Last
Wednesday I was nominated for a position in SLATSA, my program’s student
association.  I don’t know who nominated
me or why, but it was a flattering surprise. 
The position mostly involved fundraising and writing grant proposal
which not only do I have zero experience in, but they don’t seem very fun
either.  I emailed the SLATSA president
and told him that I didn’t think I was the ideal candidate due to my lack of
experience, but he told me to accept the nomination anyway.  So I did, but mostly because I don’t have a
job and I need some way to support Thai food eating habit.  
Now
that I was nominated I just had to win the election to get the position.  On Thursday I got the same email that
everyone in my program received telling us how to vote.  The voting process involved six steps
(including making a login name and password) and I wasn’t feeling up to the
complicated voting procedure at the time so I put the email in my
procrastination file (that means that I starred it for later).  
On
Friday mornings I have a three hour long class with all the first years in my
program.  We have a break in the middle
of class that usually involves cookies. 
As soon as the break started I stood up and exclaimed, “I love cookies so much!” as I walked to the cookie
table.  While chomping down on my second
or third cookie Hope walked up to me and said, “So I guess this is where we
both wish each other luck on the election.” 
I said, “Oh, you’re running, too?” 
(I would have figured that out if I had already voted).  We chatted briefly about the position and it
turns out that she didn’t feel super-qualified for it either.  
One
of my friends in the class overheard my conversation with Hope and asked me why
I was applying for the position.  I said,
“I just need a way to earn some money,” to which he replied, “You do realize
that it isn’t a paid job?”  No, actually,
I hadn’t realized that.  You see, there was
a different position on a different student council that was paid and I had
gotten the two mixed up and had somehow agreed to do something that I didn’t
want to do for free (and I wasn’t really that thrilled to do it for $12 an hour
either).  I allowed myself to briefly
feel like an idiot.
Newly
infused with the power of three cookies and worried that I might have to do
extra work for free, I came up with a plan to not win the election.  In all honesty, I probably didn’t need a plan
because Hope is a phenomenal student and well liked by everyone and probably would have won anyway, but I came up
with a plan nonetheless.  Hope was now my
only hope of getting out of doing more work for zero dollars.  Our program isn’t super-big and considering
the cumbersome voting process I assumed that few people would vote.  This meant that not winning would be
easy.  Instead of giving my full
attention to the lecture I took a few minutes to vote for Hope and then emailed
Josh and told him to vote for Hope, too, which he did.  I assumed (and hoped) that those two votes
would be enough to lose.  Later that
night I received the following the email: “CONGRATULATIONS to HOPE for winning the position and thank you all for
your support and participation." I was relieved, very relieved.  And plus, Hope will do a great job and it will look great on her resume and I can spend more time watching House Hunters International.  There was Hope for me.  Indeed, there is Hope for us all.   
1 comment:
You are SO punny.
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