Showing posts with label William and Mary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label William and Mary. Show all posts

01 April 2011

RE: LONG LOST FRIEND!

Indeed, “long lost,” but never in a moment forgotten! Throughout the span of a decade, with a mind tempered (or tormented) by “what-once-was” well-wishing nostalgia, remembrances and a deep longing desire to redeem the unearthly, unending exuberance of youth, I have often found my thoughts drifting towards you, my baby blue-eyed, porcelain-paled, lusciously lipped lil’ lady friend of times far past & gone. Indeed, “friend,” but oh so much and so many things more!

April Manteris, you were my Perestroika as Millennium Approaches; you were one above many of my arch-guardian Angels In America! How fitting that in my later, more recent life, I would battle with disease-induced malediction & delusions of messianic manic psychosis, much like the enlightened torment of Prior Walter told by Tony Kushner in his “Not-Yet-Conscious, Forward Dawning,” damned devilish drama staged as “A Gay Fantasia on National Themes.”


My own, personal, proprietary and unprecedented “Gay Fantasia,” told as follies of the mind and frailty of the body, was rife buttressed by more universal themes. In a demented state of holier-than-thou HIV/AIDS-instigated happenstance and insanity, I foresaw a full faith reconciliation of all conflicting religious around the world; the real-time cultivation of a post-apocalyptic, new-growth Garden of Eden; and my transsexual impregnation as an irrationally self-proclaiming, prophetic “Gift of God” with Christ Child incarnate.

Delusions of near godly grandeur galloped as chariots of fire along the strangely strung-out or awkwardly wrought and wired synapses of my parasitically enslaved psyche toward a new and evermore illustrious Elysian Fields. I was a hopeful, kindhearted and jubilant psychotic; not a criminally paranoid sociopath.

In my lonely, lachrymose, lunatic madness, I believed that all humankind would fall down under the watchful rule & gaze of intergalactic warring Angel/Alien brigades, led by Michael, Gabriel, Beelzebub, and Lucifer, only finally to be throttled full flight into a world far more beautiful, blissful and serene that anyone could have ever imagined before.

Funny thing for me though, during my drug-delayed, disease-induced delusional psychosis, I actually possessed the superhuman scope of mind and intellect to imagine the unimaginable as actual and real! What a harrowingly exhilarating experience! Moreover, you were there with me in spirit, all along the way.

For, I was convinced that you, April: my dream dancing “tell-it-to-snow” Eskimo named Harper Pitt, were suffering from a simultaneously paralleled, prophetic psychosis there, on your side of the world.

In my dreams, I imagined our union as beleaguered, but still sun-beaming and boisterous, biblical brethren, once each of us (and countless other young-spirited saints, psychics and soothsayers) had rightfully sown the heavenly seeds of a new beginning for our separate communities, cultures and societies on this dying-to-life, righteously reincarnate Earth of ours.

So much coincidental quizzicality has shaped the “nefand, sullen languid stories of my last-ditch, last-chance life,” including the serendipity of that first meeting of our two minds.

Our two submedially mature yet still quite sycophantic student souls were somehow, at some point, so mutually confounded, mesmerized and inspired by the truly enlightened intimacy we would go on to share, that we often (if I remember correctly!) smothered each other in self-obsessed, other-opposed & ostracized narcissism.

I fondly reminisce, remember and recall just exactly how we together, as the closest of friends, dealt only in the immaculate intimacy of trusted truth (or truthful trust). Tantamount to our unfettered ferocity of faith in one another, such truth tightly intertwined our hearts & souls together in both telltale-tangled threads of deliberately disgruntled dysfunction or malcontent malaise and sumptuously bittersweet stories of irrational, unreasoned, and misguided boy/girl romance gone awry.

Truth is, all throughout our first two years of undergraduate, I tormented myself terribly in confused and conflicted recognition of the dichotomically opposed binary between mainstream, most fortunate and “full-worth-the-effort” male-female love and its exact opposite: gay love, or “queer” love, since there was nothing “gay” about such love for me, during those years, or even ever after!

Truths is, that one occasion of my coming out that you so fondly remember in email, could have panned out in two very different ways; and trust me, when I say that you would not at all have been pleased by the alternate “outcome” of such proceedings!  WINK! WINK!

Oh! I should scream it from my rooftop! I’M IN LOVE WITH YOU, APRIL MANTERIS! I always have been and always will be! Never once have I not regretted the decision I made to proclaim my homosexuality to the world, because all that led to was me being pigeonholed in to a nasty, putrid, pestilent and perverse segment of society, where I subsequently succumbed to a lifestyle of depression, then deviance, then drugs, then disease, then delusions, then death, then disfigurement.

And, all that’s been done to me without my ever having witnessed once again the trusted truth (or truthful trust) of such mutually equitable & reciprocal platonic intimacy as we once shared, let alone anything remotely resembling the romantic!

So, that said, I’ll conclude in recognition of how immensely blessed I am to have found you meandering back into my life with such a generously opened mind and heart, with such forgiveness of the trifles of the past, and with such dignified poise, to reclaim our friendship from the exact point where we once left it off.

I welcome you into my life with widely opened arms, April! Moreover, I do ever so hope that we can rekindle that platonic intimacy that once existed between the two of us and that defined our very profound and beautiful friendship!  I look forward to a future with you in it, and I hope you do of me, as well…

With fond memories…
And, In fond regards,
Most sincerely…
Your dear friend,

Matt(e)o | QHereKidSF
Matthew D. Blanchard

San Francisco, CA USA
[20110401T223247PT]

21 March 2011

Romance's Ripe New Reason...

Love Is Like A Flower by {peace&love♥}
Love Is Like A Flower | © COPYRIGHT {peace&love♥} | 23rd May, 2008 | ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Accessed March 21, 2011 by QHereKidSF (a.k.a. Matthew D. Blanchard) on Flickr®

Inspired by the well-wishing of a college mentor: Adjunct Theater Arts Professor & Acting Coach, David Doersch, whose warmhearted wisdom woven into a few simple words beamed bright as day in my mind, I read his "Happy SPRING to All!" message on Facebook, while sitting blinded by the light of my computer monitor in the dark of well-past dusk.

Despite the dark and dreary evening that has befallen & befogged
all of San Francisco, my heart & mind were filled with the warmth of the season by these, his welcoming words. And thus, such warmth, well-wishing & wisdom from such a distant friend & role model performance artisan or craftsman inspired in me a deep desire to express creatively exactly how I gladly envision the season to blossom into rebirth such beauty as romance in spite of ridicule, and love in light of sensually dew-dampened lust & longing.

What a beautifully bespoken first few lines of lyrical rhymes & reason
have I set to poetry, as my poem is presented here poised below a quite provocatively romantic photograph, which I found via a Flickr® Photostream™ Key Word Search of "buttercups." I am pleased to recognize the talents of an anonymous artist: peace&love♥, and to thank the photographer for making available their significantly sophisticated & valuable works of photographic art for blogging direct from Flickr®.

I do hope that in posting Love Is Like A Flower, I will earn a right to download
this particular image by permission of the photographer, him or herself, because I'd very much like to have this photo image at my disposal for future noncommercial & unaltered, shared-alike use. But, we'll just have to wait and see on the outcome of that such request. For now, I am still ever so proud at least to present the poem I wrote in response to David Doersch's Facebook® remarks and inspired by this photograph posted above.

SPRING! SPRING! What beauty this season brings
From slothful doted days to a few love-labored flings
That be right wondrous, yet ne'er more as pleasing,
As day’s blessed birth doth savor splendid seedling:
Few to many-petalled gorgeous golden blossoms
Of four-leafed clovers and buttercups so lithesome,
That doth glimmer, glow and shimmer as none before
Upon the tender-to-touch bosom in beauty’s open door
Of a fair merry-weathered, mischief-minded maiden
For whom the goodly fruits of spring be not forbidden.

Here upon doth the season's sweetly stunning affect
Forever bold and bravely full on forthwith reflect
The delightfully bright and brilliant sun’s fine speck
That doth in gleaming traces of sparkled beauty bedeck
Such sweet-nectar dew upon her delicately dimpled neck,
To be kissed off and caressed by a truly “très beau mec,"
As the only daring, dashing young dapper son "français"
Who doth so love, adore, long for and desire with to stay
The dewdrop damsel and her dazzling buttercup breasts,
As she, with toes dipped wet in water’s tiding crests,
Doth also long for and desire love — come what may!
Thus, so flowering, a fine romance is born this day!

Two lovers dance to life, in light of unending union,
The colorful reflections of romance's ripe new reason
Wound and woven, as a festive time-tinted silk ribbon,
Round the maypole, at the hands of all towns-children.
While the joking jester doth flagrantly flout Love’s luster,
His fickle halfhearted flaunter be echoed by such laughter.
Still yet two lovers dance ‘til lips tenderly touch as one,
Thus, their longed-for love doth live from dusk 'til dawn;
And be no more foolish, frolicsome, dumb nor dafter.
Than desire be that doth last still more ‘til then thereafter.

Respectfully submitted,
Matt(e)o | QHereKidSF
Matthew D. Blanchard

matthew@qherekidsf.com

http://www.qherekidsf.com
http://bit.ly/qherekidsf


San Francisco, CA USA

[20110321T200037PT]

01 October 2010

ECONOMY CRISIS = ROLLERCOASTER RISING

A Response to Questions on Unemployment


Is it naive of me to think that I may be able to stick out the economic crisis for a while longer and make good of my meek & miserable financial situation by investing every last minute of my free time as an unemployed NPO Management & Development Strategist into volunteerism??

If I can't get paid to cultivate & enhance my professional skills & talents in the for-profit workforce, then why not sign on to volunteer or intern as an upper level technical or professional specialties adviser for a social benefiting charitable organization at the local, state or national level.

Nonprofits of all shapes & sizes are presently faced with ever greater challenges, when valiantly striving to sustain & enrich their programming, in order to fulfill their constantly evolving but always ubiquitously salient mission(s), even when financial support from individual, corporate or government donors in the for-profit sector is painfully slow in coming.

It is in the rank & file lineup of unpaid volunteers & interns for such organizations where my advanced education & skill sets will not only be immensely valued but further developed, and of course, put to good use!

That is why I participate as a volunteer member of the Board of Directors for two NPOs with distinctly different (yet each vitally important!) purpose, goals & missions: one serving the Public Health & Human Services sector of the San Francisco Bay Area, and the other, an International Development nonprofit based in the MetroDC Area that serves the capacity-building needs of the Government of Sierra Leone.

That is also why I participate as a distinguished Artist in Residence with a local, San Francisco Bay Area experimental performance group comprised of disabled LGBTQQI & gender variant artists, as well as disabled people of color. Furthermore, it is why I remain poised to sign on as a volunteer Development Associate for the same disabled persons' performance group, if ever they should need me, and also why I continue to educate & train myself in NPO Management & Development strategies through low-to-no cost skills building workshops & seminars offered by ... yup, you guessed it!! ... Employment Development NPOs.

On a more personal (and eventually, a more allegorical) note, I'd like to explain a little of my back-story & perspective on the economic crisis. While the initial circumstances of my long-term unemployment are quite out of the ordinary, my disabling illness & injury over the past 3-9YRS have earned me access to public health & social welfare benefits that have sustained my illuxurious lifestyle below the national economic poverty line.

However, out of necessity or sheer force of will perhaps, I have learned to benefit considerably from and maximize upon the immense freedom than comes with considering my financial instability as status quo. I've learned to recognize, with my eyes, heart & mind aimed toward optimism, that downward trends in the economy (or in any sector of our society, for that matter!) could never be eternally perpetuated, constant nor unrelenting.

I have breached the threshold of death in the last 10 years more often than I care to acknowledge; although, no matter how degraded & destitute, downtrodden, diseased & depressed I have found myself during the short unsettling span of a mere decade, as most people do -- in fact, as most socio-economic systems do! -- I have rebounded time & time again.

life is a rollercoaster

 Life is a rollercoaster by taranoel, on Flickr®
Copyright © 2010 taranoel | ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

It is the hills, not the valleys to which I look forward, hopefully. However, I try to remain realistic when the rusty-wheeled wagon of this rollercoaster we call life reaches its low points, remembering that it is our descent downward into those valleys which is most torturously jarring and hypersonic speedily fast. Furthermore, it is our ascent back up to the highest peek of our most goodly fortune that is stupendously suspenseful & slow.

Often, our wagon wheels must lock into a motorized track for assistance getting up these hills. But, eventually, we make it! The closer we are to approaching the sun-crested hilltops and the longer our wagon ride stays suspended in motion at the mountains peak, the happier, more satisfied & content we seem to be. That's the thrill of the ride! Those are the rules of motion!

The rollercoaster of life, just like the wildly raucous & rambunctious swirly whirling sudden dips & dives of our global (yes, GLOBAL!!) economy, is meant to climb very slowly out of stupendously speedy descents. All we can do is pray that the wagon wheels, which pummel life quickly forward toward adventure at every turn, do in fact stay on track, so that we don't suffer a cataclysmic crash!

Hell, then there would be severed limbs, blood, guts & brains strewn or splattered everywhere! Although, even if we ever did succumb to such a terrifying scenario, the lucky few (or many more than meets the eye!) survivors would simply pay homage to the victims, discard their remains, repair & resolve any functional weaknesses of the wagon & its wheels through implementation of carefully charted & planned design innovations, and begin the ride again right from where we were thrown off. That's the thrill of the ride! Those are the rules of motion! This is the adventure we call life, as we (are not necessarily permitted to) chose it!

Is this terribly trite & adolescent literary device of mine making much sense to you all? I guess, what I really want to know is, after reading my written response to unemployment & economic crisis, whether or not your hope & optimism has been rekindled or restored?? Curious to gauge my impact...

Sincere Regards,

Matt(e)o | QHereKidSF
Matthew D. Blanchard
San Francisco, CA USA
http://bit.ly/qherekidsf
[20101001T023713PST]

23 January 2009

W&M = Princeton Review 3rd Best Value!!

The following is video footage from MSNBC.COM of Today's feature broadcast on the Best Value Universities in the Country, amongst which my Alma Mater, The College of William & Mary ranks third for public institutions. I wanted to feature this video and comments from an article I posted to my LinkedIn® College of William and Mary Alumni Network Group page from the W&M News website, entitled "W&M Featured on Today as a Princeton Review Best Value," by Brian Whitson, W&M News; January 9, 2009.

Meredith Viera, "msnbc.com video: 2009's best value colleges."
MSNBC.COM Today : News on the Economy, (January 8, 2009).
Retrieved on January 23, 2009 at 12:12AM PST.

The comments from other members of my LinkedIn® Group Network were strikingly negative. Many people had a lot of really awful things to say about the state of affairs at the College of William & Mary today, and about the changes that have taken place in the administration of the faculty, students, facilities and financial aid system in the past ten to twelve years. Although, a few of the remarks were positive, I was rather disappointed by the negativity of the majority of the comments as I originally intended in posting this article to the Group Page to strike a cord of pride amongst Alumni members of the groups, not adamant, vehement negativity.

The first comment to the article, which I responded to immediately after its posting, is listed in its full text here below. I was struck my the snide aloofness and snobbery of this comment that I had to respond myself; in effect, emphasizing my integral pride in my Alma Mater and my faith in its admirable reputation and immense, unique history & traditions. I'll follow the text of the first comment with my own response.
Something about this just strikes a nerve.
As an alumni, I look back and see how much W&M has become such a "catch-all" institution over the last 8 years or so since I graduated and how much it was moving inthat direction even while I was there. A friend of mine and I recently visited the campus, and it just feels like it's lost that "unique" something that made it the "public ivy school" that it is considered. Now its getting to the point where it has so many programs and offerings that there is nothing that really sets it apart from any other state-funded school, other than it's "rich history." I sort of liked when the school had more stringent standards of admission, more focused ona liberal arts degree, and it felt like it meant something to be part of the privileged theat were chosen to attend. With the shift in strategy and direction, it just feels like another school now, to the point that its a "best value." Just smacks of a retail & sales strategy.
It's not Walmart; it's the College of William & Mary.

David Brin,
"W&M featured on Today as a Princeton Review Best Value!: Comments"
LinkedIn® College of William and Mary Alumni Network Group,
(January 13, 2009). Retrieved on January 23, 2009 at 12:33AM PST.

In regards to David Brin's comment 40 (or so) mins ago:

I remember quite well that when I applied for William & Mary undergraduate way back in 1997, the College was also then ranked highest amongst public universities in the nation: Number One Small Public University, by the US News & World Report. So things haven't changed much, except that W&M is climbing in its rankings.

I still believe that the College holds the same stature and reputation for being a forbearer of all things good about the public liberal arts university education, albeit it's history does make it unique.

I was just remarking in a message to my W&M Alumni/Faculty Connections on LinkedIn® sharing the article with them, that the College has far different a reputation on the West Coast as it does on the East Coast. Had I stayed on the East Coast upon graduating from W&M in 2002, I would have easily been employed by a top notch organization or business, but alas, I chose to venture out to the Fog City (i.e., San Francisco, CA) to start anew, and few employers then recognized my outstanding, sterling academic credentials when I was first looking for work.

Californians are all about CAL and Stanford and USC and UCSD and UCLA; they don't pay much attention to things happening on the East Coast, and they certainly don't value deep-seeded history of old ivy league (or "public ivy league") institutions of higher learner. They focus on the new...on frontiers...on innovations. A liberal arts degree from the number one small public university in the nation doesn't mean much in the eyes of the West Coast employer.

That's just a matter of fact, and where I'm stuck now in my career development path. The transition or continuation into a graduate level of study will be an important decision for me, based on the California university that I am able to attend, because that academic credential will be regarded as highly important by potential West Coast employers.

That's just a little of my two cents and my experience! Thanks for your comment, David. I'd simply say, "Buck Up!" And Have still some profound pride in the stature and reputation, the character and aplomb of your Alma Mater! "William & Mary loved of old, hark upon the gale! Hear the thunder of our chorus! Alma Mater hail! Cheers! — Matthew

Matthew Blanchard
mblanchard79@yahoo.com
mblanchard2002@wmalumni.com

Community Development /
Advocacy Professional
San Francisco Bay Area
[January 13 at 08:32AM]

Matthew Blanchard,
"W&M Featured on Today as Princeton Review Best Value!: Comments"
LinkedIn® College of William and Mary Alumni Network,
(January 13, 2009). Retrieved on January 23, 2009 at 12:50AM PST.
In responding to David Brin's comment, I sought to promote a sense of pride in him that seemed he was lacking, but also to be realistic, by explaining my experience coming to the West Coast and witnessing the diminished, often ignored reputation of The College of William & Mary amongst employers. For graduate & post-graduate institutions of education, I believe that the reputation still holds. Let's hope! For I do intend on continuing my education sometime in the next few years. Alas, my remarks went mostly unconsidered by proceding commentators, as they continued to thrash the College for the divisive changes that have taken place over the last ten or twenty years. Still some people had positive remarks to share, and I appreciate them. What follows is a sampling of some of the comments from this news article posting.
There are now programs in place to allow anyone who gets good grades at VA community colleges to attend The College after a year or 2 and come out with a degree marked "William and Mary". I think that fundamental change has cheapened the degree in a sense.

Not to generalize or to sound arrogant by any means, but some of those students who have taken advantage of said program have a distinctly different level of academic capability which is noticeable to their classmates. This is especially noticeable in such a setting as team-oriented business school courses.

I've heard this fear echoed by my fellow classmates and maybe I'll be one of the few who actually brings it up at the risk of being labeled an elitist or intolerant, non-PC, or something else along those lines.


Christopher Crook,
"W&M Featured on Today as Princeton Review Best Value!: Comments"
LinkedIn® College of William and Mary Alumni Network Group,
(January 13, 2009). Retrieved on January 23, 2009 at 01:06AM PST.

I am an alumnus from the class of 1990 and I spent 6 1/2 years on the faculty. I was surprised at how little had changed at the College between 1990 and 2002 -- the time from when I graduated and the time I began as an Assistant Professor. The biggest thing that changed is that grades became inflated. My colleagues tell me that the average GPA went up by about .3. From teaching in the School of Education I found there really were no academic standards to speak of -- when we on the faculty are told that 90% of the grades on the School of Ed are As, where are the standards?

"Best Value" is no great honor though. It is code language for being way underfunded, at least compared to most other colleges. That was another big change between 1990 and 2002. The state funded roughly 60 some percent of W&M's budget in 1990. It now funds somewhere around 19% or so. The big shift occured when Jim Gilmore decided it was a good idea to cut taxes and freeze tuition at all Virginia Colleges. In all honesty I believe that decades from now when we all look back at the history of the College we will see that as the beginning of the fall of the College from which we never recovered. Believe it or not, I'm an optimist. I'm also pragmatic. When you freeze tuition for 4 years, you can't keep a strong institution moving forward. Other institutions moved forward nationwide. We stayed still, then a bad economy hit, then we had a presidency filled with turmoil and questionable financial management.

The College became much more diverse while I was there as a faculty member. You could literally watch it happen. I view that as a great thing. I don't agree with many of the sentiments expressed in the messages that come before my post. I think W&M has been enhanced by the added diversity provided by all students who are admitted during the regular admission and transfer student admission process.

I will say that I got tired of being lied to at W&M by administrators who kept saying "we will raise faculty salaries to the 60th percentile of our peer group" and seeing our salaries continue to drop and reside somewhere in the 30th percentile or there abouts. I don't use the word lie lightly. They knew we wouldn't get there. They even told us of a plan to raise salaries a few percent a year for a few years to get up to 60% -- assuming every other school would stay flat. An insult to our intelligence.

So after I received tenure I did a national job search and left. Was it due to salary? No. But more competitive salary would have helped. One of the sad things about change at William and Mary right now is that faculty are leaving. I saw them leave each year, and more and more keep leaving. And to be quite honest, many who are replacing them are not nearly as reputable as those who are leaving. I had many reasons to take an offer elsewhere -- work climate pushed me out and a great offer pulled me in to a great place. Were I one person it wouldn't matter. What concerns me is that many faculty are leaving and that is one of the things I do remember about my William and Mary experience -- great faculty. We've reached the point that good ones have left and continue to leave. The financial situation has been so bad for so long and morale among so many faculty so bad that getting top people to come teach at W&M is not going to be the easy task it once was.

Are there things about W&M that are special? Of course. Are there memories that we as alums can always cherish? Definitely! Has W&M changed? Without a doubt. Some of these changes have made it a better place. Others have been beyond the institution's control. Others have just been bad choices. In the end, W&M will always be a good institution. Pragmatically speaking, I honestly believe as a scholar of higher education administration that we've seen our best days.

John Foubert, Ph.D.,
"W&M Featured on Today as Princeton Review Best Value!: Comments"
LinkedIn® College of William and Mary Alumni Network Group,
(January 11, 2009). Retrieved on January 23, 2009 at 01:19AM PST.

Wow! I did not think that I would be hearing so much negativity as I am from this crowd.

I have the benefit of my in-laws living in W'burg so I have witnessed the transformation gradually as it was happening since I graduated in 1995. What we have at The College now are World Class facilities sprinkled into a still very accessible campus community that is actually smaller and more focused with the elimination of the Dillard residence complex.

The caliber of students are still the same, it is just the dorms have been upgraded, the new Graduate School of Business looks and will behave like a Top 50 program is supposed to, and the individual schools have been given the right tools and buildings equal to the caliber of the professors. Let's be honest here - new campus was really sore on the eyes in comparison to the rest of Old and Ancient campus and the upgrades have have transformed really tired and crummy PPE.

What has been dismissed or understated with the former comments is the dynamic change that has happened since most of us were there. We have witnessed a complete revolution in regard to IT / IP / and access to information. The world has become completely global and the way that William and Mark has to market, yes I said market, and position itself among other world class institutions has changed. The upgrades and modifications were necessary to continue to draw the best teaching faculty (no offense to the previous post) and students we have come to expect from William & Mary.

Lastly, in regard to reputation, I live and work in the Mid Atlantic / Greater NYC area and whenever anyone hears I went to W&M they all say what a great place it is and how tough it is to get into. Regarding the transfer students (from what I hear - still aren't that many)...W&M and CNU have always had a deal to allow transfers and unless things have changed, the workload and the demands of the W&M professors are still ridiculous. So, if those individuals are able to do well enough their Junior and Senior years to graduate - they deserve the same benefits as any other graduate.

I have to say that, coupled with the continued success of its graduates, all of the effort that William & Mary has been going though the last 10+ years has only increased the value of our degree. Based on the passion, well thought out and the well written responses - The College has done a bang up job.

Larry B.,
"W&M Featured on Today as Princeton Review Best Value!: Comments"
LinkedIn® College of William & Mary Alumni Network Group,
(January 10, 2009). Retrieved on January 23, 2009 at 01:36AM PST.

I was particularly struck by the former faculty member and alumni of the College, who commented on the decline of faculty standards and affairs at the W&M. Below are my final remarks to date. I'm curious to know of the Gene Nichol debacle that was mentionned in a comment that might not be cited here, so I ask for more information on that topic in my final comment. I also beg the commentators and any viewers of the article link to maintain and I guess, in a way, salvage their sense of pride in the College of William & Mary, for the University is still a sterling, stalwart institution with a distinct history and set of traditions and still yet a focus toward the future in its present administration.

My primary intention in posting this news article link to the LinkedIn® College of William and Mary Alumni Network Group Discussion Board, viewable only to members of the group, was to promote and encourage a sense of pride and respect and faith in the reputation, standards, traditions and history of our College. I hope I was able to acheive that in my commentary.

It's taken me about two weeks to return to this discussion and to view the previous comments, and I am also struck with a deep and wounding blow by the negativity that everyone has expressed in their remarks on the dynamic changes instituted at the College in the last ten or twenty years, and that's coming from someone who has already spoken of the diminished reputation of the College on the West Coast.

I'm not familiar with the Gene Nichol debacle, so I can't comment on how the issues there have affected the standards and stature of the College. Would someone kindly inform me of who Nichol is and what he has done to negatively affect the College.

Is change always progress? That's what I believe these comments asks of us all. I haven't been back to the College since I graduated in 2002, so I have no experience with how the College has transformed in the last 7 years, but I hope that the transformations have been positive, despite the economic crisis the country faces and that in due affects W&M administration. I'm glad to hear of facility improvements, which when I was a student at the College were already all long over due.

I must say that I find it quite a shame what the former W&M faculty member and alum had to say about that state of affairs for faculty administration at the College. I have noticed that many of my most beloved and well-reputed professors form the College have left in recent years, going on to change their institution of employment or their career focus entirely. This disappoints me tremendously!

I hate to see the College suffer in that way! And I wish that economically, W&M could afford remunerating their prodigious, elite faculty and candidates for tenure with higher, more competitive salaries. They truly deserve it! We all know that! Perhaps with more private funding in future years, the College will be able to improve the standards of faculty salaries while also improving facilities and maintaining a strong financial aid system.

These are just hopes for progress! Change can happen in so a many ways, from the most minute, quotidian swaying of traditions, to the birth of new monumental edifices and classrooms of learning, dining halls or dormitories. I just wish for the best! And I believe that is what the current administration of the College is striving for: positive, progressive change in full respect of our hardy traditions and stalwart, immense history!!

I wasn't expecting such vehemently negative responses to this news article I posted, and I appreciate the positive remarks immensely. I hope that despite the negativity that herein lays, we all still are able to hold a true sense of pride in our Alma Mater. That was my true intention when I posted the news article originally.

Please inform me on the Gene Nichol issue! And I'd love to hear in more detail of how the College has developed its facilities in the last seven years.

Thanks to everyone who has responded to this news article. I appreciate hearing all of your comments. They have helped broaden my perspective on the College as a relatively recent alum. I still only wish that W&M had quite nearly the same reputation on the West Coast as it does on the East Coast amongst employers. Kudos to you all for sharing so thoughtfully on the the topic! Cheers! — Matthew

Matthew Blanchard
mblanchard79@yahoo.com
mblanchard2002@wmalumni.com
Community Development /
Advocacy Professional
San Francisco Bay Area
[01.22.2009 @ 11:36PM PST]

Matthew Blanchard,
"W&M Featured on Today as Princeton Review Best Value!: Comments"
LinkedIn® College of William and Mary Alumni Network Group,
(January 22, 2009). Retrieved on January 23, 2009 at 01:48AM PST.

13 January 2009

"An Escape Hatch for a Troubled Intellect!"

The following is the text from an email thread dialogue I am continue to have with a former Facebook™ Friend: Jeff Parker. I am entering this text into my blog as a public record of this insightful, illuminating correspondence. I hope that in sharing these words with my followers, I might impart a sense of the divine purpose that I feel having been bestowed upon me by God (or a Higher Power) in light of my death-defying, tragic illness and injury.  
 
I sincerely hope as well that Jeff doesn't have any qualms with me making this dialogue public. I do so in a way to honor him, for "the fragments of Enlightenment" that we have shared with one another through written conversation. First is the text that Jeff Parker wrote me in response to my Facebook™ Email message (see blog entry: "An Irreverent, Licentious Remark on God!"), and then you will find the long, tedious, rambling remarks that I wrote to him just this evening on Facebook™. 

JEFF PARKER'S FACEBOOK™ MESSAGE TO ME:

Hi Matthew,
Divine faith is neither. It is an escape hatch for a troubled intellect. I believe only in Science and curiosity. Only science can achieve the sublime and find universal truths. With that said, everyone's spiritual journey is different. Your's is especially challenging, but you will get through it. Do whatever works for you, but know that Science is your friend. The pastors & priests make promises for some future paradise, some with good intentions, some with cynical and corrupt motives.

Let them take care of your spirt until your body is healed, and even cured, by Science, as mine was. I am amazed every day by the beauty of the natural world around me. Heaven is here right now. Don't miss it. And know that I wish you the best.

RE: MERRY CHRISTMAS & HAPPY HOLIDAYS! Email Correspondance.
Jeff Parker, Facebook™; January 5, 2009 at 11:34 AM.
Retrieved on January 13, 2009 at 03:17 AM.
MY RESPONSE TO JEFF PARKER'S FACEBOOK® MESSAGE:
Jeff, I'm sorry to regret having sent you these preachy, pious and proselytizing emails which only provoke your atheism and rational faith in Science, while making me sound like a completely ignorant, brain-washed ascetic. I want you to know that I do also very much believe in Science as the ultimate source for universal truths and healing.

While I have in the past year tired to open myself up to my faith,
believing that both it and Science are not a diametrically opposed binary but instead work cohesively together in broadening our understanding of humankind and all things greater than the human intellect, I have at the same time completely abandoned myself to the process of healing though Science.

Science can answer many questions on the mysteries of life,
but there are some questions, I believe, that cannot be answered through Science. That's why we have Faith and Religion—to answer the greater preponderances of the human intellect. Major, predominant, contemporary philosophical theories of a Supreme Being and the Divine argue this same thesis.

I agree with you, as I've said, that Science can lead us to
many universal truths, but I do not want to be misled to put all my faith excludively into Science; especially now, during my time of immense struggle, discovery and reawakening. I am not a born again Christian. I have been saved not figuratively in the Evangelical sense of the word, but literally both by the miracles of Science and by the miracles of God. Or so I choose to believe!

This, my mutually respective, combined faith in Science and in God,
has allowed me to develop a deeper sense of faith in Myself, believing out of circumstance and necessity, that since I have survived death-defying, brutal illness and injury, then I must have a certain calling or purpose in this life that is yet unacheived and still ahead of me to be accomplished and bestowed upon me by a greater being or power that has some important impact on and influence over how the World works.

Is it wrong, in your opinion, to believe that I am meant for
something greater, something special, because I have survived? Science doesn't seem to answer the or'looming questions of human intentions, actions and purpose in life. Or, at least, no Science that I have been introduced to answers those questions. If you know of any secular, scientific teaching that could enlighten me as to my purpose in life, please indulge me with the answer!

For now, I'll continue to uphold my faith both in the Divine and in Science,
as both will strengthen me in different ways (some physical/tangible and others more abstract/spiritual) and allow me to heal and to survive. Please, do not judge me any less of a person because I hold my faith in the Divine close to my heart, because I am also and equally a firm believer in the miracles, mysteries and mayhem of Science.

In that way, I agree with you! You might be right in saying
(although, I'd be hellbent on defending myself against the accusation, if I weren't the victim and survivor of such unspeakable tragedy) that I, like many, use Faith as "an escape hatch for a troubled intellect." I have sought such escape on after falling to an unfathomable low, having my life threatened and saved by Science and by God. And after having my perceptions of the world, my perspective, drastically changed and challenged, flipped upside down onto its dirty underbelly, weak and vulnerable to intimidations of outside forces.

My spiritual journey is "especially challenging!" I ask you though,
in admitting this, to not take my faith for granted and denigrate it with awful, licentious remarks.

I have never talked to my priest (or rather, my priest has never
discussed with me) about any "promise for some future paradise." He doesn't mention some ulterior, celestial heaven; but instead, he talks to me about demonstrating God's love though our good intentions, actions and experiences with others and about thereby creating a degree or amount or experience of Heaven on Earth: "Heaven is here right now!"

And my priest has yet to answer all my questions and resolve all my doubts.
For example, I still wonder how, if God is this blessed, divine, all powerful and eminently/entirely loving being, he could have allowed for this awful tragedy to befall me. Why has he allowed for such great sufferance in my short, young life (delusions, disease, dysfunction, and disfigurement)?

If my faith cannot answer these questions, then I still don't see Science
readily offering me any answers or affirmations of life well-lived and good health deserved. Just as much as Faith is a source of great doubt in my life, Science will always be, in my mind, the harbinger of death and disease, not Enlightenment or Salvation. I'll tell you...I'd be a Buddhist, if only I knew enough about that religion to follow their belief system.

My priest does not have "cynical and corrupt motives."
He is a well-intentioned, kindhearted, blessed man who only wants to provide me with absolution of my trespasses, assurances of my forward path in Faith, and affirmations of my life and of my miraculous survival/salvation: redemption and reward and recompense in God and in Science.

Finally, in closing, I ask why have you canceled our friend connection on Facebook™? Is it simply because you so wholeheartedly disagree with and were offended by my reverent proselytizing or do you have ulterior motives? I would very much like to have you as a Facebook™ connection, so that we can stay up-to-date on and informed of developments in each others' lives, and because frankly... honestly... truly, I do very much enjoy and benefit from our interactions and correspondence.

Still however, I do not want to be such a burden or offense to you.
I just hope that we both can continue to enjoy the beautiful fragments of Enlightenment that we gain from each others in our binary, opposed perspectives on the world. Please, re-accept my invitation to connect on Facebook™, as I would be very grateful to call you a Friend. I want to continue a dialogue with you and hope that you would be interested to know periodically of how I am doing (as I would of you!).

Please, let this be an continuation of our conversation,
another jumping off point and not a final, abrupt end to our cyber-interactions. Indulge me, please! Invite me in! Talk to me and continue to share your wisdom with me. I am many times over a better person for what I have gained and will gain from our experience corresponding together.

As always, thank you for reading this email and for offering me
your time and attention. Thank you for being willing to consider my thoughts as legitimate and sane and not as merely "an escape hatch for a trouble intellect." And thank you for responding thoughtfully to my remarks! God Speed! Peac Out! Blessings! Until some time soon...


Your Friend,

Matt(e)o | QHereKidSF


P.S., Onto a tangent, I digress: Are you familiar with LinkedIn®,
the professional development and networking web service that connects colleagues and classmates though effect and active Internet linkages? Well, if you are not familiar with it, then I encourage you to set up a profile and to connect with me directly there as a member of the College of William & Mary Alumni Network Group.

My public LinkedIn® profile URL is
http://www.linkedin.com/in/matthewblanchard/. From there, you will be able to set up an account of your own and request a connection with me.
Matthew Blanchard's LinkedIn® Profile

Matthew Blanchard's Facebook profile

http://qherekidsf.blogspot.com/
http://www.bebo.com/qherekidsf/
http://www.myspace.com/qherekidsf/
http://www.linkedin.com/in/matthewblanchard/
http://www.pandora.com/people/mblanchard79/
http://www.wmalumni.com/member/mblanchard2002/

THE GREAT ENEMY OF TRUTH IS VERY OFTEN NOT
THE LIE, DELIBERATE, CONTRIVED AND DISHONEST,
BUT THE MYTH, PERSISTENT, PERSUASIVE AND UNREALISTIC.
— John F. Kennedy

SI ON SAIT EXACTEMENT CE QU'ON VA FAIRE,
À QUOI BON LE FAIRE?
If we know exactly what we are going to do,
What's the good of doing it?
— Pablo Picasso

An Escape Hatch for a Troubled Intellect! Email Correspondence.
Matthew Blanchard, Facebook™; January 13, 2009 at 3:04 AM.
Retrieved on January 13, 2009 at 3:24 AM.

22 December 2008

Beliefnet.com : The Rick Warren Interview

Rick Warren, the megalithic media phenomenon, much-acclaimed pastor of Sattleback Church and financial supporter of Porposition 8 in California: the Constitutional Amendment banning Same-Sex Marriage on November 4, 2008, remarks on Gay Marriage & Divorce in a Beliefnet.com video interview, going so far in his opposition to Gay Marriage as to equate it with the legalization of marriage based on incest, pedophilia and polygamy.


In further investigating the Rick Warren matter on weblogs and in online news journals, I came across a political commentary posted by one Kathryn Kolbert on the CNN.com Politics website, entitled: "Commentary: Choosing Rick Warren was a Mistake." Her comments were extremely revealing to me, as I am sure they were to many curious readers.

Kolbert succinctly argued against President-elect Barack Obama's choice to have Pastor Rick Warren give the pivotal, very significant and solemn inspirational invocation at his inauguration on January 20, 2009, by demonstrating in a very matter of fact manner all the ways in which Warren (a self-reputed "moderate" and "bridge-builder") exemplifies the anti-freedom & anti-gay values of the Evangelical Religious Right.

She contends with the anger & disappointment of the Nation's "progressive activists who worked so hard to elect Barack Obama" by admitting first that some people might be a bit confused by such attestations & discouragements from the extreme political left. She goes on to elucidate the whys & wherefores for the injustice and damned near disgrace of choosing Warren as invocateur for the inauguration.

Mrs. Kolbert says with regards to Warren's opposition to Marriage Equality in California that "it's not just his support for Prop. 8 that is so galling to equality activists. It's that Warren, in an interview with Beliefnet.com, has since equated allowing loving same-sex couples to get married with redefining marriage to permit incest and pedophilia."

Curious as I was, I set out to find this Beliefnet.com video interview with Pastor Rick Warren, and easily found it with a keyword search on their website. I was shocked, appalled and disgusted! Here was a man, a prominent moderate Evangelical leader, justifying anti-equality bigotry and hate-speech by actually agreeing with the interviewer that Gay Marriage is equivalent to incest, pedophilia & polygamy and by always referring back to the self-assured crux of the conversation: that it's not any matter iof whether or not Warren is opposed to Gay Marriage or Civil Unions; what is truly significant is that he opposes a redefinition of Traditional Marriage—as if to hide the bigotry, prejudice and hate behind a vapid veil of more solemn faith in a five thousand year old tradition!

The following is a dictation of the final segment of the Beliefnet.com Rick Warren Interview: On Gay Marriage & Divorce. But better yet for the full dramatic effect, just follow the previous link to view the video for yourself. The text of the interview:
RICK WARREN: "I fully support equal rights for all Americans [...] The issue for me is: I'm not opposed to [Civil Unions] as much as I'm opposed to the redefinition of a five thousand year old definition of marriage. I'm opposed to having a brother & a sister being together and calling that marriage. I'm opposed to an older guy marring a child and calling that a marriage. I'm opposed to one guy having multiple wives and calling that marriage."

STEVEN WALDMAN: "Do you think those are equivalent to gays getting married?"

RICK WARREN: "Oh, I do! For five thousand years marriage has been defined by every single culture and every single religion...this is not a Christian issue—Buddhists, Muslims, Jews. Historically, Marriage is a man and a woman, so I'm opposed to that.

"And the reason I supported Prop. 8 really was a free speech issue, because if...first, the court over-read the will of the people, but second, there were all kinds of threats that if it did not pass, any pastor could be considered doing hate speech if he shared his views that he didn't think homosexuality was the most natural way for relationships. And that would be hate speech. Well, to me, we should have freedom of speech, ok...Can we do this in a civil way?

"I have many gay friends. I've eaten dinner in gay homes. No church has probably done more for people with AIDS than Sattleback Church. Kay and I have given millions of dollars out of the portraiture of people getting AIDS through gay relationships, so they can't accuse me of homophobia. I just don't believe in the redefinition of marriage."

Like I've written already, I find this rhetoric appalling, shocking and disgraceful!! Funny though, how Pastor Warren speaks as though this is a global, worldly issue by including Buddhists, Muslims & Jews in his argument for Traditional Marriage, when "historically" speaking, many world religions have once (or still do) give credence and legitimacy to incestuous, polygamist, pedophile relationships between men and women; thus, invalidating his entire overture right from the start.

After seeing this video interview, I realize ever more so that I am extremely disappointed and angry with Obama's pick for his inaugural invocation. Giving such a significant role in such a major event in our Nation's history to a man who blatantly and guiltlessly promotes hate-speech and homophobia (YES! HOMOPHOBIA, Rick Warren! I'd call him a homophobe, wouldn't you?) is a bold, shameless affront to all the just and fair-minded equality activists that supported Barack Obama's Campaign for President.

I am personally offended and ultimately very disappointed that I have put so much faith in Barack Obama as a proponent of Change and as a stalwart advocate for equality, only to be let down by his choice here.

I wrote in an entry in this blog, entitled "Rev. Rick Warren: An Anti-Gay Invocation," that I could understand Obama's choice of Pastor Rick Warren to deliver the invocation at his inauguration, because, as the President-elect himself argues, he has been trying to promote a dialogue between conflicting political and social camps by bringing together a diverse array of people to participate in this monumental occasion. He says that is what his campaign was all about, and I agreed with him, wholeheartedly!

But, as a gay man who dreams one day of escaping the aesthetic judgments and prejudices of the average homosexual, passing beyond my disfigurement and finding a relationship with a man that can develop openly, honestly and lovingly into a committed union: a Marriage, I can not and will not support Barack Obama's choice to have Rick Warren, a bigoted & hate-mongering Evangelical, give the opening invocation at the 2009 Presidential Inauguration. It's just not right!

As Kathryn Kolbert remarks in her CNN.com Politics Commentary:
There is no shortage of religioius leaders who reflect the values on which President-elect Obama campaigned and who are working to advance the common good: Rev. Joseph Lewery, who has been selected to give the benediction, is a life-long advocate for justice. There are others like him, and in our increasingly diverse nation, they aren't all Christian.

Rick Warren gets plenty of attention through his books & media appearances and has every right to promote his religious views. But he doesn't need or deserve a position of honor at the inauguration of a President who has given hope to so many Americans by rejecting the politics of division and emphasizing his commitment to constitutional values.

(K. Kolbert, "Commentary: Choosing Rick Warren was a Mistake,"
CNN.com Politics, December 19, 2008 at 9:41AM.
Retrieved on December 22, 2008 at 7:04AM.)
Mrs. Kolbert is right in her conclusions: there are plenty of other American religious leaders that uphold the values that Barack Obama fought for in his Campaign for President and that he could have just as well chosen for the invocation. The socio-political implications of the choice of Rick Warren to give the invocation at the 2009 Presidential Inauguration are grave and divisive, opening the door to so many other arguments against an Obama Presidency, because of Rick Warren's other illicit values concerning as such a women's right to chose, amongst other things (as explained in the Kolbert Commentary).

I in no way can consider myself an allegiant equality activist, for I have had no frontline experience fighting for Marriage Equality and other equal rights for all under the law. I have only begun to voice my opinion on this blog and on comments I've posted to other blogs or news feeds I've read concerning these issues.

I've also associated myself via Facebook™ with ENGAGE to End Discrimination: The Marriage Equality Project, a fledgling, soon to be incorporated nonprofit organization based out of San Francisco, CA and founded by my Facebook™ Friend, Michael Friedman. I haven't been active in their Marriage Equality rallies & protests, but I have subscribed to their RSS feed on Blogger® and Google™ Reader and stay informed of developments within the organization by those means. I can't say that I am an allegiant equality activist, no! But, I can't say that, as a gay man living in California, I am just as equally disappointed and angered by Obama's choice as the best of them. In fact, ...

I can't stand this! I'm irate! Aren't you? Please, give me some feedback! Let me know if I'm letting my easily affected emotions become unhinged by something of little importance; or otherwise, affirm my disappointment & anger and join me in opposing this choice. I eagerly anticipate any feedback or thoughts I receive from my blog followers. This is a dialogue I'd very much like to have; if not, just to calm my nerve!

Maybe the choice of Inauguration Invocation Speaker should have followed more of the effect of decisions on Commencement Speakers for the College of William & Mary (speaking from experience), where candidates are selected based on writing samples and formal public speaking skills, as opposed to on popularity or stature within a particular community. What on Earth is Barack Obama trying to evoke with this choice? I can't find any good in it! Please help!

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In closing, I must say: Peace Out! And Plenitudes of Pumpernickel & Plum-Pudding Pastries, as well as Cheer, Bliss & Merriment for you this Holiday Season! May you all experience the joy of giving & gratitude and the blessings of good tidings this wintry season. I know that I am grateful to have so many dear friends and family who care so deeply for me. And I'm thankful for the ungodly AWESOME gift that my William & Mary Theatre Assoc. friends purchased for me for Christmas—as some sort of recompense for all the tragedy I have experienced in the last year & a half. I'm eternally grateful to you all. You know who you are! :-) Happy Holidays!!

14 December 2008

W&M Alumni | Reluctant to Reconnect...

Below, you will find the text from a blog posting I submitted for my William & Mary Alumni Association Website Member's Profile. I decided to set up this profile in an effort to re-establish a connection with my College community—friends & classmates that I haven't had contact with since leaving the University just weeks after my HIV diagnosis, in April 2002.

I have been "reluctant to reconnect" with this community of my peers for reasons that are explained in the blog posting; mainly, because I feel that I have little to show for my life's accomplishments since graduating from what once was the "Number One Small Public University" in the Nation, according to the U.S. News & World Report's College/University rankings.

Especially, now, during this period of immense struggle in my life, I feel rather ashamed of my failures & shortcomings, but I still hope that my connection with a cyber-community of my alumni classmates will prove fruitful in fostering new friendships & effective professional & social networking. We'll see...

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New Beginnings & New Connections


Interruptions & awakening seem to happen in alternating patterns in life,
as in the hills & valleys of tepidity, turmoil & bliss that syncopate periods of mind's poverty & prosperity. Frankly, though, for a "Fagged-out, Funambulist Freak Show" like me, there are ofttimes solely treacherous, lamentable lows in life, like the recent raucous tragedy that I've lived though.

Sadly, those who think themselves forever forsaken oft have faithlessly forgotten the opportunity for restitution & rewards born of rest-stops, recovery & re-examination of rationale & reason's whys & wherefores.

Presently, I am poised in such painful perplexity, trying to salvage a sense of salvation after sufferance severe. Here so, I plan to push off from a point of calamitous misfortune with my mind bent on building & bolstering a connection to the more beautiful occupations of my past, wherein I once triumphed & found peace. Such is to begin again, but better! So, I blog a bit & begin to build... [MB12.14.2008]

Reluctant to Reconnect...

Here I am at the onset of an ostensibly rewarding journey
through the complex, entangling worldwide web of social networking, ready to re-establish some sort of worthwhile connection with the College of William & Mary : my classmates, my community. Thus begins a new endeavor to retrace my roots & reconnect with friends & colleagues form my time as a student at William & Mary.

I was a little reluctant to initiate this cyber-experiment on wmalumni.com, fearing abrupt, insensitive rejection and negative reprisal from new people or old acquaintances that I might meet in this particular social networking space, because of my harrowing, tragic situation. You see, I regret the myriad of impulsive, carnally-driven, daunting (though determined) choices I have made in life ever since my final year at William & Mary—choices that have led to nothing much of great merit or worth. Life has been a nightmare never-ending for me. And, as if to shirk & stumble over the serendipitous calamity of my situation, I am here trying to make the best of things. What better way to work my way toward wisdom than by sharing honestly of my reluctance & my shame.

Yes, life has been ridiculously rotten & difficult for me. I came to San Francisco, CA at the abrupt end of my college education in hopes of finding safety, sanctity, solemnity, sanity and (sure as hell!) good health. But I have little to show for myself academically, professionally & socially.

I have not yet had the courage, poise or opportunity to continue my education in directions that would be meaningful & challenging to me. I am unemployed and am living on the measly sum of Social Security Disability Insurance and SSI benefits, as I have been so living since early 2007, when my health began to deteriorate for a second time. I have few friends that I can depend on for turn, unburdened sympathy & support. I am a head-spun, home-bodied homo, who bides his time by sleeping the days away & rarely venturing out into the World. I would be an absolute recluse, if it weren't for the company of & some compassionate support from paid personnel, like my in-home nurse, my peer advocate & my priest.

As I described in the final section of my wmalumni.com profile, I have in the last year experienced such intense tragedy & suffering that I have not been able to live fully to my potential—the sterling, elite potential for which W&M so nobly groomed me. I don't want to be ashamed of my circumstance, but I am! AS a student at the and while studying abroad in College of William & Mary and while studying abroad in Paris, France and Florence, Italy, I truly envisioned myself achieving great, triumphant things in life—championing the amazing altruism and social & political activism of my most beloved friends, mentors & heroes. But, I have failed; I have stumbled. I have suffered!

It is such a burden to look back on the major events & milestones in my life, because while much of my life has been bleak & awful, there have been brief periods of perlexingly positive, peaceful development & accomplishment. However, I can not say that I have lived my life yet to its fullest. I fear that if I had already accomplished all in that God put me on this Earth to do, then he would not have allowed me to survive my recent illness & injury. There's something still remaining in the World for me to do; of that, I am sure. Survival has convinced me that I have an immanent, pressing responsibility to pursue all possibilities for peace & perfection in life: Enlightenment, or so my Buddhist brethren would conclude. Alas, onward...

I am here; now, ready to begin again my life's adventures by first reconnecting with my amazing, accomplished, positive past-life. I am asking any classmates, colleagues & community that I might connect with here riding the wistful, whimsical cyber-waves of wmalumni.com to judge me sensitively & sympathetically and not to be afraid to confront & react upon the misery that Matthew's mind has led him to.

I am not a pariah! And, I am not perfect. I am a survivor! And if there's only one thing to say in closing, it's that my successes as a student of the College of William & Mary prove that I still have a great potential to positively affect the World. My face might be gruesomely disfigured; my life might be harsh, but my beauty, my brains, my beatitude & my betterment all still survive within.

So please, I invite all of you who may come across this listless, lousy lamentation of life ill-lived & ill-loved to connect with me & respond to my postings. Any thoughts from other more hopeful, happy souls would be worth the world to me! The reward of any remarks form other members of the worldwide William & Mary family is that they all would be very empowering, as they each have the distinct potential of promoting change & growth & learning in my life. What a remarkable reward for me—a reckless, raucous remnant of disaster, doomsday and (just damned nearly) death!!

I look beyond my shameful reluctance & forward to the moment when I may realize that I've made many a rewarding connection through these "blog-ilicious" ramblings & reason. Thank you for encouraging me with your words & interactions. I offer my best, beloved blessings to you all!! May bliss be yours! Until next time...

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AUCUNE ILLUSION N'ADOUCIT MON AMÈRE SÉRÉNITÉ!
No illusion will ever soothe my bitter serenity!
— Charles de Gaulle [Mémoires de Guerre, Le Salut (1944-1946)]

ATTACHEZ VOTRE CHAIR À UNE ÉTOILE!
Hook your flesh to a star!
— Anonymous