I sit next to Amaris Wade and Lauren Stigers, but Lauren is situated in a manner that makes me feel somewhat sketch calling her my neighbor. She is my neighbor, of sorts, but I really think our orientations (sort of perpendicular) just really throw off the neighbor dynamic. Sorry, Lauren.
I could probably tell you a good deal about Amaris Wade, but you could just ask her for that. Instead, I think I will predict Amaris' life.
Amaris will, like many other people and unlike many others, go to college. She will major in something or another and have friends and be involved but the true peak of her life will not be in college.
After college, Amaris will develop a fierce interest in complex rhetorical mechanisms. She will be enchanted by the evolution of discourse and the forward march of the English language. Her deep, immovable interest in this area will last approximately three months, and then she will shift rather dramatically.
Amaris will cycle through fascinating and varied professions-- from investment banking to pearl diving-- until finally settling on what will become a lifelong passion. Despite her current (as far as I know) lack of interest in this topic, Amaris Wade will become the world's foremost geologist.
From this age (probably around 26) until her late retirement at 83, Amaris will maintain a vivid interest in the geology of the earth. She will revive the discipline, demonstrating the increasing importance of geology as the earth continues to be subjected to human changes.
She will rock.
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