So there I am… in a lecture hall with 199 other students. The T.A. announces that we can begin our exam. I look down at the first page….
What the HECK is this???
The first problem may as well have been written in Esperanto because I can’t make heads or tails of it. So I go on to the next problem…
“Design a flibbety floo using only a gobbledy goo and three different types of hibiddy jibiddies.”
Huh? Then I look at the name of the class on the top of the exam… “Plutonian Eigenvector and Basketweaving Theory 102″
I don’t remember signing up for this class, much less attending a single lecture… but there it is on my class schedule, which mysteriously is still in my pocket here at the end of the semester. I also wonder if I actually took the pre-requisite “P.E.&B.W.T. 101” class last semester…
A bead of sweat forms on my upper lip as I frantically try to recall any relevant information that might help me not fail this exam.
Thus goes the only recurring nightmare I’ve ever had for the last decade or so. I don’t have nightmares of being chased or of falling or of Rosie O’Donnell having a huge crush on me… just this one. The details change, like the name of the class or size of the pool of sweat forming under my arms, but the theme is the same – taking an exam (or having a project due) in a class I signed up for but never attended. Which is odd, because I rarely missed a lecture due to the dweeb with perfect attendance through high school in me that never died. It probably has some deep-seeded psychological meaning behind it, but I wish it would just stop.
Story time!
This reminds me of something that actually happened in college, though. In one of my physics classes, we took a weekly, five problem, multiple choice exam – no partial credit. So if you missed one problem, the best you can do is get an 80%. If you missed two, you got a “D” or 60%. The only saving grace was that you were allowed to drop one exam (your lowest I’m assuming… well, unless you’re really cocky, I suppose) from your final grade. But since you had a “drop,” the professor made it clear that there would be no makeup exams.
In my usual, disciplined promptness, I put off studying for one exam until 1AM the “night before,” and my class was at 8AM. I studied through the night and watched the sun rise over the study lounge in my dorm…
I’ll just put my head down for a second… I thought to myself…
You know that feeling when you wake up one very important morning, not to the sound of an alarm clock, but just silence? And you’re petrified of what time you’re going to see when you finally look over at the aforementioned silent alarm clock? Yeah… imagine that except no clock or watch… because I was in the study lounge. So I sped out to the hallway and ran over to the nearest person and, breathless, like Scrooge in the final scene of “A Christmas Carol” where he needs to find out if Christmas has passed yet – except not so joyful, I asked what time it was.
“Why, it’s 8:30, Mr. Scrooge… I mean, Nate… why?”
I actually don’t know exactly what he said after “8:30…” because I immediately ran back to the study lounge, grabbed my calculator and a #2 pencil and sprinted out of the dorm… in my flip-flops and what I normally wear to sleep. For a moment I thought that I could just use this as my “drop” exam until I remembered the 40 I got just a few weeks prior.
My class was about a mile away. At 1/4 mile, one of my flip-flops disintegrated so I was now sprinting with only one flip-flop, in my sleep clothes, on an hour of sleep. A friend of mine saw me and asked where I was running to. I yelled back, “to my 8 o’clock exam!” I’ll never forget the look on her face as she looked up from her watch as I thought I heard her yell, “RUN, FORREST, RUN!”
Well, I made it to my class at around 8:40 (hey, you try sprinting in flip-flops, excuse me… flip-flop). I quickly made my way to the front of the lecture hall and, trying not to barf a lung, I told the T.A. that I needed a copy of the exam. My back was to the 150 or so students that were there, but I could distinctly hear the entire room, in unison, raise and shake their heads at the poor sap up front before returning to the exam.
I sat down with my scantron sheet (do they still call it that?) and exam and actually nailed the first problem (hey, what do you know… studying works!), but halfway through the second problem I knew there was no way I was going to be able to finish it in time. So I made my best guess on problem two, and as the T.A. was telling us to stop, I randomly wrote something like ‘B’, ‘D’, and ‘C’ for the last three answers.
Hey, at least I didn’t get a zero… I thought to myself as I collapsed on the steps outside the lecture hall.
The following week, when they posted the scores to the exams… can you guess what I got? Yep, that’s right! 100%! HAHA!
It’s true what they say… “sometimes it’s better to be lucky than good” I suppose.
The End.
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Haha that was hilarious
Nice story.Isn’t it amazing how much energy you suddenly get if you realize you’re late?
HEY SAW YOU’R SITE YOU LOOK PRETTY HOTT
great story. better lucky than good, haha
Well, hello there.
i used to have this same type of recurring nightmare–some big paper or project due in a class that i’ve skipped the whole school year, even though i’m not sure why i skipped it because i too had this thing for perfect attendance, and how come i didn’t have a recollection of ever signing up for this class in the first place? i’d freak out and backtrack and figure out what went wrong. then i’d wake up, with a sigh of relief, shrugging off ‘oh it’s just a dream’. until of course, the same thing happened again.
then one night, something different happened. same beginning, some big test loomed ahead and i walked into the class not knowing a thing about the subject matter. except this time, instead of panicking and trying to fudge my way through the test (or waking up), i approached the teacher and said i don’t know the material. i said i have been skipping class the whole year.
the teacher, who happened to be a small dry and dark woman, clucked her tongue in disapproval and said “you’ll have to re-take the whole thing”. without hesitation, i said okay.
in the end i was sent to paris for some type of finishing school in the dream and i had a ball but that’s another story.
the point is, after i took ‘responsibility’ for not taking the class, and owning up to my so-called actions in the dream, the nightmares have stopped.
own, sown, grown.
Oh my God… awesome haha 😛