Well, last week was quite the week for me.
Being from Oregon, I’ve never really been apart of a natural disaster like the fires in S.D. last week, I mean the worst we have is a downpour of rain 9 months out of the year.
It is possible to have thick fog, hail or perhaps a little flooding, but where I grew up and did my undergrad they NEVER closed school.
I’m pretty sure we all fell walking around campus due to the layers of ice in the winter, but they would never close campus for just a little black ice.
Side note: I’m pretty sure if San Diego got ice, campus would probably be closed because people would think it is another natural disaster.
Have you seen people drive here in the rain?
Okay, at least those out-of-staters know what I am talking about.
A little off topic and I’m not trying to make light of the seriousness of these fires nor devastation that occurred here last week.
I was a lucky one who lives in Mission Valley and was not directly affected by the fires, however, the first couple days I think was a little scary for everyone.
It is so strange to me to try to think of the most important things I have that I would want to take with me if I would have had to evacuate.
The most random things came to mind first.
I mean seriously, do I really need band aids?
I’m not buying those darn text books again!
Anyway, my heart goes out to the families who lost their homes, pets and animals and to the firefighters (I had friends out there), police, military and volunteers for their continued hard work in battling the flames and getting people out of harms way.
It is also interesting what Dr. E said in class on Monday, referring back to the river analogy from the first week.
The first few days the news was all that was on TV, then regular programming started coming back slowly and now it is fairly normal, but still very popular in the news.
It is just interesting how the media works, it was very full last week with fire information, and soon it will be fairly non-existent.
In addition to last week’s fires, I lost my 12 year old German Sheppard, Rainee, (90 pound puppy to me) due mostly to old age. Thinking back about her, she was the best listener I knew. Never judging, never had anywhere else she’d rather be, always comforting and always willing to give you a hug and a kiss AND you always felt better after talking to her because usually she made you smile and laugh. This reminds me of how Dr. E is always telling us we should be better listeners and that it will get us a long way in life. I agree. Everyone should be more like a family pet. : )
As far as the guest lecture on Monday about PR…
For someone who really isn’t all that interested in PR as a career, this presentation was valuable in the sense that many of the points made about marketing clients can be applied to other aspects of life including public health campaigning or job hunting. The points included: figuring out who you are (SWOT: strength, weaknesses, opportunities & threat), how are you different/better, goals (specific, trackable, time bound & measurable), networking, using media publicity and following up.
When the guest speaker said that her mother never understood what she did, it reminded me of when I tell people I am studying Public Health. In my experience they always seem to responds with “that’s cool” or “that’s interesting” as if they know, but have a confused look on their face. If they ask a following question it is usually, “so what do you want to do with that” or “so what exactly is that” or else they immediately think of medical things. While Public Health is becoming better known, a lot of people don’t really know what it is.
Interestingly enough this guy started talking to me on the trolley today on my way to school. He asked what I was studying. I responded with “I am getting my Master’s in Public Health”. His response was, “so what are you going to work at FEMA or something?” I laughed thinking he was kidding because of the fake press conference that happened last week. I then realized he hadn’t heard about that and was serious.