As I near the end of my first year at U.Va., I think about my favorite aspects about going here — the people, the classes, a Chipotle within a 10-minute walking distance, etc. But I also have some major grievances I need to get off my chest. So instead of getting a therapist, I figured I could work through all of these emotions by writing letters to the sources of my problems. It’s cheaper and less traumatic! Win-win.
Dear NetBadge Login,
Ah, Netbadge. Is it okay if I call you that? Perhaps Net? See I want to like you, I do. But you reallllly push me to my limits. You enter my life in the absolute worst moments. I could be sweating bullets, realizing I need to turn something in moments before an 11:59 p.m. deadline, struggling to find the turn-in page and bam! It’s you, NetBadge, blocking me until I Duo Authenticate myself on my computer. Lately, you have been absolutely insisting — nay, beseeching! — me to Duo Authenticate myself at least eight times a day. I am done!
Allow me to explain to all my readers, far and wide, how NetBadge enrages me.
NetBadge Login and Duo Authenticate team up every day to make my life more difficult. They force me to retrieve my phone and press a silly little electronic button that says, “Bibbidi Bobbidi Boo, open Margo’s comptueroo” when I log onto any University-affiliated site. All I want is to access my beloved discussion page, but instead I must go through the labor-intensive process of reaching for my phone, unlocking my phone with my face and hitting “approve.” Absolutely ridiculous.
Perhaps I should run for some position on Student Council and gain power to destroy you once and for all, Netbadge. Mwah ha ha! Or I’ll become the next Jim Ryan and you’ll be finished.
Worst wishes and no regards,
An unsatisfied customer
P.S. Does Mr. President Jim Ryan have to Duo Authenticate himself? Honestly, just curious.
Dear Brita in my fridge,
I will admit, you are semi-useful. You hold water and allow me to easily refill my water bottle because my roommate and I have been cursed with a room located an entire floor above the closest water fountain. Ugh.
But, Brita, I must confess that I do not trust you. It’s hard for me to believe that I am actually drinking 100 percent purified water. Something just feels off. Perhaps it’s my fault — it’s possible that I did not set you up properly. But my water never tastes quite right. And this would make sense, considering I have practically been sick since arriving in August. I don’t remember the last time I didn’t have a cough — this is a cry for help, BTW. I have tried Mucinex, DayQuil, you name it. But still, all day, every day I just cough. That’s all I do. Well, cough and Duo Authenticate myself.
Oh, and, Brita, one more thing. Remember that time when I was trekking back upstairs after filling you up and you decided to let the lid give out, so my grip loosened and you tumbled down a flight of stairs, spilling the freshly “filtered” water everywhere? Well, I do. And I must say that was rude and inconsiderate.
Anyways, please do better, Brita. I need all the help I can get.
Sincerely,
A friend in need of purification
Dear Everlasting Pile of Stuff on the Chair Next to my Bed,
No matter what I do, no matter how productive I may be, there will always be something on the blue fabric chair — provided by Housing and Residence Life, of course — next to my bed in my first-year dorm. You, Everlasting Pile, just won’t quit. Because even if I do fold and put everything away — there’s always one item I need to leave out as a reminder to myself, or that I need to give to a friend or that I need to bring somewhere in an hour — the cleanliness is always temporary. Within 24 hours of getting it clean, I am guaranteed to throw something onto that chair. In my eyes, you, Everlasting Pile, hold a permanent spot on my mental to-do list. At certain points, you have reached all time lows — or really, I should say highs considering the loads and loads of clothes I throw onto you. You’re composed of countless items — outfits from three days ago, a book I keep telling myself I will read and the gas station phone charger I bought this summer that is holding on for dear life with wires popping out.
I wish you would disappear. I wish you away!! It’s not my fault that I need an easy place to drop something. But why must you exist? Why can’t you merely open a trapdoor when I place a t-shirt on your surface that magically transports the shirt to my drawer — folded, of course — instantaneously? It’s not fair!
Scornfully,
The girl who uses you as a stool to launch herself into bed
Phew! I feel much better, what a relief.