Sadie Foster
Bio
Stories (3/0)
The hobbies I picked up during quarantine
Edwin Hooper's above photo has prompted a number of feelings for me as of late; specifically, what does "temporarily" really mean? When the world shut down in March of 2020, I left New York City to try and escape the chaos. I expected to be gone for a few weeks... at most a few months. When reality set in, I realized it had been a whole 14 months. I've heard of some people using their time in quarantine productively by perfecting bread baking or even learning a new language. I, however, am not one of those people. I've found bread baking is best left to early risers (or the french), and unless I'm challenged to learn Esperanto, the elementary Spanish I know has been all I need. "But what did get you through Quarantine, Sandra?" you might ask. Let me tell you?
By Sadie Foster3 years ago in Lifehack
Learning How to Code Changed My Life
As an art history major, taking a computer science course was the last thing on my mind. I didn't even know what coding really was, let alone how to do it. After a few friends convinced me to take an introductory computer science course, I fell in love with it. I ended up pursuing a minor in CS, which changed my life for the better. Here's how:
By Sadie Foster4 years ago in 01
- Top Story - March 2020
Becoming A NARPTop Story - March 2020
Background The only thing a college athlete can do that is worse than losing is becoming a NARP. For those of you who don't know, NARP is an acronym for Non-Athletic Regular Person, or people who are not members of athletic teams. In college, even at a D3 school like mine, being on a sports team is a major status booster...especially if you're on a varsity team. You have instant friends, a support system, and get invited to all of the parties. So what would drive someone to give all of that up?
By Sadie Foster4 years ago in Unbalanced