Internet Advertising or How Pandora Is Trying To Get My Pregnant

Internet advertising is getting ridiculous. I go to one website about Halloween costumes and suddenly my Facebook feed, Google searches, and pop up ads are all postulated with websites on which I can get costumes. While I can appreciated the sexy Shrek costumes (yes they exist) I do not like the idea that search engines are keeping track of what I am searching and making recommendations. I will admit that sometimes it is helpful. When I am actually searching for clothes, I have liked that I find new websites at which I can buy clothes but when I accidentally head to a website that sells both women’ and children’s clothing and Pandora thinks that I should get pregnant, I draw the line. I listen to Pandora every day at work because it has a wider music selection. I started noticing that Pandora thought I should get pregnant when one day I head the same four ads for the entire day. there may have been one or two others thrown in here or there but it was basically a repeat of these same five ads all of which had to do with children and/or pregnancy in some way.

The ads were on,

1) pregnancy tests;

2) birthing suites at local hospitals;

3) children’s toys,

4) and finally, IVF treatments.

 

At first I couldn’t understand why Pandora was giving me these ads. I had not googled anything close to this! Then I remembered, I had liked a website, on Facebook, that sold women’s clothing but also sold children’s clothing. I was in shock when I remembered this. I mean I had liked it after viewing a few of the women’s clothes. I was barely on the website twenty minutes. However, that one like and visit, were noticed by Facebook and because my Facebook account is connected to my Pandora account it seemed that infer that I was pregnant or soon to be. I have since started noticing that this happens A LOT with the other websites I visit if my Facebook is connected to them. I have always loved shoes. I online window shop for shoes, so a lot of the ads that pop up or are streamed on Pandora have been shoes. I had never really noticed before because well, I love shoes. They were just the normal, annoying ads that come along with going on the internet. I have been told to be careful about what I put on the internet but I never thought it would get down to what I like on Facebook. It’s amazing how a simple act can spiral out of control…or in this case try to get my pregnant.

 

 

 

Guest Writer: Who Said I Was An Adult?! I Want Names!

It seems as though everyone and their mother (and grandmother and grandfather and second and third cousins) is writing articles on what it means to be a twenty-something.  As though the decade where you hit many major life rites of passage can be described in a twenty-something list of .gifs, vines and memes.  I have chuckled at and shared many of these articles.  I watch old episodes of Friends and think “I’m just like these people,” searching for the funniest BuzzFeed I can find comparing myself to Chandler (As of course I am a Chandler).  I am practically screaming at the top of my internet lungs that I was born in the 1990s and remember all of these pre-internet things.  twenty-somethingWhile this is all superficial and fun games I can’t help but wonder has the internet age of sharing created the more malicious implication of these posts—the urge to be an “adult?”

Every single time (EVERY. SINGLE. TIME) I get together for drinks/workouts/dinner with a friend the topic of marriage and babies comes up.  The dialogue usually involves something along the lines of “Did you see so-and-so procreate/got married?”  It then quickly turns into either a “they are the last people on earth who should be trusted with another human life,” or a “what-the-actual-explicative is wrong with me?”  It’s as though the constant updates from people who in the past I wouldn’t have given a second thought after graduation has created a form of self-doubt that psychologists will study in the future and mark as the moment humanity collectively lost its mind.  I spend an inordinate amount of time reminding myself that I shouldn’t be jealous that Kathy bought a house, I don’t even know where I want to live yet! (Related: I’m 24 years old—I shouldn’t be buying a house!)

When did everyone come to the decision that they wanted to grow up so fast?  I relate to the characters on Friends and they’re in their late 20s when the show BEGINS.  This means that they are a decade ahead of me in years but I have this unrealistic expectation that I too should be knee-deep in my career and family life.  I shouldn’t.  I am not.  I am not and I shouldn’t be.  I am exactly where I should be in life.  I graduated college and went on to a Master’s program right away.  Teacher-with-Discipline-Written-on-Board-for-BlogI acted as a Teaching Assistant and had the weirdest experience of having to be an authority figure to people who were just like I was 3 months prior.  I thought back to my experience with Teaching Assistants my freshman year of college at the University of Nebraska before I transferred to a university where all my professors had their doctorate in what they taught (Thanks for being worth my money, Mary Washington!).  The TAs always were either ridiculously hard or so laid back and awesome.  Which one they were differed based upon whether they saw themselves as an “adult” or not.

I didn’t understand it at the time, but it was either acceptance of the weirdness of their situation or overcompensation. The hard TAs were basically saying, “I feel insecure in my position of authority over you so I’m going to ruin your life,” or I imagine that was what it was anyway.  I spent so much time trying to be “professional” that I think I was actually unavailable to the students—which is the exact opposite of what an educator should do.  Then I became a tutor for the athletic department and in my first semester was so formal in my correspondence that I ended up having a lot of students stand me up (which isn’t as bad as it sounds because I still got paid!).  The second semester I realized that if I texted them instead of emailed them they might actually show up, listen to me and learn, because guess what—just like me they were twenty-something’s who are attached to their phone like it’s a good luck charm.  Once I stopped trying to be an “adult,” I actually was able to do my job.

This isn’t to say that I didn’t make mistakes along the way, because I did.  There’s a great story about one of the students I tutored giving me his post-game Gatorade because I ran into him after I had personally drank a gallon of alcohol.  All this means is that I shouldn’t have tried so hard to fit into this definition of what it means to be an “adult.”  I don’t know what an adult is, honestly.  But if it means having a home-loan and babies and husbands at the young age of 24 then I never want to grow up.  I barely know who I am.  I eat candy for breakfast sometimes.  I stay up until 3 A.M. for no reason.  These are not things that adults do but they are things that I am supposed to be doing.  e9f7eaa45bc33a09a67d486b9d4eb978I work a crappy job for crappy pay and have not yet reached my goal of becoming a Men’s College Basketball coach and that is entirely okay.  If being married and having kids is what you want to be doing at 24, then do it.  If it’s not, just remember Chandler and Monica were in their 30s before they got married and half of marriages end in divorce.

Sara is a currently working a crappy job for crappy pay in Virginia. Some of my fondest memories are hanging out with her during our college years. When she does decide to become an adult the world better watch out cause she is going to take it by storm.

Baby Later

I am going to say the one thing that makes people very nervous: I  do not want children. I enjoy kids in small doses but settling in for a lifetime of tantrums, fighting, parent teacher conferences, and debt, seems unnecessary and unhappy. Yes, parents will tell you that there are moments that make it all worth it but as a former child I think I can say with authority, there will need to be a hell of a lot more to  make up for the shit my brothers and I put my parents through.

I know I am  in the minority and I know that it would be really easy to say that I haven’t met the right person or I will change my mind but as my friends know, I really do not like children. I get along better and prefer adults. Babies are needy, toddlers move faster than I am willing to, I actually enjoy children between the ages of 4-10, pre-teens are too much like teenagers and teenagers are…well…teenagers. I have noticed that once a teenager hits 20 I suddenly like them. Maybe cause I have flash backs to some horrible times I had with fellow teenagers in middle and high school and am so not willing to deal with their drama.

Since moving back from college I have been able to see and understand better not only how hard it is to be a parent but the cost of being a parent. I mean having one kid must be hard but then there are families that do it multiply times?! I had to babysit these two little girls one day from about 3 pm until about midnight. So we spent the day outside playing and by the time they went to bed at 8:30/9 I was exhausted. I had to take the entire next day just to recuperate. I realized that my mother did that as well. The mere thought of doing it as a single parent just gives me nightmares. I thought, I can’t imagine this day in and day out. They were also on their best behavior with me which I KNOW is not always the case. I mean are those amazing moments worth all the work. I hate to say it but from my vantage point it’s not. I respect anyone who decides  to have a family but I do no think it is for me.

So will this change? Maybe. Can I reserve the right to change my mind? Yes.  Am I completely satisfied with my decision as of now? Absolutely.