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Dennis Jansen

July 7th, 2009

Best Summer Ever 6: Valvoline and $150k

My windshield wiper fluid had been empty for a week, so I was really proud of myself when I finally bought some fluid from Wal-Mart.

In fact, I was SO excited that I popped my hood in the parking lot and filled the wiper fluid right there. Just because I’m that classy.

But when I got into my car, the “you need windshield wiper fluid” light was still on.

On the way home I realized why the light was still on – I poured the windshield fluid in the radiator!

The next day I was on the phone with Valvoline. They wanted $79 to flush my radiator.

I then called my car dealership’s repair shop – they wanted $125.

A few minutes later I’m speaking with a very knowledgeable boyish-woman at Valvoline. The amount of mechanics was amazing. It looked like a setup for a Bollywood dance number.

While my car was being pumped, yanked, and greased, I crossed Hennepin and went to SpyHouse, aka, the indie coffee shop.

I had two Time magazines that had been in my car for weeks. I got my overpriced coffee from the spot-bleached and pierced barista, and then found a seat among the macs and skinny jeans.

This was my first time “hanging out” in a coffee shop for months. I had done a substantial part of my law review petition at another indie coffee shop, but my café life basically ended once I got a car and a job.

The cliché in law school is “to do the things that make you happy so you don’t get angsty.” But the problem is that it’s hard to realize that you’ve stopped doing something that makes you happy – I didn’t realize how much I missed just hanging out until that day.

Somehow, during the dog walks and commutes to work, my extracurriculars became guilt-laced. And although my social life is now on par with the my best days in Miami, I forgot how important side projects and “me time” are.

And it took a windshield wiper fluid mix-up for me to figure that unstructured time needs to be a priority.

Something else was bothering me this week. Actually, I missed class on Wednesday and almost didn’t go back.

I didn’t fully understand what the problem was until I had a drink with Mobs at the Eagle.

Minneapolis Eagle

Minneapolis Eagle

The problem? Morale at the law school is low because a lot of us feel shafted. There was this unspoken expectation that if we went to a prestigious school and worked hard, that we would have some sort of job security.

Obviously, a quick glance at Above the Law reminds everyone that the job market is bleak.

Now, neither of us feel completely unemployable – it’s just that if we knew that we would have to do this much leg work and face this kind of uncertainty, then we would have done it for free at a less prestigious school.1

I don’t know how Mobs feels, but I definitely consider going to the University of Minnesota a mistake. My scholarship is a joke, and tuition for out of state students is the equivalent of a bitchslap.

The only problem is that there was no way I would have known that this was a bad idea. During undergrad I forwent Macalester, NYU, and Georgetown to go the University of Miami.

Sure, I was on a full ride and got to stay in a fun city, but I felt that I had shortchanged myself for the money.

So for grad school I went to my first choice school, despite getting full rides at dozens2 of schools.

My point is that the mild inferiority complex of going to a tier 3 school is better than cementing yourself into debt and jumping into a river of unemployment.3 And no, that’s not dramatic at all…

But with debt comes freedom. I’m going to finish my degree at UMN because a single year of law school is even more useless towards paying off loans than a JD degree. And since gainful law-related employment4 seems unlikely, I can focus what law interests me without worrying about “what looks good” to a non-existent employer – which I would have done anyway if I took a full ride at a third tier.

So this week I recommitted to me-time and focusing on law that I enjoy, which was the plan before I started law school. It only took trip to Valvoline and a $150,000 loan to get back to that goal.


1 There’s also the other inherent problem of going to a prestigious-but-not-top-5 school: there’s a curve and our peers are smart. Most of the people in our school are used to being in the top 10% of their class, but 90% of us can’t achieve that. All it takes is one question on an exam or one nutball professor and you’re screwed – and it’s too late to snatch that full ride at NoName University.

2 Yes, I applied to almost every school that sent me a fee waiver…

3 Fashion analogy? The girl with the Wal-Mart purse covets the Guess Bag. The girl who went into debt to buy the Guess bag realizes that the stupid bag is not worth the debt, and that Guess is still a few steps away from Gucci.

4 Gainful as in, “I can pay my student loan payment and still feed my dog.”

February 1st, 2009

Goldy

University of Minnesota’s mascot is Goldy the Golden Gopher. There’s a wooden statute of Goldy in front of the school recreation center:

Hey, at least we aren’t the Beavers right?
Continue reading “Goldy” »

January 30th, 2009

The rest of Bemidji

I finally uploaded the rest of the Bemidji trip photos.

January 25th, 2009

Bemidji bar

Jamie stole my camera and…

January 24th, 2009

On the lake

And this a video of us on a frozen lake:

As I say in the video, I though driving on a lake was absolutely crazy…so when I saw this on the fail blog last night I felt vindicated.

Me (to Jamie): “SEE? SEE? That could have been us!”
Jamie: “Eh, that only happens at the beginning or end of the season…”

Ermp. Okay.

January 24th, 2009

Bemidji videos


I finished uploading some videos from last weekend’s Bemidji trip. The rest are on the youtube channel.

January 19th, 2009

Pictures from Bemidji

Here are the pictures from the Bemidji trip: Gallery #1

… and Gallery #2.

January 19th, 2009

Bemidji

Jamie and I spent the weekend in Bemidji.

Bemidji is a resort town in Northern Minnesota where Jamie went to college. Bemidji State University looks like a grotty, oversized high school.

The university is on the shore of lake Bemidji. The lake is frozen over and dotted with fish houses.

Driving on the lake quickly lost its appeal. We were convinced that the ice would crack and we would drown…and it would be our fault for… well, driving on a lake. Who does that?


We sampled downtown Bemidji’s nightlife on Saturday night. The first bar had a pair of snow-mobilers chatting up a 300-pound female bouncer. Frizzy hair and galoshes. Indeed.

The next bar was full of undergrads. There were two jukebox Nazis who played 14 songs using the “play now” feature. I think they blew $20 on that jukebox. They did play Radiohead, Nine Inch Nails, and our favorite Peaches song so I forgave them.

We played photo hunt as a group of five. It’s really easy to get the high score when you have that many people.

The best moment of bar #2 was when two very blond, very tan girls busted in wearing mini-skirts. They shook the snow from their stilettos and stumbled into the back of the bar. No frost was too deep to keep these girls from being tanned and (almost) naked!

We ended the night at Bemidji’s local hiphop club called Bada Bing.

Bada Bing was tragic. There was skinny, painfully dorky DJ. The DJ was accompanied by Cartman, his morbidly obese sidekick. Cartman stood on the stage and flailed about while shouting “yeah yeah! Oh oh oh!” We saw way too much of Cartman’s belly.

And hers:

That would be mean, but the girl in the middle was so obnoxiously drunk that she spat in my face while asking me to dance. “CMON! CMON! SHOW ME HOW TO POP LOCK AND…

Today, Jamie took me on a tour of Bemidji State University. We also saw the wonders of the Paul Bunyan Mall . K-Mart is an anchor store. Yep.

Out of revenge, I dragged asked Jamie to go to Wal-Mart with me. Jamie hadn’t been in a Wal-Mart in 7 years, which is unacceptable. He loves Wal-Mart. He just doesn’t know it yet.

Sunday night we saw Marley & Me. The plot? Jennifer Aniston and Owen Wilson get married and have kids. The comic relief is their troublesome dog, Marley.

The best line in the movie was delivered by the 6-year-old behind us:

Kid: “They have sex a lot.”

I laughed so hard that I had tears in my eyes.

January 17th, 2009

Best Winter Ever

We kicked winter off with Jean’s graduation party:

Continue reading “Best Winter Ever” »

January 16th, 2009

Cat crap

I forgot to mention the cat crap! The Mountaineering store by school had a box of “Cat Crap” on the counter:

It’s lens cleaner. I’ve never heard of it, but it sounds like the biggest brand-naming fail since Athlete’s Foot.