Saturday, August 15, 2020
Accountability
Accountability I wanted to post this a couple days before decisions came out but could not put my thoughts together while studioâing it up for midterm reviews, but itâs Spring Break now and time for all of us to take a deeeeeeeep breath Before decisions came out, I felt like writing something like: Have faith in the fact that everything youâve put forth has been a decision youâve made/ Youâve put a stamp of approval on every part of the application/ Whatever happens, know that youâve put forth YOU. After decisions came out, some of you were happy and would have found the above message totally agreeable and your lives totally rewarding, but some were sad and would have no doubt felt indignant as if your âbest selvesâ went unnoticed. I feel the message still stands though for you, for me. As Emad and Anna have said, undergrad admissions is but a phase and itâs so important to hold on to your dreams. Hereâs my anectodal addendum: It was the day of the final review. I left several hours in the morning to draw up diagrams and export drawings from my 3D model which I spent all night coding before review time @ 2PM. But soon, I realized a fatal catch-22⦠while coding allowed me to produce geometry exponentially it also, well, created too many lines for computer programs to handle! ahhhhhhhlineslineslines The 3D version of this literally has millions of lines that the program could not flatten and export into Adobe Illustrator as drawingsheck, it essentially went to Not Responding every 30 seconds. The professor expected 12 drawings of our 3D models, but I couldnât get the program to process a single line So what happens when I couldnât get the model I spent all night making (and that actually shows all sorts of interesting effects)to produce one drawing? Which is what is actually printed and presented to the professors and panel of jurors at the final review??? Panic. Panic. Panic. But I remembered a general lesson I learned in the past couple months as an architecture student, summed up in a quote from Joel, my studio professor from last semester: âIf youâre going to spend that much time on something, commit to itâ (He was trying to make me explain and defend my project more robustly.) So here I am with a huge 3D-model file, unresponsive software, and no drawings to show. I could sit there some more and wrestle with the program to try to get a drawing or two out. Or I could screw it and straight up REPRESENT my project as comprehensively as possible Last semester, I mightve chosen the first, but this semesterchoice 2 is the obvious way to go. Choice 2 meant screenshots (like the two pictures above). 12 giant screenshots and then some more. Iâm pretty much committing a presentation sin, but if thatâs the only way I can show the model Iâve been slaving away for and the concept that Iâve cultivated for weeks then Iâve gotta get over the huge embarrassment of presenting only screenshots. Presentation timeand I nervously prefaced with âI apologize for all these screenshotsâ And my professor smiled a little and said, âYeahhthis is pretty badâ WOW! GREAT START! But whatever, I went on and explained. Throughout the presentation, my professor and the jurors were itching to rip away the screenshots and see some clean line-drawings but in the end, they were excited to see the results produced from my system, shown in the screenshots. Although the screenshots were a sin, they still allowed me to articulate the details of my concept and explain my decisions when they were being questioned this ability to really represent my work is empowering, as if I held the steering wheel. Sometimes, unimaginable end-of-the-worlds might spring up and stop you dead in your tracks, blurring your vision for a while, until you realize what it is youâre actually here to do. What it is you have to show. What it is youâre arguing for. So donât let go of that steering wheel feel in control and accountable for where you go. Even if youâre somehow unable to deliver whatâs expected, find whatever works to get your thoughts across and help others understand them. Be responsible for your ideas and defend your decisions. Put your stamp on things and stand by them.
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