This Spring Break thing is overrated, I think. My usual day is so cleanly circumscribed and planned that I have a feeling of liberty: my PDA goes off to tell me I have a class or meeting, my little to-do list warns me of impending deadlines, and when I’m in between tasks, I at least have the illusion that it is my time.
Right now, my PDA says it is Spring Break, and will be Spring Break for several days to come, with nothing else in there. It is blank and unstructured. I am lost.
So today I polished up and submitted an in-house grant proposal, and then went to town on some substantial university paperwork I’ve been postponing (PDAs are also good for telling you that there is an immediate, high-priority thing you must do, making it easy to justify putting off the big nebulous jobs). 15 pages of bureaucratese, 12 copies, in the mail. I got about a centimeter of the evil box done. Since I’m home alone, I did the few dishes in the sink and am thinking about hitting up the grocery store and fixing a respectable dinner.
I don’t feel very relaxed.
Is it true that we’re supposed to take it easy on vacations?
pablo says
You’ll have the routine worked out by Sunday.
J Daley says
No relaxing! You should be spending every free minute updating Pharyngula with interesting, enlightening witticisms and commentary to keep your public informed! More squid now!
Joe says
You’re supposed to do all of the above with your favorite cold beverage.
Frumious B. says
Spring break is overrated like weekends are overrated. Those of us who don’t get one have no sympathy.
J Daley says
Incidentally, if you haven’t seen it yet, two parts of Dawkins’ “Root of All Evil?” are at
Sorry for not figuring out protocol for posting links.
Sean Foley says
I suspect you aren’t shouting the right things.
Christopher says
I know the feeling. I’m a student on break, but here I am, doing economics reading on a Monday. Teachers and students alike, we ought to be sleeping and relaxing, not working.
Steve Sutton says
I think it’s important to take it easy and relax during vacations. If you can just forget about paperwork, students and deadlines for a while, it’ll revitalize you and improve your concentration for when you have to go back. If not, you risk becoming stressed out later on.
Alon Levy says
Is it true that we’re supposed to take it easy on vacations?
Not at all – on my spring break, I spent many hours on my senior thesis.
Darryl Pearce says
Feh. I got laid off from my technical writing job and I’m not very relaxed at all. But somehow…, I feel in a very dreamlike-sense nevertheless.
…oooh.
GrrlScientist says
did you already shovel the driveway?
chemparrot says
I usually go visit my parents on my vactions, since they live several states away. I always end up doing some kind of computer work for them – creating or tweaking a database, showing them how to use some feature, general cleanup/archiving of stuff on the drives.
Not so bad now, but a couple of times it took up the bulk of the visit!
John Wilkins says
Without deadlines I have nothing to Avoid. I can’t relax on holidays, which is why I never take any.
Abel Pharmboy says
PZ, just run down to your local, start dancing, doing jello body shots and lifting up your shirt a lot. That’ll get you in the spirit…or beaten and ejected.
sampetrova says
I expect it’s measurable to determine it comfortable and act during vacations. If you can honourable lose roughly paperwork, students and deadlines for a spell, it’ll amend you and amend your density for when you bang to go confirm. If not, you risk becoming troubled out afterward on.
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sam
used caravans