For a savagicious/sapiential/omniscient person, acing Humanities courses might come off as leisurely.
For me, however, it seems more demanding than a clingy girlfriend.

Don’t get me wrong, I absolutely love the courses I take, and study them too, but I believe it is my lack of a certain level of prudence that thresholds the secret to making Humanities courses easy.
I feel that after about a month of failing to be good in these courses, I have cracked the secret to success.

Wordism (noun: |wurdi-s(u)m| ): Wordism is the ismy ism that advocates the hypothesis of theories by the suffixation of ism to a common noun
(for example, Wordism).

Hands down, I know there’s no such thing as Wordism. But it’s a theory, right? Theories are meant to be …well, theorised.
Wrong!
Three Golden Rules:

  1. Theories have to be accepted by a large group in order to have them recognised.
  2. Point 1 is very important.
  3. The resistance faced when thinking against an already established theory can erode your soul away.

Where do you think feminism stood in the 19th century?
Fun fact, it didn’t.
Every time it tried to take a stand, it was beaten down by authoritative masculine hands.
And now there are theories in theories of the doctrine called Feminism.

Have an in-depth knowledge about certain doctrines to exploit Wordism, throw in a punch of your GRE-shaming vocabulary, write your heart out and voila!

Please tell me you didn’t fall for all this.
Because, for a savagicious/sapiential/omniscient person, acing Humanities courses might come off as leisurely.
For me, however, it seems more demanding than a clingy girlfriend.