Friday, February 25, 2011

Midterm

It's Friday again...TGIF! =)
Well, for everyone else it is a easy Friday, for me it is a very scary day known as midterm exam day! =( I have to admit that while I have actually read all of the assignments and have great notes, thanks to my awesome friends! (you know who you are) I am still terrified of this test.
So right now I am studying like mad! Trying not to freak myself out too badly. I probably won't tell you how I did, because that would be too much information for a online blog.
So today's update is no new material, taking the midterm here in just about 10 minutes. I'm honestly thinking this midterm may go better if we had huge margaritas to drink while we took it, but sadly we can't have them on campus. *sigh* I can still wish for one I guess.
The plan for next week is the first installment of The Lord of the Rings. I'm excited to start reading this book again, because it has been awhile.
Until Next Friday.
XOXO,
Julia
Post Midterm Comments:
So I managed to survive the midterm. Thanks again to my awesome friends who allowed me to use their notes. (meaning they e-mailed them to me before the exam. I didn't sit and look off of them. Just thought I should clarify.) The midterm was everything I expected and more...my hand is still killing me and I feel like I have a Tolkien hangover! =) I guess I could have a real hangover and that would be even worse, so I won't complain about my Tolkien hangover anymore. Well I'm going to stop typing now. My hand still isn't quite right, it hurts to type. Next week is Fellowship of the Ring! <3

Friday, February 18, 2011

Boethius-The Consolation of Philosophy

It's Friday again!

Today's blog is happening while class is going on, because this subject matter makes my brain fry. Seriously, there are times when I think I hear a faint sizzling sound in my ears. (just kidding!) However, this subject matter really does make my brain hurt and I honestly have trouble understanding it. I honestly feel like they talk in circles and this is the second time I have read and attempted to comprehend The Consolation of Philosophy. Here is what I sort of grasp, (I'm sorry, it isn't much and it is going to be very basic and random!)

There are two Boethiuses (?) (not sure if that is the correct plural or not! haha...moving on), a real living man who wrote The Consolation of Philosophy and there is a character in the book named Boethius.

The real Boethius wrote The Consolation of Philosophy in isolation after his life was taken away by an evil man named Cyprian who wanted more power. The real Boethius and the character Boethius have similarities. (okay, enough background information..mainly because that is all I remember!)

The basic question that Boethius is trying to answer is this: Why do bad things happen to good people and good things happen to bad people? This is of course an honorable question because everyone at some point in their life has asked this question. While I understand what question Boethius is asking, I am not ashamed to admit that I do not understand the answer.

I am not a philosophy major and I do not pretend to be some brilliant human-being that can understand all kinds of things. This is way beyond my comprehension level and really makes my life more difficult. This is what I have gathered from the class and I honestly wouldn't have gotten this on my own at all.

Lady Fortune is a fickle woman who can give you false goods, (the things we love in life) but can also take them away from you as well. These false goods, (fame, power, wealth, public office, and pleasure) aren't true happiness because they aren't really our own. Now, somewhere in all of this providence, fate, chance and free will come into the picture which ultimately brings about the understanding of true happiness.

According to Lady Philosophy true happiness = True Good which comes from the one true God.

This has been the most painful blog I have had to write the whole time. Mainly because this has been the most painful reading I have had to tackle so far. My brain hurts now and I am not even sure what I typed makes sense. I apologize if it doesn't. Thanks for suffering along with me.

Until Next Time.
XOXO,
Julia

Friday, February 11, 2011

The Hobbit

It's me again! I am so excited to write this blog about The Hobbit today. I just want to start by saying if anyone is reading this and has never read The Hobbit by J.R.R Tolkien, you need to read it. If you have read it, but it has been awhile, you need to read it again. This was the first time I had ever read The Hobbit, even though I "read" the Lord of the Rings when I was a 6th grader. I say "read," in quotations because I was still very much a child at the time that I read the books and honestly don't have that good of a memory of them. I really wonder if I honestly gave them the proper reading that I would now at that age. As a middle-schooler I was more concerned about drama, which most children are and so my reading habits, while strong at that point were still growing and developing. So, what this random rant that has nothing to do at all with The Hobbit, is saying is that I am basically starting over even with The Lord of the Rings Trilogy. Now, on to the story at hand.

I was very intrigued with The Hobbit right from the start. It read very much like a children's book, which I learned later was the entire purpose of the story, it was in fact written for children. The main character and hero of the tale is Mr. Bilbo Baggins, a hobbit if you haven't already figured that out, who lives in a hobbit-hole that is in the ground. (where most holes usually are.) Anyway, the whole story revolves around Bilbo and his great adventure that he has. This is typical for most stories, but of course there is a twist. Being a hobbit, Bilbo is supposed to only enjoy being at home and staying at home. Hobbits don't usually go on adventures or even leave their houses except to enjoy their gardens outside of their homes. (Even though it doesn't really mention this from the book.) Anyway, the book focuses on Bilbo's trip to the Lonely Mountain with group of dwarves led by Thorin Oakenshield. Bilbo is actually selected by a wizard named Gandalf to go on the trip with the dwarves, even though he never tells Bilbo this, and sort of manipulates him. Okay, so I think I've given you enough of a summary, if you want to know more you either need to read the book or look up the spark notes. Because I am getting on to what I learned from the book as well as what I found interesting and excited.

If you don't already know, The Hobbit is the prelude to The Lord of the Rings, it tells the beginning of the story, how "the ring" came to Bilbo and ultimately how "the ring" ended up with his younger cousin Frodo Baggins who is the unlikely hero of that Trilogy. Anyway, I took what little I remembered from the books and put that into what I was about to learn in The Hobbit. Needless to say I was completely shocked to discover that Bilbo was not always Bilbo the adventurer. I was surprised to learn that Bilbo was not at all interested or excited about going on this adventure, even though his mother was Belladonna Took. (The Took Family in the hobbit world were known for being strange because they loved going on adventures.) Bilbo was more like the Baggins side and liked his hobbit-hole, until he was basically forced into going on the adventure by Gandalf. Something else I was surprised about was my misunderstanding of how Bilbo came to be the owner of the ring of power. I always thought he had taken it from Gollum, but I was surprised again to learn that he merely found it on the floor of a cave tunnel, while trying to find a way out and escape from goblins. He defeats Gollum in a battle of wits instead.

I found The Hobbit to be nothing like I anticipated. It was better than I expected because it took everything I believed or thought I knew and flipped it upside down. Bilbo wasn't always a hero or a great adventurer, he became that. To me, The Hobbit has a moral, it tells anyone that reads it that you can become more than you are as long as you try hard enough and are willing to overcome the obstacles that will ultimately stand in the way of your goal, because it is those obstacles that will make you want you want to be. I want to say so much more about the story and all of its wonder and excitement, but I am afraid that I will never stop writing if I do.

The basics of The Hobbit are as I said above, but they also serve as an answer to those who want to know and understand more about The Lord of the Rings and how all of the events in those novels came to happen. It is a fascinating and thrilling tale about a hobbit who becomes more than he ever thought he could. He goes from being a scared, fainting, shrieking hobbit at the beginning to a bold, courageous, quick-witted hero and adventurer in the end. Bilbo's tale takes you on a journey that could easily be your own, which is the magic of J.R.R. Tolkien, but it also leads you to want to know more about the things Bilbo discovers and encounters and it eventually makes you desire to read the rest of the tales, which are of course (as I have said multiple times now) The Lord of the Rings Trilogy, which picks up the story of "the ring," its effect and impact on Bilbo's younger cousin Frodo

I end with this, the story was amazing and I learned a lot things. I wish I could share them all, but I really need to stop writing now. Anyway, It was a fun read and I can't wait until I start The Lord of the Rings. Next week is The Consolation of Philosophy by Boethius. I have read this once before, but I didn't really grasp it then, so my next blog will be interesting. I hope I didn't bore anyone too much. =) Sorry if I did!

Until Next Time.
XOXO,
Julia

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Stay Tuned

I'm back again!

So my weekend did not go as planned at all and an illness kept me sidelined from my Tolkien class on Friday. Actually, a 30 minute wait at my doctor's office kept me from class. Once my doctor confirmed that I wasn't contagious I had intended to try and make it to class. The 30 minute wait made that impossible and I was heartbroken, because I was looking forward to discussing the works we had read.

Beowulf has always been and probably will always be one of my favorites, even though I have read it what seems like 100 times at least. (okay, so it hasn't been that many, it just seems that way.) Anyway, my illness has put me behind on my schedule, so I am going to do the unthinkable and skip the Anglo-Saxon works and will write this coming Friday all about our next reading J.R.R. Tolkien's The Hobbit.

Sorry for anyone looking forward to my discussion of the Anglo-Saxon works. I wasn't prepared for a cold!

Until next Friday.
xoxo,
Julia