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Can anyone find this college newspaper column?

It was posted here a couple months back but I can't remember the name of the college or any other search terms that'd work. It's a really well-written column about a guy who finally tells the love of his life his true feelings.

Can anyone help? Thanks.
 

MartyMcFly3

Lifer
Jan 18, 2003
11,436
29
91
www.youtube.com
This?

You met her a few months ago, and somehow she managed to seep into your subconscious like that "Suga how you get so fly" song. Just like you have no clue who the hell sings it, you don't know why she's there. But she is, whether you like it or not. You know her cell phone, her room phone. You can dial her Aunt Doreen's house in West Springfield (where she goes to do her laundry every two weeks) faster than you can peck-out 911. But she doesn't know.
Her screenname, that generic one with her first name followed by three to five random numbers or UMass, has its own category at the top of your buddy list. Not only do you know what a "Buddy Alert" is, you've rigged your computer to play "Fat Guy in a Little Coat" from "Tommy Boy" every time her screen name changes from gray to black. Then her away message comes down, and you have a decision to make. To IM or not to IM? These are the ridiculous games that you play on a daily basis. But she doesn't know.
She's it. All right, so maybe not "it" it. Not necessarily Ms. Right, but closer to Ms. Right-up-there-with-Anna-Kournikova-and-Lizzie-McGuire-on-your-list-of-people-you'd-give-anything-to-be-stranded-with-on-a-broken-down-elevator. But it's about more than that. When is it ever about more than that? Never. Not like frilly white dress, overpriced catering, embarrassing drunk in-laws more, but closer to UMass sweatpants, two D.P. Dough Roni Zonies, a futon and a movie you have no interest in seeing more. But she doesn't know.
She's gorgeous, but gorgeous is an understatement. More like you're startled every time you see her because you notice something new in a "Where's Waldo" sort of way. More like you can't stop writing third grade run-on sentences because you can't remotely begin to describe something ... someone ... so inherently amazing. But you're a writer. You can describe anything. That's what you do: pictures to words, events to words, words to even better words. But nothing seems right. More like you're afraid that if you stare at her for too long, you'll prove your parents right: that yes, your face will stick that way. But you wouldn't mind.
You wouldn't mind that the questioning, "Hello?" on the other end makes you want to smile and throw up at the same time. You wouldn't mind worrying about what to get her for her birthday and spending $300 when you only have $17.50 and a Triple-A card to your name. You wouldn't mind that she left your TV on and the blaring infomercials wake you up at 4 a.m. ... because it gives you a chance to watch her sleep. You don't mind that you've slipped up twice when you were hammered and hinted at how you feel, but she was too drunk to remember. So she doesn't know.
Sure, she's pretty, but it's about more than that. You two connect. Anything you throw at her, she can throw right back. You figured out what's going on in that predictable head of hers in under five minutes, but something tells you her heart would take about five years.
You remember everything she's ever said to you, and when that freaks her out you blame it on your photographic memory (which is a lie, you have a 2.7 GPA). You can't remember your teaching assistant's name, and you can't remember that your Puffton rent check was due four days ago, yet you remember the middle name of the kid who tripped her in fifth grade and gave her that cute little scar on her shoulder. Maybe it's because you actually listen when she talks. When do you actually listen? Never. But she doesn't know.
But she has a boyfriend. The kid is a tool, and you are not. He has no redeeming qualities, and you have about 38, even when you're hung over. You could kick his butt, and you've never been in a fight in your life. He treats her like crap, and you would treat her like the princess she believed herself to be on Halloween in 1988.
But she loves him. He wouldn't know what he had even if she slapped him across the face and dumped him, but somehow she still loves him. And somehow she still doesn't know.
Then, out of nowhere, she slaps him across the face and dumps him. She comes to you. You've been there before, so you seem like the smartest guy on earth. She cries, but your corny half-joke, half-compliment somehow gets a smile out of her that almost makes you feel ashamed that you're the only one around who gets to witness it. It looks like you might make her realize that all guys don't deserve to have rocks thrown at them.
But nothing changes. She doesn't know. You get that library elevator feeling in your stomach that she'll never know. You get that feeling that you'll be forced to write a cheesy Collegian column about her that makes "Sleepless in Seattle" look like "Girls Gone Wild."
You go to sleep. You wake up. She doesn't know. You're not in love. You're not obsessed. You blame it on the fact that you just need to get some, but still, it's about more than that. It would just be nice if once in your life, things worked out the way you wanted them to.
So ___________, it's about time you know*.
Now cut this out, fill in her name, and give it to her, coward. Just let me know how it works out.
Matt Brochu is a Collegian columnist.
 

Originally posted by: MartyMcFly3
This?

You met her a few months ago, and somehow she managed to seep into your subconscious like that "Suga how you get so fly" song. Just like you have no clue who the hell sings it, you don't know why she's there. But she is, whether you like it or not. You know her cell phone, her room phone. You can dial her Aunt Doreen's house in West Springfield (where she goes to do her laundry every two weeks) faster than you can peck-out 911. But she doesn't know.
Her screenname, that generic one with her first name followed by three to five random numbers or UMass, has its own category at the top of your buddy list. Not only do you know what a "Buddy Alert" is, you've rigged your computer to play "Fat Guy in a Little Coat" from "Tommy Boy" every time her screen name changes from gray to black. Then her away message comes down, and you have a decision to make. To IM or not to IM? These are the ridiculous games that you play on a daily basis. But she doesn't know.
She's it. All right, so maybe not "it" it. Not necessarily Ms. Right, but closer to Ms. Right-up-there-with-Anna-Kournikova-and-Lizzie-McGuire-on-your-list-of-people-you'd-give-anything-to-be-stranded-with-on-a-broken-down-elevator. But it's about more than that. When is it ever about more than that? Never. Not like frilly white dress, overpriced catering, embarrassing drunk in-laws more, but closer to UMass sweatpants, two D.P. Dough Roni Zonies, a futon and a movie you have no interest in seeing more. But she doesn't know.
She's gorgeous, but gorgeous is an understatement. More like you're startled every time you see her because you notice something new in a "Where's Waldo" sort of way. More like you can't stop writing third grade run-on sentences because you can't remotely begin to describe something ... someone ... so inherently amazing. But you're a writer. You can describe anything. That's what you do: pictures to words, events to words, words to even better words. But nothing seems right. More like you're afraid that if you stare at her for too long, you'll prove your parents right: that yes, your face will stick that way. But you wouldn't mind.
You wouldn't mind that the questioning, "Hello?" on the other end makes you want to smile and throw up at the same time. You wouldn't mind worrying about what to get her for her birthday and spending $300 when you only have $17.50 and a Triple-A card to your name. You wouldn't mind that she left your TV on and the blaring infomercials wake you up at 4 a.m. ... because it gives you a chance to watch her sleep. You don't mind that you've slipped up twice when you were hammered and hinted at how you feel, but she was too drunk to remember. So she doesn't know.
Sure, she's pretty, but it's about more than that. You two connect. Anything you throw at her, she can throw right back. You figured out what's going on in that predictable head of hers in under five minutes, but something tells you her heart would take about five years.
You remember everything she's ever said to you, and when that freaks her out you blame it on your photographic memory (which is a lie, you have a 2.7 GPA). You can't remember your teaching assistant's name, and you can't remember that your Puffton rent check was due four days ago, yet you remember the middle name of the kid who tripped her in fifth grade and gave her that cute little scar on her shoulder. Maybe it's because you actually listen when she talks. When do you actually listen? Never. But she doesn't know.
But she has a boyfriend. The kid is a tool, and you are not. He has no redeeming qualities, and you have about 38, even when you're hung over. You could kick his butt, and you've never been in a fight in your life. He treats her like crap, and you would treat her like the princess she believed herself to be on Halloween in 1988.
But she loves him. He wouldn't know what he had even if she slapped him across the face and dumped him, but somehow she still loves him. And somehow she still doesn't know.
Then, out of nowhere, she slaps him across the face and dumps him. She comes to you. You've been there before, so you seem like the smartest guy on earth. She cries, but your corny half-joke, half-compliment somehow gets a smile out of her that almost makes you feel ashamed that you're the only one around who gets to witness it. It looks like you might make her realize that all guys don't deserve to have rocks thrown at them.
But nothing changes. She doesn't know. You get that library elevator feeling in your stomach that she'll never know. You get that feeling that you'll be forced to write a cheesy Collegian column about her that makes "Sleepless in Seattle" look like "Girls Gone Wild."
You go to sleep. You wake up. She doesn't know. You're not in love. You're not obsessed. You blame it on the fact that you just need to get some, but still, it's about more than that. It would just be nice if once in your life, things worked out the way you wanted them to.
So ___________, it's about time you know*.
Now cut this out, fill in her name, and give it to her, coward. Just let me know how it works out.
Matt Brochu is a Collegian columnist.
That's it! From the UMass Collegian!?
 

Originally posted by: azazyel
pretty cool, I must have missed this..
God dammit, this column is fvcking awesome. I've never read anything more real in my life.
 

Siva

Diamond Member
Mar 8, 2001
5,472
0
71
Welcome to life, it happens.

Next time don't be a bitch. When I'm hungover the only redeeming quality I have is shutting my mouth and staying in bed, and I bet this guy doesn't even have that. He needs to go out and find a girl that isn't gonna use him as a brother/leaning post. This guy needs to learn not to whine and hold a torch for a girl he probably has no right to be hung up on.
 

CarlKillerMiller

Diamond Member
Jul 14, 2003
3,099
0
0
Originally posted by: Siva
Welcome to life, it happens.

Next time don't be a bitch. When I'm hungover the only redeeming quality I have is shutting my mouth and staying in bed, and I bet this guy doesn't even have that. He needs to go out and find a girl that isn't gonna use him as a brother/leaning post. This guy needs to learn not to whine and hold a torch for a girl he probably has no right to be hung up on.

Wait, what?

troll.
 

Siva

Diamond Member
Mar 8, 2001
5,472
0
71
Originally posted by: Chraticn
Originally posted by: Siva
Welcome to life, it happens.

Next time don't be a bitch. When I'm hungover the only redeeming quality I have is shutting my mouth and staying in bed, and I bet this guy doesn't even have that. He needs to go out and find a girl that isn't gonna use him as a brother/leaning post. This guy needs to learn not to whine and hold a torch for a girl he probably has no right to be hung up on.

Wait, what?

troll.

So I don't think a whiney column that mirrors just about every other YAGT on ATOT is well written and that makes me a troll? SHE USED HIM. That guy needs to get over it and move on, I know at least two smoking girls who go to UMass, maybe I should introduce him. His column paints him more as a stalker than a writer to me.
 

Literati

Golden Member
Jan 13, 2005
1,864
0
0
Siva you seem like a herb.

I'm willing to bet people think you are a tool in real life, and just hold their tounges because it's easier to let you tool around like a clown then actually confront you about it, which will, in the end, just result in you still being a tool.


 

Siva

Diamond Member
Mar 8, 2001
5,472
0
71
Originally posted by: MantisFistMonk
Siva you seem like a herb.

I'm willing to bet people think you are a tool in real life, and just hold their tounges because it's easier to let you tool around like a clown then actually confront you about it, which will, in the end, just result in you still being a tool.

I am in no way a tool in real life. Your online assessment is way off. I just don't like this column at all, guys shouldn't get hung up and obsessive on girls like that. There are better ways to live life.
 

Literati

Golden Member
Jan 13, 2005
1,864
0
0
Originally posted by: Siva
I am in no way a tool in real life. Your online assessment is way off. I just don't like this column at all, guys shouldn't get hung up and obsessive on girls like that. There are better ways to live life.

Sounds like something a tool would say.

No honestly, I have noticed a few of your posts where it seems to try to get the easy one up on people by saying generic and degrading things to them in order to either satisfy your need to prove to yourself you are better than someone or to just generally try to put yourself on some sort of digital pedestal.

Either way though, I don't care.

My reply was more to make an "outloud" observation than to actually stick around and try to sort things out.


[edit]

I forgot to acknowledge that I also see your point.
 

crazycarl

Senior member
Jun 8, 2004
548
0
0
all i have to say, is i've been in that situation before. it's best to just accept the fact that you have already ruined any chance with that girl by this point and save yourself the embarassment of letting her know you're obsessed.