people need to really step up and save these kids. We might think “who cares if someone other kid drops out.” Well would you rather ship your car to Mexico to have your transmission fixed because we don’t have enough educated mechanics here in the United States because instead they are all just high sitting on a couch with their other drop out friends watching Aqua Teen Hunger Force? Hell no… we need the American teens to be educated and graduate so that our work forces stay localized in the United States, without their education there is truly nothing stopping outsourcing if we don’t even have enough educated workers to fill the position… If you don’t agree with me, at least think about it, go see the movie, think about what he has to say – but really understand, something has to be done because our schools and our students suck.
http://www.blogcatalog.com/blogs/project-savior-reborn (Imitation)
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Making a List - Futuristic Life Management Taken for Granted
Imagine an age, say… Medieval. Margaret exists as a servant to King Henry (one often known to kill those that upset him) - cooking, cleaning, running errands, etc. are all various aspects of her life. All of these things involve steps – heat water, add broth, add vegetables, etc. Now imagine Margaret is not a professional “Iron Chef” and she has a memory considered to be “sub-par” at best. Being as poor as she is, she cannot afford parchment and ink in order to write down her lists or recipes. She cooks the dinner in the improper order, resulting in a horrible stew worthy only of a poor starving College Student. Henry is much less than happy and immediately has Margaret sent to “the tower” in order to have her imprisoned and killed for this powerful treachery of his taste buds.
The list - Something that is VERY often taken for granted by the unorganized. Me being one of the most prevalent culprits of this crime. Imagine if Margaret had the luxury of a notepad, lined paper or a day planner – Henry would have received a much more properly prepared stew and she would have lived at least a few days longer. Obviously today we would not be killed for making dinner incorrectly, being late for a meeting or forgetting socks for the summer trip – however these things are all still important. If we sat down, took 2 minutes out of our hectic and busy lives and just wrote down “bring socks,” we would not be riddled with blisters, smelly shoes or a trip to a shady late night convenience store to buy a 17$ bag of off white socks.
I can admit that I never make lists, I never write down reminders, a sticky note, nothing. I can also admit that I forget… everything. I forget at least one thing on every trip, I always forget things for class, I even forgot to bring my wedding present to a wedding I recently attended, causing our limo to have to reroute in order to retrieve it – you can believe that none of my friends were particularly happy at my failure. Every time these things happen to me, I just think – damnit… I should have made a list. Lists are such a simple practice that can immediately shift someone from chronic forgetfulness to a more punctual, less forgetful and more organized person. The best part, it only takes a piece of paper, a pen and a few minutes of your time – in the end it could save you hours, you never know.