Nostalgia [entries|reading|network|archive]
simont

[ userinfo | dreamwidth userinfo ]
[ archive | journal archive ]

Mon 2005-09-19 20:50
Nostalgia

Sparked by a random song lyric, I've spent a fair amount of the past few days reading back through various text archives I have from 1997-8, the second half of my time as a student. Online diaries, messages exchanged with friends; that sort of thing.

I understand it's traditional to look back on one's time at university and see it as the best years of one's life, and indeed that's what I find myself thinking. So I thought I'd muse a bit about how and why that's the case.

The most obvious thing I notice in the day-to-day conversations with people is the huge amount of freedom I had. As somebody with natural aptitude for the two subjects I studied, I was able to take a pretty relaxed attitude to my actual work: I did do some, but it happened as and when I felt like it and I was able to give most other things priority over it provided I made time for it at some stage. So there wasn't this rigid roping-off of thirty-seven hours of every week as Work Time and the need to fit everything else into a few fixed evening and weekend slots; I could wander out to visit a friend or to shop or to eat at the slightest whim, and I frequently did.

Accompanying that temporal freedom was a corresponding spatial freedom, arising from everything I ever needed being within walking distance of my college room, including the college rooms of my friends. Today, if I have a sudden desire to shop for something, I have to either climb in the car and faff about with car parks, or face a half-hour walk into town. Neither is conducive to whim-shopping: these days I tend to delay trips into town until I've got enough things to do there to make the journey worth the effort. But at college, none of this was an issue; if I wanted to buy (say) a CD, HMV was two minutes' walk away and I could be back in my room with the new CD in my stereo within ten. Visiting friends was just as easy then and is at least as much effort as shopping now, complicated further by the fact that one of my choices of transport is incompatible with drinking when I get there.

In addition to all that, there was a freedom of food which I probably wouldn't have remarked on before being diagnosed as coeliac this year. I'd get messages saying ‘I feel like a sausage roll, meet me at the shop’, and I'd jump out of my chair and say ‘good idea’ and off I'd go. Three minutes later I'd be cramming something into my mouth which I hadn't so much as thought about moments earlier. This contrasts sharply with my post-coeliac eating habits, in which food simply isn't something I can do on a whim because of the hassle of getting hold of the right ingredients; it all has to be planned days in advance. If I wanted to eat pizza right now, for example, I'd have to start by going into town and visiting a doctor, for goodness' sake, to get a repeat prescription for non-useless gluten-free pizza bases. Which would take a few days to arrive, and I'd have to go into town again to collect them. And then I'd have to cook the pizza myself, and by that time I can pretty much guarantee that my momentary pizza craving would have long since evaporated.

That's kind of the obvious thing, though. None of it seems very surprising in retrospect, but it felt depressingly wrong to imagine myself doing things like that now. I just read back over a load of suggestions for things to do which were sent to me in 1997, most of which I accepted; almost every one of them was something to which I'd now say ‘sorry, I can't’, followed by one of a range of excuses such as ‘I'm at work’ or ‘I'm driving’ or ‘I can't eat that anyway’ or ‘I need to get up early tomorrow’ and so on. It's not just that I had more freedom as a student; it's how much more freedom I had as a student.

(Which is not to say that there weren't downsides too. I just about remember the sense of new freedom I had after starting a full-time job, when I realised that my evenings and weekends were wholly and inalienably mine. As a student, they'd been potential working-time just as much as the week; the feeling of separation between work and life that enabled me to leave my entire job on the hook at 5:30 felt very liberating. And although I've muttered above about the hassle of needing to use a car to go places, it's also unquestionably the case that the car also gives me the freedom to randomly go to places which would otherwise have required considerable planning.)

There was another thing I've noticed about my studenthood, though, which is an attitude thing more than anything else: I cared about stuff more. I seemed to have more brain-space, more concentration, more emotion and more enthusiasm to spare for random things that crossed my path.

I'm not sure I can produce any particularly good examples of that, which is worrying to my own detailed-example-oriented mind. It was lots of little things, more than any one big thing. Anything from random quirks of software, through casual remarks by people in their online diaries, down to exchanges of silly messages such as impromptu word ladders: I had the time, the energy and the inclination to analyse, to speculate, to play, and most of all to feel. It seems to me now that in those days I found a lot more things interesting, or fun, or worth spending time on, whereas now I'd just sigh in a world-weary (or possibly just plain weary) way and save my strength for the things that really mattered to me.

The phrase ‘youthful idealism’ is lurking in my mind when I say stuff like this. That's interesting in itself, because I didn't feel youthfully idealistic as a student about any of the things I've just mentioned. What I did suspect of being youthful idealism at the time was my devotion to writing free software to help other people, and I remember feeling a little worried that I might lose that devotion as I got older and become a corporate drone with no purpose to my life that wasn't derived from someone else. In spite of that, or perhaps because of it, that devotion is one thing I do still have eight years later; but a lot of other stuff I hadn't realised I had seems to have gone.

So what I wonder is, were these two things unrelated? Because now I've written about them in quick succession, it seems to me that the sense of caring, of having the time and effort and energy spare to lavish on any even marginally interesting thing that crossed my path without regard for whether there was something it could be better spent on, might actually have been a result of all that freedom. It probably counts as a freedom in itself, in fact: freedom from the constraint of having limited energy, to go with the above-mentioned freedom from the constraints of time and space.

Of course, I'm currently (as in this week specifically) feeling particularly tired, so I don't doubt that I'm seeing my past in an especially rose-tinted fashion when it comes to the specific issue of how much energy I had then compared to today. Perhaps in a few weeks' time, once I've had some proper rest, the difference won't seem so big.

I think that's probably enough wittering for now. I'd like to bring this piece to a triumphant conclusion and present some great insight or (better still) something I can do to improve my present life, but I haven't got any; all I've got is a general sense of wistfulness and nostalgia, and sorrow for a lost sense of playfulness and enthusiasm which these days I only feel in isolated moments. So I'll just have to say that, and then shut up.

LinkReply
[identity profile] vyvyan.livejournal.comMon 2005-09-19 20:10
Do you not have more financial freedom now, than as a student, though? The main reason I feel I still have most of the freedoms you mention above (aside from the coeliac bit, obviously) is that I was more or less happy to settle for a job which actually gives me less disposable income than I had as an undergrad, but which leaves me a lot of flexibility in when and how I work.
Link Reply to this | Thread
[identity profile] meirion.livejournal.comMon 2005-09-19 20:51
you make a point which is perhaps fundamental to my current thinking: given that i am not getting any of the much-vaunted benefits of academia (integrity, freedom, ability to work when, where and as i choose) why am i putting up with the poor salary?

i think it's because i still believe that decent academia can exist. and i know i wouldn't survive in the cut-throat outside world.

-m-
Link Reply to this | Parent
[personal profile] simontMon 2005-09-19 22:08
I've certainly got more money :-) I'm not entirely sure whether that translates directly into more financial freedom. I never really felt constrained by my finances as a student; I think I had a natural tendency not to want more than I could afford.

(Also, I was reasonably rich by student standards, thanks to parental generosity a little way above the call of duty, a number of well-paid summer jobs, and on one occasion successfully licensing some of my own software to a Canadian company.)

I'm sure I'd feel constrained if I had to go back to a student budget now (not least because I'd have to move out of this reasonably nice flat into a small room of some sort). But at the time, it didn't bother me. Certainly I was able to respond positively to almost all random "let's go out for pizza/curry" type suggestions without ever having to beg off on financial grounds.
Link Reply to this | Parent | Thread
[identity profile] pne.livejournal.comTue 2005-09-20 04:58
on one occasion successfully licensing some of my own software to a Canadian company.

Tell me more, please?
Link Reply to this | Parent | Thread
[personal profile] simontTue 2005-09-20 08:11
The company in question was writing software which modified executable files to provide, in their words, "various kinds of security". I was never entirely sure what that meant; could have been anything from obfuscation to self-decrypt-at-runtime. They licensed the disassembler in the NASM suite from me to use in their product. I got nearly £2000 for it, which I thought was pretty good going given that it had taken me two days to write :-)

(Well, not exactly. The disassembler was mostly a front end on the enormous instruction table I'd already spent a lot more than two days on; that was where the real value lay, if anywhere. But the two days I spent writing a disassembler front end to the table, simply because it seemed easy and it might come in handy one day, turned out to be well spent indeed!)
Link Reply to this | Parent
[identity profile] ex-lark-asc.livejournal.comTue 2005-09-20 10:15
I have far more income than I did when I was a student, and less financial freedom. Debt is an insidious tihng.
Link Reply to this | Parent
[identity profile] cartesiandaemon.livejournal.comMon 2005-09-19 20:50
Yes, that seems to say it all really.

It occurs to me it might be wise to make a deliberate attempt to spread passions out over time now. To plan to take things up and have time for them and then leave them.

Or to become a rich consultant and have extended holidays or something-i-don't-know-what. It's a shame that the freedom we had then wasn't appreciated as much, because we didn't have our working lives to compare it to.
Link Reply to this | Thread
[identity profile] vyvyan.livejournal.comMon 2005-09-19 21:00
By the way, hello; I've just noticed you added me, and I've added you back.
Link Reply to this | Parent | Thread
[identity profile] cartesiandaemon.livejournal.comMon 2005-09-19 21:05
Thanks. *waves* Hello. It was very nice to meet you in person. Though it was weird wasn't it; I was so amused/disturbed to hear you described as the one Jack knows...
Link Reply to this | Parent
[identity profile] geekette8.livejournal.comMon 2005-09-19 21:10
Yes, yes and thrice yes. Well written.

OOI, which college were you at and what were the two subjects you did?
Link Reply to this | Thread
[personal profile] simontMon 2005-09-19 21:59
Trinity; my degree was in maths, and when that finished I did the one-year DipCompsci. (Partly as a means of delaying the inevitable onset of full-time work, and partly because I suspected there were gaps in my extensive self-taught computing skills which might be filled by a formal taught course.)
Link Reply to this | Parent | Thread
[identity profile] ptc24.livejournal.comTue 2005-09-20 08:55
Were there (significant) gaps?
Link Reply to this | Parent | Thread
[personal profile] simontTue 2005-09-20 08:59
Nothing that would have seriously impacted my ability to do a programming job, as it turned out; no enormous gaping holes. But there were plenty of little things I hadn't happened to encounter before, such as some of the finer points of computer graphics, a proper understanding of NP-completeness, functional programming and so on. I found it to be a mind-broadening experience and thoroughly enjoyable. (And the project I did probably resulted in me getting my current job, so even if none of the above had been true it might still have been worthwhile on that basis alone!)
Link Reply to this | Parent
[identity profile] geekette8.livejournal.comWed 2005-09-21 10:07
Cool - I probably ought to have known that, in fact, and now you say it it does ring a bell. I was wondering if we'd overlapped, but it doesn't sound like we did - I was at Clare doing (vanilla undergrad) CompSci from 1992-1995.
Link Reply to this | Parent | Thread
[personal profile] simontWed 2005-09-21 10:09
I matriculated in 1994, so we overlapped temporally for a year, but first-year mathmos and third-year compscis wouldn't have had that many opportunities to overlap spatially. Er, as it were.
Link Reply to this | Parent | Thread
[identity profile] geekette8.livejournal.comWed 2005-09-21 15:11
Oy! Are you trying to overlap spatially with my wife? -- Jif

:-)
Link Reply to this | Parent
[identity profile] jvvw.livejournal.comMon 2005-09-19 21:25
I suddenly felt like this recently when one of my friends organised a fancy dress thing and I realised that when I was a student I'd have put lots of effort into it but that I have so little time now, that just being able to see those friends felt like a luxury.

Even though I'm better off financially now, it's much more expensive to have a social life, partly because of distances but also because it pretty much necessitates going to restaurants and pubs, rather than sitting around in someone's room. I don't feel better off financially which is silly. I think I'd notice if I went back to living on a student budget though!
Link Reply to this
[identity profile] thecritick.livejournal.comMon 2005-09-19 21:38
You don't want to underestimate the importance of nostalgia in colouring your memories (even when you read what seem like facts). I used to be a student (seven years ago) and I'm still a student now, but I look back with nostalgia on things like living in a college room, or being able to go out to buy things instantly, like you say, without having to walk into town.

On the other hand, I can equally see lots of things that are much better now (I have cats, I have a car, I have my own house, I don't have a bedder that smokes in the bathroom downstairs making me wake up in the morning to the smell of stale smoke, I have money, I have a TV, I don't have that bloody bagpiper annoying me all afternoon, etc)

But the problem with nostalgia is that it mistakenly separates out the good and the bad, so you can't consider the whole situation together in one mind-breath (I find mind-breaths a useful concept, but that may just be because I have a short attention span). I think it's better to assume that the past, like the present, is full of good and bad things, and that in principle, any two times or periods of time are inherently equal in terms of happiness.

I also think that freedom is a hugely over-rated concept. As you rightly argue, you have simultaneously gained and lost freedoms over small things. I don't think that it is helpful to view these as "freedoms" in any meaningful sense: you could just as well consider them as material gains and losses - lost time, gained a car. I think that gives you a better basis on which to evaluate whether you've made improvements or not.
Link Reply to this
[identity profile] pne.livejournal.comTue 2005-09-20 04:59
I'd like to bring this piece to a triumphant conclusion and present some great insight or (better still) something I can do to improve my present life, but I haven't got any; all I've got is a general sense of wistfulness and nostalgia

I found it rather enjoyable to read just the same.

Perhaps it was even better for being mostly nostalgia and not amazing insights and thoughtful deconstructions.
Link Reply to this
[identity profile] ex-lark-asc.livejournal.comTue 2005-09-20 10:31
Speaking as a migraine sufferer, the "energy-level economy" is something I'm all too familiar with. It is true that when you have many demands you have to balance them against your resources and prioritise in a thoroughly unromantic and funless way, and it's also true that "growing up" in the financial and material sense seems to be about acquiring an increasing number of responsibilities that make just such demands on your time and mental energy. I've wound up off sick from work long-term three times in my life now, and it startles me every time it happens how much more creative energy I suddenly have, and how much more inspiration I get to do things like write and take up new things to learn.

As for youthful idealism, I think there's an element of the Silver Horde nature to its apparent evaporation too - your older self doesn't put energy into so many random things because you're experienced enough to make a canny guess as to which avenues are actually useful in the end. I'm sure childish open-mindedness does lead to wonderful discoveries sometimes, but I think what tends to get forgotten is that it also leads to a lot of wasted time in between them...
Link Reply to this
navigation
[ go | Previous Entry | Next Entry ]
[ add | to Memories ]