Thoughts for the New Year, part 3
The hell of fall semester is finally over and I have resurfaced from my cave of despair to blog again! I\'ve made this post two years in a row at this point, and I figured that it would only be appropriate to make one this year. Also, these posts are basically the only point all year where I reflect about my life, and I think I need that :P\r\n\r\nSidequest 1: Learn the building numbers \xe2\x80\x93 99% complete. I\'m SO CLOSE. I just had an embarrassing moment this year where I had no clue where building 24 was, so I can\'t quite give myself 100% on this.\r\n\r\nSidequest 2: Get my Pirate Certificate \xe2\x80\x93 25% complete.\xc2\xa0In my defense, I\'m really trying to take the sailing class next semester, so maybe I\'ll get this to 50% before I graduate. Turns out varsity fencing is THE BEST and I never want to leave so I\'m okay with never completing this sidequest :)\r\n\r\nSidequest 3: Collect 60 free t-shirts \xe2\x80\x93 ~50% complete. This is a wild and probably incorrect estimate, but honestly, I\'m sort of over the free t-shirt craze. This is probably because career fair t-shirts are pretty much my entire day to day wardrobe and this has not changed for the past two years. You get tired of wearing different Jane Street shirts every day.\r\n\r\nSidequest 4: Get a cool internship/externship \xe2\x80\x93 100% complete!\xc2\xa0While this is technically completed because of last year\'s internship at PlayStation, I have still not acquired one for this year because most of the companies I want to work for started their recruiting cycles super late (and I got rejected/ghosted from some of the big ones I applied to, RIP). Stay tuned!!11!!11!\r\n\r\nSidequest 5: Pull a cool hack \xe2\x80\x93 ???% complete.\xc2\xa0???\r\n\r\nSidequest 6: Study abroad as many times as physically possible \xe2\x80\x93 0% complete. Okay, I SWEAR I\'m going to do GTL next year. I actually did apply very half-heartedly this year, but with no intentions of doing it anyways because I need to work on my research project over IAP :P\r\n\r\nSidequest 7: Beat Imposter\xe2\x80\x99s Syndrome \xe2\x80\x93 45% complete.\xc2\xa0I think that this semester, I felt like I belonged at MIT the most out of any semester that I\'ve been here. This would have increased this percentage to like, 75% on its own. But I do feel shitty and sad about getting rejected from a lot of jobs, so I\'m going to subtract 30% from that total :,). I\'m pretty god damn awful at technical interviews. I think I\'m getting better with practice, but I\'m still pretty bad. Definitely worse than the MIT average :P.\r\n\r\nSidequest 8: Survive the winter without a winter coat \xe2\x80\x93 0% complete.\xc2\xa0I\'ve given up on this. I\'m old and it\'s too damn cold out.\r\n\r\nSidequest 9: Build a thing \xe2\x80\x93 40% complete.\xc2\xa0I think I could theoretically build most of the basic things. I planned on building my own loft this year, but decided against it because a. it\'s a lot of work and b. my boyfriend wound up doing all the building and he didn\'t want to build a loft, lol\r\n\r\nSidequest 10:\xc2\xa0Find something I genuinely love to do \xe2\x80\x93 50% complete. Note that this is the first year that this sidequest actually has a number value. Long tangent and explanation incoming, per usual.\r\n\r\nI think the last year was the year that I actually found projects that I genuinely enjoyed working on, and that was really inspiring - after suffering through three joyless semesters of CS requirements, I was honestly getting pretty damn sick of this school. I found a UROP where I do independent research that\'s [annotation note="who wouldn\'t love working with games and robots though???"]relevant to my life interests[/annotation]. I\'m pretty much carrying out my own study using technology that I built myself. I might even be published by next semester if I get everything working this IAP! I also wrote some cool papers for classes - I conducted ethnographic research into dating app culture at MIT for the class Petey taught last semester, and did an in-depth analysis of a TV Tropes page for T.L. Taylor\'s Games and Culture this semester. I love writing papers, which is a truly hot take here at MIT, but every time I had a research paper due for a class, I truly relished the opportunity to dig down deeper into a subject that I didn\'t know much about before.\r\n\r\nTo be honest, this focus on more research based projects is not the direction that I saw my life going in - I was sort of resigned to becoming a regular old software engineer for the first two years of my MIT experience. But I think I\'ve realized that this should be my backup plan, because I really think that I can do more with my skills than become a [annotation note="read: code monkey"]software engineer[/annotation]. Working as a programmer this summer in PlayStation, my literal dream company, sucked the soul out of me more than I thought possible. And honestly, I suck at computer science - granted, that\'s a comparison to people at MIT, but I\'m awful at technical interviews and haven\'t gotten the hang of them after countless hours of practice. Maybe I just have Impostor Syndrome, but I think it\'s telling that I\'ve enjoyed all my design-heavy UROP projects far more than I have enjoyed any software project in my entire MIT career.\r\n\r\nI\'m still trying to give it a shot. I [annotation note="and got rejected from a lot of software internships"]applied to a lot of software internships[/annotation] for next summer, as well as product management and product engineering internships. I think that having technical experience is important to actually gaining \'hard\' skills. But I can\'t see myself as a software engineer forever.\r\n\r\nI\'m rapidly approaching a crossroad that I\'ll have to navigate in senior fall. I think that I have three options that I\'ll have to choose from. Note that these are in order of preference.\r\n
- \r\n \t
- Apply to the Media Lab for graduate school (masters/PhD program).\xc2\xa0\r\n
- \r\n \t
- Pros:\r\n
- \r\n \t
- Continue my research in games, learning, and robot collaboration. \r\n \t
- Participate in a ton of cool projects, and create a few myself! \r\n \t
- Meet some of the coolest people in the field! Maybe even form a startup! \r\n \t
- Learn about job opportunities beyond just being a software engineer, and gain the qualifications to get those jobs. \r\n
\r\n \t - Cons:\r\n
- \r\n \t
- I will be a broke grad student for a while. At minimum two years, even more if I get in to the PhD program. \r\n \t
- I don\'t know concretely what sorts of jobs I would get with this higher powered degree. I don\'t really want to go into academia. \r\n \t
- It\'s really hard to get in to the Media Lab and I may not be qualified straight out of undergrad. \r\n
\r\n
\r\n \t - Pros:\r\n
- Apply to the MEng program to get a master\'s degree in a year.\r\n
- \r\n \t
- Pros:\r\n
- \r\n \t
- You get a master\'s degree...in a year. That\'s pretty dope. \r\n \t
- Gives an extra year of buffer before applying to real world jobs, and also I could apply for better jobs with a master\'s degree. \r\n
\r\n \t - Cons:\r\n
- \r\n \t
- Might be hard to find a TA-ship (which is how you get funded for the degree). \r\n
\r\n
\r\n \t - Pros:\r\n
- Apply to jobs in the real world, preferably in 1. UX design 2. product management and 3. software\xc2\xa0\r\n
- \r\n \t
- Pros:\r\n
- \r\n \t
- $$$ \r\n \t
- Start living real life \r\n \t
- $$$ \r\n
\r\n \t - Cons:\r\n
- \r\n \t
- I will probably be miserable pretty quickly if I do not get a job in UX design or product management. \r\n
\r\n
\r\n - Pros:\r\n
Now, let\xe2\x80\x99s describe MIT as an ocean of possibility. Once you\xe2\x80\x99re in it, you can basically head in any direction you want and land on solid ground. Such is the nature of this school, and this is one of many reasons it\xe2\x80\x99s one of the best colleges out there. However, to go back to the analogy: once I reached the figurative ocean, my boat broke down, dumping me into the deep end and soaking my map, leaving me paddling in no particular direction whatsoever.\r\nI no longer feel quite like this. I think that I\'ve commandeered a boat from...somewhere...and paddled it in the general direction of forwards. I\'ve almost reached the mainland. I just need to decide which one of three rivers will carry me there, and I\'m sort of stalled at the confluence of all three of these rivers trying to decide.\r\n\r\nGood analogy? Not really, but let\'s move on. Life is still meaningless, but I don\'t think I\'m paddling aimlessly in my MIT career any longer.\r\n\r\nSophomore year, I was writing from probably the lowest point in my MIT career. I realized that I hated computer science. I realized that I wasn\'t even very good at it, and regretted not exploring any of the other countless opportunities that MIT provides.\r\n\r\nI still am not computer science\'s biggest fan, but I do think that knowing how to program is basically like knowing how to read in the current day and age. Maybe not quite that important, but it\'s unequivocally useful to know how to program. And I do appreciate being able to create cool side projects and make games with the programming skills that I\'ve learned. Did I need a computer science degree to do this? Probably not. But having a computer science degree gives me marketable skills in case getting a master\'s degree doesn\'t work out for me.\r\n\r\nI still regret not exploring more opportunities within MIT. I realized that I should have been a 6-9 instead of a 6-3, but it\'s too late now. I wish that I hadn\'t gotten started in the Media Lab so late, and wish that I had explored more Media Lab classes in freshman and sophomore year. I wish that I had time to take more evolutionary biology and genetics classes. I wish that I was good enough at math to understand more math and physics classes. I do regret all of these things.\r\n\r\nBut I think that I\'ve found a little niche in the world of MIT that I fit into, and that I\'m pretty good at. And that\'s something that I\'m really grateful for, because I think that gives me the support I need to explore similar fields and find something that I\'d be interested in working on as a career. And really, that\'s something that freshman Nisha and sophomore Nisha would have both died to have. I think progress has been made.\r\n\r\nStay tuned for next year, when I\'ll hopefully have a better idea of which road life will lead me down.