Thursday, May 31, 2012

Abaratian


Anyone else read Abarat? I love that series. So many pictures! Such a unique story! Love!

This is my tribute to the series. I read book three and couldn't get over how much I liked the character on page 75. I gravitate towards colorful things and I think it was the most colorful picture in the series so far.   

I posted a badly sculpted version of this a while back on DA, but I have been working on it every so often, nudging things around on her face in my free time. It's looking much better now.  I thought it would be nice to add a little color to my blog, I haven't posted anything colorful like this in a while, so...

My ode to you, colorful unnamed lady! 



Sunday, May 20, 2012

The Cancer Center


From left: Me, the Oregon Duck, Amy, Maria
Bottom: Joel

This is a  segment of my essay I wrote to get into the UO. Since my math grades aren't the best, I think it was this essay that got me accepted. Here's a little back story that I didn't include in my snippet. I graduated high school in 2007. From 2007-2008 I worked 12 hours a day, full time at Hynix, a semiconductor plant and I looked like this all day. Oh, the bunny suit years... Anyway, my parents were nice enough not to charge me any rent so I saved every dime I made. The money I made there got me through my first two years at OSU living on my own. It paid for half of my tuition, my rent, gas, food etc. I squeezed two years of education off that money, then it ran out. I had no idea what to do at that point. It seemed like the end.
But it wasn't....

The Cancer Center

....So, in one last desperate attempt to do something productive with my remaining $1000, I enrolled in the crash course phlebotomy class.  I didn’t know it would be such a life changing choice. And the day I moved home to my parents was the day my bank account hit zero.  I had exactly the right amount of savings to last me from the time I moved to Corvallis until the time I moved back. It was almost miraculous how the numbers lined up.  That was the beginning, two years ago.

Now, I am working at the Cancer Center, as a phlebotomist. I see a lot of pain, sickness, and bravery where I work. I work with the general public, but I see a different side of them, a side that most people don’t get to see. Cancer patients have a unique perspective on life. It is a wonderful privilege being able to spend time with them.  I only hope some of their greatness rubs off on me. My patients have beautiful hearts, they still smile despite the fact that they’re facing death.  Most people in the world are good, and that fact becomes apparent in my line of work. I am proud to be there with them. I’m proud of my patients, and of the work I do. 

Staring into the face of terrible sickness, with the possibility of death changes a person.  I have drawn the blood of prisoners, drug addicts, and who knows what else.  I remember a prisoner came in in shackles. He sat down in the drawing chair, and his escort, who was an armed police man, stood there next to him. The man was white and shaking.  Clearly he was terrified. I remember saying, don’t worry, I’ll try to make it not hurt.  I guess I did a pretty good job because he kept saying thank you, thank you,  thank you, in sort of a hysterical kind of way. I don’t know what that man did to deserve coming into the center in shackles, with a police man wielding a gun, but all I could see was a scared human being in pain. No different from anyone else. Almost childlike.  Childlike in the sense that he was terrified, looked like he was on the verge of tears, and really appreciated a few kind words and being treated gently. In the end we're all just people.  I still think about that man, and wonder what happened to him. I haven’t seen him in a long time. Did he get better? Did he die? Wherever he ended up, I hope things are better for him now.