I suppose all blogs need an introduction.
Hi, I'm Sabrina. I like long walks on the beach and quiet conversation ... Nah. Actually, I'd rather be in the mountains than on the beach. I'm not very good at introductions, because for every thing I say about myself, there are at least ten that I didn't or forgot to say. But, here we go: a brief time-line of my life.
I am now in my mid-twenties. I was born on an August morning, two months premature and a few minutes before my twin sister followed me. I spent my first month in an incubator at the hospital; she died seventeen days later. When I was nearly a year-and-a-half old, my parents moved into their first home, and the next day, my brother was born. Another two-and-a-half years later, my little sister joined us.
We lived in that house until the summer after my eighth-grade year, when we moved into a larger house across town--and for the first time, I had my own room. It was like a dream. The downside was that it put me in a different high school from the rest of my friends. The ultimate upside is that I still have several friends whom I would not have met had I not gone to Riverside.
I graduated high school at seventeen, and had decided to go to a Christian school away from home, so the week before my eighteenth birthday, we packed my stuff into the trunk of the car, and the five of us drove out to Minneapolis, my new home. We spent a few days in town, celebrated my birthday, and moved me into my dorm on Saturday. The family took me out to breakfast after unloading the car, and they left for a family reunion in Wisconsin.
I was extremely lucky in my roommate assignment, and spent my three college years living with Jenny, along with two other girls each year. Thanks to AP classes in high school, I was able to get my bachelor's degree in three years. I majored in English, minored in History, and wondered what I was going to do with my life.
As I started looking at post-college options, my best friend from high school was in North Carolina, attending a small university there. She suggested I come down and live with her, and so I did. Six weeks after graduation, I once more packed my gear in a car and drove down south. I entered divinity school the next January with the intent of becoming a children's minister; my plans changed fairly quickly, and I started a dual-degree program that included an M.A. in English as well as the M.Div.
I lived in North Carolina for almost five years, finishing my schooling and making great friends along the way. I graduated this past December, and still don't quite know what I'm going to do with my life.
In the meantime, I moved back in with my parents (rather reluctantly) at the beginning of February, and worked in a restaurant for two months. Then, suddenly, I found myself heading off to an in internship in West Virginia, which is where I sit now. I'll be here for another two months, and I'm excited to see what this time might bring for me.
Blogging is not a new adventure for me; I have had blogs and online journals before, but I have fallen lax in my postings. I am a lapsed writer, in that my instinct is to write even when I don't necessarily follow through on it. This new blog is an attempt to jump-start the writing again, to encourage myself to start fresh, and to keep going. Something about West Virginia has encouraged introspection in me, and hopefully that will allow itself to come in the form of blogs.
This actually turned out longer than I had thought it would, and since most of you probably already know me well enough that this is repeat information, I'm going to lay off here. But, I'll say this before I go:
Thanks for joining me. :) Feel free to ask any questions you might have.
Thursday, May 27, 2010
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I like how you said you were going to give a timeline. The timeline started with you today and then looped around to the beginning.
ReplyDeleteTimelines don't loop, you nonlinear thinker. ;)