The Philippine Star

HOW I KNEW MY CROURSE WAS THE ONE he day I decided not to shift out, I felt an odd peace. I knew I was ready to give all the energy of the next three years to this discipline. I knew it would train me in the analysis needed for my future career as a lawye

- By KAREN RACELIS Art by RIA MAGCASE

The day I decided not to shift out, I felt an odd peace.

THE PLAN

As I refreshed the page for the 70th time that day, I wondered which would give up first — my phone battery or my mobile data. With each tap, I feared that UP was a dream far beyond my reach. The university registrar had said results would be out on April 30, which made that Monday infinitely more dragging than usual. Finally, the screen loaded. I scrolled as fast as possible to the list containing surnames beginning with “R,” and I finally saw mine.

However, the course written beside my name was not my first choice. Seeing my second course choice, I was not heartbroke­n. I did not have time to be.

I hatched my freshman year plan in 25 seconds. Enter the program for now. Get the highest possible grades. Shift out after two semesters. That’s all I really knew at 18 — one foot in front of the other, Step 1 to reach Step 2.

THE FRESHIE

Three months later, I enrolled in my first major classes under the program Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy. Between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m., I jumped from lecture to lecture, learning as much as I could, but not devoting more time than was necessary to any notes. I took 30-minute lunches when my schedule had breaks. At the end of the school day, I returned to a dorm nestled between rambutan trees.

I went to bed with only the sound of crickets as accompanim­ent to the plan, which by then had become a song: “Do well, shift out... Do well, shift out...”

THE FIRST CLUE

Though my major classes spanned different branches of the discipline, one constant between those classes was the unrelentin­g embrace of questions. Professors encouraged us to ask anything and everything that would develop insight into the subject matter. It was 2 p.m. on a Tuesday when I found my first clue.

The afternoon sun danced off our classroom window as I asked the most awkwardly phrased question I’d ever spoken: “My eye says that the curtain is blue, but do I know it’s blue?” Our professor replied: “What makes you ask this?” As I went through the rationale for my question, the professor nodded slowly. At that moment, I realized I was doing philosophy. Turns out, “What makes you ask this?” was exactly the response I needed.

For the first time, I imagined what staying in the program would look like, what three more years of that kind of analysis could do for me. That image was a clue, but it wasn’t convincing enough yet.

I kept comparing that hypothetic­al future against others. On one hand, I could shift out toward the future my 18-year-old self had envisioned, one wherein I was writing and investigat­ing as a journalism major getting ready to be the next foremost newspaper editor. On the other hand, I could shift out toward my 12-year-old self’s ambition of political science, crafting what I thought was the most direct path to law school.

Discerning which course was for me felt like the midpoint of a mystery film.

THE SECOND CLUE

The second clue that this course was for me was drawn in bright red ink. After my last class, I claimed a graded term paper from a second floor pigeonhole. I flipped it open to see a giant “1.00.” Allow me a moment’s joy at this point. I had worked diligently on that paper, submitting my proposal weeks before it was due, seeking multiple consultati­on sessions, and revising several drafts. But my grade was not the most interestin­g part. Under it was a comment, in cursive, saying that my paper was promising enough to be developed into a thesis. That shattered a doubt that had been weighing so deeply and heavily on my shoulders. After months of feeling adrift in philosophy, I finally knew that I could contribute something useful to the field.

That evening, I called my best friends, saying: “I like this idea, and I am willing to see it through. I want to see what I can do in this course.” That fateful night, my undergradu­ate thesis was born.

THE THIRD CLUE

The third and final clue waved hello on a Wednesday morning. In a thought experiment, a professor asked: “Is it possible to reconcile free will and predestina­tion?” I walked to my next class formulatin­g my answer. After all, choice was the heart of my dilemma.

If I was predestine­d to take a certain college course, why was I spending so much energy on deciding the “right” one? Don’t all the inspiratio­nal tweets say that what is meant for us will find us eventually?

“Yes,” I answered in the end. I can be free and still be meant for a path, as long as I freely choose that path. In my gut, I knew what that was.

THE ONE

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