Registration: $250
Manhattan Tests: $40
GMATClub Tests: $40
Red Bull: $2
Ghirardelli Chocolate: $10
760 (99)
Q51 (99)
V41 (93)
Irish Car Bomb at local bar: Priceless.
Monday, July 23, 2007
Monday, July 16, 2007
The Telltale Test
I am positively tired of studying for the GMAT - its wrecking havoc in my daily (or everyday?) life.
I am haunted by the passive voice - nay, the passive voice haunts me. I not only strive for parallelism, but also aim at precision. I incessantly cut down wordiness and constantly reduce redundancy.
I routinely critique my manager's emails for underlying assumptions, and am constantly engaged in rewording my own to make them (the emails, if you still haven't caught on) more persuasive. Even as I write email, I pause after my lines...thoughts swirl in my mind: "I will follow up on this" (..shouldn't this be a would?). "...it is something I'd love to do" (ambiguous 'it'...is this awkward and redundant?). I pick on my manager's emails (in my mind) for misplaced modifiers or ambiguous pronouns.
Just today, I sent an email that started with : "While it is true that specifying XYZ would serve to our advantage, I believe that deferring this until next quarter would prove even more beneficial". I've been using words like evident, notion, belief, assumption, hypothesis, redundant, ... so often that I suspect everyone around me knows I'm taking the GMAT.
These days, I always number my reasons - and leave an empty line between 2 paragraphs. I even have started using a 0.7 mm pencil instead of my favorite pen, and prefer taking notes on letter-sized sheets instead of the notebook. What's more, I must conserve my paper, for I have only 6 sheets of paper a day. Oh, and I sit at my work-desk in slots of 75 minutes, breaking for exactly 5 minutes in between. I have timed myself - I take 30 seconds in the loo, another 30 to wash my face with cold water (the holy books say it's gotta be cold), 2 minutes to down a can of coke, and another minute to walk back to my desk. I have another minute as buffer, to regain my breath, and dive back in.
While driving to work, I try not to look at other cars and their license plates. Numbers like 43, 37 and 101 are devious and prime. They make me cringe, for I cannot cross-out common factors. On the other hand, I am very nice to drivers with plates that have numbers like 4096 and 8649 - they are perfect squares, and all perfect squares have an odd number of prime factors. At the lights, I know I have an average of just 2 minutes until it turns green - so, my mind races to find possible values for A and B, since the plates I see in front of me read: AXB(=)1101. I hate driving on interstates - I start thinking of the number of different ways I could choose a lane if 2 of the 5 lanes are occupied. It gets convoluted on a circle (Dupont Circle, if you are in DC) - clockwise and anti-clockwise are the same.
I can hear the voices you know - they are so close! It's just a matter of time now - I am nervous, for I must not fail, yet excited in a strange way.
I'm also ready to buy a drink to anyone who (or that?!) can (could? god!) help me get over this.
(Crudely adapted and force-fitted from Edgar Allan Poe's The Telltale Heart)
I am haunted by the passive voice - nay, the passive voice haunts me. I not only strive for parallelism, but also aim at precision. I incessantly cut down wordiness and constantly reduce redundancy.
I routinely critique my manager's emails for underlying assumptions, and am constantly engaged in rewording my own to make them (the emails, if you still haven't caught on) more persuasive. Even as I write email, I pause after my lines...thoughts swirl in my mind: "I will follow up on this" (..shouldn't this be a would?). "...it is something I'd love to do" (ambiguous 'it'...is this awkward and redundant?). I pick on my manager's emails (in my mind) for misplaced modifiers or ambiguous pronouns.
Just today, I sent an email that started with : "While it is true that specifying XYZ would serve to our advantage, I believe that deferring this until next quarter would prove even more beneficial". I've been using words like evident, notion, belief, assumption, hypothesis, redundant, ... so often that I suspect everyone around me knows I'm taking the GMAT.
These days, I always number my reasons - and leave an empty line between 2 paragraphs. I even have started using a 0.7 mm pencil instead of my favorite pen, and prefer taking notes on letter-sized sheets instead of the notebook. What's more, I must conserve my paper, for I have only 6 sheets of paper a day. Oh, and I sit at my work-desk in slots of 75 minutes, breaking for exactly 5 minutes in between. I have timed myself - I take 30 seconds in the loo, another 30 to wash my face with cold water (the holy books say it's gotta be cold), 2 minutes to down a can of coke, and another minute to walk back to my desk. I have another minute as buffer, to regain my breath, and dive back in.
While driving to work, I try not to look at other cars and their license plates. Numbers like 43, 37 and 101 are devious and prime. They make me cringe, for I cannot cross-out common factors. On the other hand, I am very nice to drivers with plates that have numbers like 4096 and 8649 - they are perfect squares, and all perfect squares have an odd number of prime factors. At the lights, I know I have an average of just 2 minutes until it turns green - so, my mind races to find possible values for A and B, since the plates I see in front of me read: AXB(=)1101. I hate driving on interstates - I start thinking of the number of different ways I could choose a lane if 2 of the 5 lanes are occupied. It gets convoluted on a circle (Dupont Circle, if you are in DC) - clockwise and anti-clockwise are the same.
I can hear the voices you know - they are so close! It's just a matter of time now - I am nervous, for I must not fail, yet excited in a strange way.
I'm also ready to buy a drink to anyone who (or that?!) can (could? god!) help me get over this.
(Crudely adapted and force-fitted from Edgar Allan Poe's The Telltale Heart)
Monday, July 2, 2007
The Identity Crisis of the MBA Blogger
I am going to write about a completely divergent topic today. I cannot do more GMAT questions, and just need my mind to wander just so it is away from the CRs and the RCs and the DSs.
I was wondering over the last day or so over this - as an MBA blogger, should you keep you identity secret? Those of us who work would appreciate this question - most employers are not very kind when it becomes known that you intend on leaving them in a year from now. So it is in the best interest of the blogger not to divulge any information that may lead to a possible exposure. You are the mole, that double, not what he/she pretends to be!
On the other hand, putting in some context sensitive info about yourself on these blogs can be a huge plus. You can accumulate comments that are more specific to you, your profile/blog is oft-visited by like-minded MBA bloggers, and this forms a community within a community that is focussed, and much stronger than the sum of its parts.
Personally, I believe that keeping it under wraps has advantages. This could be significant if you are due for promotion sometime towards the end of the year. Why would an employer promote you if you intend to leave within 5-6 months anyway?
I know, I know...it's a matter of drawing that fine line, of not letting anyone know AND getting that elusive promotion AND the admittance letter from X (insert your stretch school here). I just wanted to elicit responses from fellow mates.
I was wondering over the last day or so over this - as an MBA blogger, should you keep you identity secret? Those of us who work would appreciate this question - most employers are not very kind when it becomes known that you intend on leaving them in a year from now. So it is in the best interest of the blogger not to divulge any information that may lead to a possible exposure. You are the mole, that double, not what he/she pretends to be!
On the other hand, putting in some context sensitive info about yourself on these blogs can be a huge plus. You can accumulate comments that are more specific to you, your profile/blog is oft-visited by like-minded MBA bloggers, and this forms a community within a community that is focussed, and much stronger than the sum of its parts.
Personally, I believe that keeping it under wraps has advantages. This could be significant if you are due for promotion sometime towards the end of the year. Why would an employer promote you if you intend to leave within 5-6 months anyway?
I know, I know...it's a matter of drawing that fine line, of not letting anyone know AND getting that elusive promotion AND the admittance letter from X (insert your stretch school here). I just wanted to elicit responses from fellow mates.
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