Sunday, July 26, 2020
One Month of Baby Steps
One Month of Baby Steps Hi, Iâm Kathleen. Iâm a first-year student and a new blogger here at MIT! I arrived in Cambridge one month ago, but it feels like its been much longer. Time doesnât flow at its normal rate when everything around me is saturated with newness. Iâm still adjusting to making new friends, taking new classes, and handling the new responsibilities that come with greater independence. Iâm a big fan of data. It can reduce complicated phenomena (like my transition to college) into comfortingly simple sets of values (like a step count). Through my iPhoneâs Health app, I have collected data about the number of steps Iâve taken and flights of stairs Iâve climbed each day. Iâm calling this dataset âBaby Stepsâ because of how foreign these steps have felt. Over the past month, my once-white New Balances have turned an ashy grey. Iâve been walking a lot. This September, Iâve averaged 15,375 steps per day â" more than triple my daily average in July. Iâve made a bar graph of my daily step counts. You might notice the tallest bars and wonder, what could possibly have taken her 30,000 steps to accomplish? I wondered that too, especially since the tallest bars all happened to be Saturdays, when I assumed Iâd have a lower-than-average step count. my soccerbot from Discover Mechanical Engineering 8/25 (28624 steps) This was the second to last day of âDiscover Mechanical Engineering,â one of MITâs many Freshman Pre Orientation Programs (also known as FPOPs). In my FPOP, I got to see the wonders of MITâs mechanical engineering labs. We each built a soccerbot and became familiar with using band saws, drill presses, and CAD software. We also took trips around Boston to visit improv shows and eat hot pot. For our second to last day, we took long walks between campus, the Museum of Science (free for MIT students!), and a trampoline park. (Future prefrosh, definitely do an FPOP if you can, especially DME!) 9/1 (27425 steps) I live in MacGregor House, the tallest dorm on MITâs dorm row. MacG isnât the most exciting dorm on campus, but itâs perfect for me. No other dorm gives every resident their own room. I also get access to a kitchen, which I share with my suite. On this particular Saturday, a few MacG upperclassmen organized a grocery trip. We walked to Haymarket, an outdoor produce market. I brought back tomatoes (a favorite) and a ton of oranges. After returning to MacG to put our food away, we then walked across the Harvard Bridge to visit Star Market, a much larger and more conventional grocery store. It was awesome to get to know the MacG upperclassmen â" and Boston â" a bit better. 9/8 (30756 steps) Iâve literally never taken this many steps before in a single day (at least, for as far back as my phoneâs log goes). I began the day with brunch at a restaurant near MIT called Cafe Luna. The bulk of my steps occurred afterwards, when I walked all around campus as part of a scavenger hunt held by Student Cable, MITâs video club. We recorded footage all around MIT and â" wow â" MIT, the Charles River, and the Boston skyline are just so beautiful. Itâs surprising just how much of MIT becomes familiar once youâve taken 543714 steps. Or maybe it isnât. Thatâs a lot of steps. flights climbed per day I originally arrived to MIT with just a suitcase, a duffel bag, and a backpack. To the left is a calendar, with each bar representing the number of flights of stairs I climbed on a given day. The giant bar in the back? Thatâs the day my family drove up from New York with (way too many) of my remaining bags and boxes. At the time, I was temporarily housed in a room on the fourth floor, in a building without an elevator. My parents and my younger sister helped me lug everything up to that room. Iâll end this post by saying thank you to my family â" the people who watched me take my real baby steps. I wouldnât be here without you. Post Tagged #FPOP #MacGregor House
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.