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I'm most definitely not running on no sleep and there definitely isn't a strawberry stain
on this shirt. Hi people, it's Elly here! So I am back at college. That means new teachers,
new classes, yadda yadda yadda. For my English class my professor gave us this questionnaire
to answer. She just explained that she wanted to know a little more about us and how we
think. I didn't think anything of it, so I just took it home and I wanted to do it that
night. So when I actually got around to doing this questionnaire, it set me into this huge
existential crisis. It was The Proust Questionnaire. If you don't know what the Proust Questionnaire
is, it's pretty much this personality questionnaire where it asks you really deep questions and
you really have to think about it. And you might be asking yourself how this questionnaire
could give me an existential crisis, because questionnaires are supposed to be easy and
light. Not this one! For example, the first question on the questionnaire was, "What is
your idea of perfect happiness?" ....ummmm? As the questionnaire goes along you just keep
getting deeper and deeper like: "What's your greatest fear?" "What's your current state
of mind?" "When and where are you happiest?" "How would you like to die?" It's just this
list of 35 really insane questions that I wasn't expecting to have to answer. These
are the kind of questions that you don't think about. So when I was just laying on my bed,
just getting ready to answer this quick questionnaire, I wasn't ready! I felt like if I knew what
this questionnaire was ahead of time I would have prepared myself, but I just went head
first and I was so deep. I don't even know why I found this questionnaire so hard. It
really made me think about my life and the importance I had to it. And what made me happy,
/ˈkwesCH(ə)n/
sentence worded or expressed so as to elicit information. Issues or problems you are dealing with. To have or express concerns or uncertainty.
/ˈkərənt/
belonging to present. Movement of water in a river, or air in the sky.
/səˈpōzd/
generally assumed or believed to be case, but not necessarily. To imagine or guess what might happen.