Acute Stress Withdrawl Synodrome (ASWS)

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ASWS is a rare and fortunately temporary disease, occurring when the patient is subjected to large quantities of stress and work, and rapidly weaned off the high stress cycle into a new cycle of significantly reduced tension. The result is that the patient quickly loses all motivation to work or perform any tasks assigned to him/her. I am its victim. I just finished my junior literary analysis paper (the infamous JLAP), and I will take the BC Calculus AP tomorrow. Over the past several weeks, I have been cobbling together my paper, frantically finishing 1200 pages of books for it, studying for seven AP tests this week and next, working on a 30-page study of a local stream for ecology, and involved various other high-impact cerebral strains. As it all comes to a close within the next two weeks, and the sun finally shines on a semi-regular basis, I cannot help but sit in a contemplative stupor doing absolutely nothing but fathoming the infinite and eternal verities of life and the unknown. Nothing. Which is precisely why I'm writing this, here, now. I think I'll go read some of Walden.

3 Comments

Colin said:

Let's take advantage of this lack of stress and see Hitchhiker's Guide on Thursday.

Me said:

Ahhh...

Me said:

With your new comment approval process, there's a lack of continuity between comments.

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This page contains a single entry by Adam Anderson published on May 2, 2005 10:21 PM.

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