Compare-aholic treks down the road to recovery

Compare-aholic treks down the road to recovery

Jeanene Harlick

Comparisons. We all fall prey to them. We all eye our peer’s
success and compare it to our own. We try to sneak a peek at the
grade of the person sitting next to us, and a lower grade on their
part instantly fills us with feelings of superiority and
accomplishment. Or we glance at another person’s body and sigh as
we wish it were ours. Americans today are compare-aholics, and this
deadly disease is crying out for remedy.

Hi. I’m Jeanene Harlick, and I’m a compare-aholic.

I’ve known it for some time, yet I am finding recovery a
difficult path. My condition is made even worse by the fact that I
am a twin. People always express envy when I tell them I am a twin:
"Oh, isn’t that great?! I’ve always wanted to be a twin!"

But in reality being a twin is very trying. Although I love my
sister with all my heart, being a twin has only served to intensify
in me this innate tendency we all have to compare.

When I was in high school, Diana and I ran track for our school.
When we first started I was faster than she, but I suffered an
injury which forced me to wear a cast for six weeks. When I came
back, she was far ahead of me in shape and much faster.

That year we both made it to the California Interscholastic
Federation section meet, I in the one-mile and she in the two-mile.
I ran the one-mile early that evening, and did not run fast enough
to qualify for the California State Meet ­ the meet of all
meets for California track runners. To reach it was to reach the
highest level of running in the state.

My sister ran the two-mile in the dark of night later that
evening. The top three finishers of her race went on to the State
Meet. I stood alone as the race started, away from the bleachers
full of screaming family members and friends. Hundreds gathered to
watch this qualifying race. I knew Diana had a slight chance at
qualifying for State, but I didn’t think she would, and secretly I
hoped she wouldn’t.

As Diana came into the last two laps of her race, I stared in
disbelief as she passed the girl in front of her and moved into
third. The loudspeaker blared forth this interesting turn of
events. I prayed she would fall back into fourth.

She held her place, and crossed the finish line third, to
qualify for the State Meet. I started to cry. It was one of the
happiest moments of my twin sister’s life, but the jealousy inside
of me poured forth a torrent of tears I could not restrain.

I felt like an endless, black pit of worthlessness. But at the
same time I was as small as the tiniest piece of matter, always
overlooked and impossible to see. All I could think about was the
attention my sister was going to receive. Everyone would admire and
respect her, and I would stand unseen in the shadows.

And this turned out to be true. In the ensuing weeks, Diana was
bombarded with accolades and attention for her success on the
track. It was announced to the entire school over the intercom. It
was reported at church. The local newspaper did a feature article
on her in the sports section.

I was a ghost. I felt like no one would have noticed if I ceased
to exist. Diana was the athletic twin, the good twin, the smart
twin, the pretty twin. She was the one everyone liked. She had all
the friends, and I had nothing to make people like and respect me
as much as they did Diana.

In my mind, my entire identity was based on how I compared with
Diana. I tried to be like her in any way I could. I tried to be as
nice as she was. I trained harder. I tried to dress like her. I
enrolled in all the AP classes so I could be as smart as she
was.

All through high school I constantly compared every aspect of
myself to her. And I always came out with a lower mark. I was never
good enough. This kind of thinking led to a horribly distorted
self-image. I had no self-esteem whatsoever.

So I tried to make up for my perceived defects by starving
myself. Here was an area in which I could be the best. I withdrew
into myself and entered a world of restricted calories, restricted
acquaintances and restricted feelings. Now people would notice me
and respect me because I was so thin. They would envy the
self-control I had over food.

And people did notice and comment on how thin I was. But I
didn’t realize they were commenting out of concern, not envy.
Anorexia gave me something I could be proud of, something I could
be better at than my twin sister. It gave me a false sense of
security and made me think I was happy. In reality, however, I was
miserable.

Although this state of comparison may not be as heightened in
others as it was in me, I feel we all suffer from comparison to
some degree ­ especially those of us who are women. We compare
our bodies, our grades, our relationships, our clothes and our
talents, among other things.

Comparison must stop. It is a blight to our existence which
breeds unnecessary unhappiness. When we compare ourselves, we
inevitably end up feeling inferior and less important. We think we
aren’t good enough, that we don’t measure up. And if we do from
time to time manage to feel superior to others through our
comparisons, it is a very superficial superiority, one which
vacillates with our degree of success in life.

I have a great fear of being just "average." I want to be
unique, noticed and respected and I think many women share this
fear. We don’t want to just blend in, so we try to be who we
aren’t. We try to be what we think society admires.

But it is time we learn to accept ourselves for who we are. We
are all different, we all have different talents and bodies. If
everyone were the same, this world would be a very boring place
indeed. We all have different areas in which we excel and we should
be content with our talents. We have to stop judging ourselves on
the basis of comparisons.

When Diana and I split up to attend different colleges, I was
finally able to create a separate identity apart from her. I no
longer use her as a gauge to measure my self-worth. I am now
content with my own talents.

And I am closer than ever to Diana. I am no longer jealous of
her every success ­ I’m happy for her. I can be myself with
her, and I can tell her anything. I love her more than I ever
have.

Of course, I still struggle with comparing myself to her and to
my friends. But I’m a lot better than I used to be, and the number
of comparisons is slowly dwindling.

Comparisons are odious. They are a social bacteria eating away
at the self-esteem of millions of women today. But I believe if we
can stop comparing, we will all be a lot happier, more
self-assured, and more content with who we are.

We will have better friendships, unmarred by jealousy and envy.
We will applaud our friends and we will be happy for them when they
succeed. Ridding ourselves of comparisons is so simple it’s hard,
but certainly achievable. Try it, like I did, and see how much
better you feel.

Jeanene Harlick is a junior majoring in English.

Cross country faces new heights in Provo

Cross country faces new heights in Provo

Bruin runners to

race top-ranked

schools at BYU

By Mark Singerton

The UCLA cross country teams have been tested by highly touted
opponents all season. This Saturday, their biggest challenge may be
Mother Nature.

Provo, Utah, the site of the Brigham Young Invitational, is
4,800 feet above sea level, and for many of the Bruins, it will be
the first time they have run at such heights.

The men will compete with nine other teams, many of which are
nationally ranked, including No. 13 Montana State, No. 20 Idaho
State, and No. 15 BYU.

UCLA continues to be plagued by injuries. Senior Creighton
Harris and sophomore Keith Grossman will probably be sidelined for
the remainder of the season.

But there is one bright spot for UCLA. Junior Dan Niednagel is
back from a foot ailment, and he, along with senior Brian Gastelum,
will likely lead the Bruins. Both are coming off good finishes at
the Stanford Invite, Oct. 1.

Despite the injuries, UCLA could be a threat.

"UCLA might be our biggest competition," BYU head coach Sherald
James said. "They beat us two weeks ago."

* * *

There is no doubt that the No. 12 Bruin women are the favorite
in their meet. UCLA will sport the fastest squad on the 5000-meter
course, and will hope to take advantage of the flat surface.

"It (the surface) should help our chances," UCLA coach Eric
Peterson said. "People like Jeanene Harlick can utilize their
strength on these type of courses. But everyone is capable of a
strong race."

The toughest challenger for UCLA will be the host Cougars, who
are ranked 13th going into the event.

Volley gets two easy ones

Volley gets two easy ones

No. 4 Bruins team plays last place Oregon at Wooden Center
tonight

By Eric Branch

Daily Bruin Staff

After spending their last two matches battling the bourgeois of
the Pacific-10, the fourth-ranked UCLA women’s volleyball team will
spend the weekend entertaining the proletariat of the
conference.

Coming off a four-game defeat to top-ranked Stanford last
Saturday in Palo Alto and a marathon, two-and-a-half-hour,
five-game victory over 15th-ranked USC on Wednesday, the Bruins can
apparently breath slightly easier as Oregon (6-10 overall, 0-7 in
Pac-10) and Oregon State (11-6, 2-5) crawl into Westwood.

While the Ducks and Beavers combined 1-36 career record against
UCLA (16-2, 6-1) is less than awe inspiring, head coach Andy
Banachowski is aware of the potential problems in playing the
conference featherweights.

"Suffering a letdown is something we have to be worried about,"
Banachowski said. "But right now we have put ourselves in good
position in the Pac-10 race, which is not something we want to
jeopardize."

While a letdown is cause for concern, the Bruins might have to
be catatonic on Friday night to let the Ducks spoil a run at the
conference championship. Mired in last place, Oregon enters the
Wooden Center on the heels of a nine-game losing streak, with
home-court sweeps at the hands of ninth-place California and Cal
State Northridge included in the skid.

On the other hand, Oregon State, UCLA’s opponent Saturday night,
might be the best eighth-place team in the country. Each of the six
opponents to defeat the Beavers have been ranked in the top 25 at
one point during the season. Although the Bruins figure to continue
the losing streak, OSU will feature a slew of big guns.

Among OSU’s five returning starters is All-Pac-10 senior outside
hitter Shelly Smith. Smith led the Pac-10 in kills and kills per
game last season. Her 564 season total set a new school record.

"Shelly has always been a big gun on the outside," Banachowski
said. "She has been the steadiest player on their team for
years."

While Smith has been a consistent pinnacle of excellence in
Corvalis, it is 6-foot-3-inch sophomore middle blocker Staci Hintze
who leads the Beavers in kills this year with 3.4 per game. Her
.365 hitting percentage places her third in the Pac-10. Alongside
senior middle blocker Tanya Lifa, who ranks third in the conference
with 1.55 blocks per game, the Beavers possess a formidable pair of
blockers in the middle.

UCSB marks end for water polo

UCSB marks end for water polo

No. 4 Bruins hope

to end three-game

slide with Gauchos

By Esther Hui

Daily Bruin Senior Staff

The end is in sight for the fourth-ranked UCLA men’s water polo
team. Not the end of the season, but the end of four weeks and nine
straight matches played on the road.

The Bruins (10-7 overall, 1-3 in the Mountain Pacific Sports
Federation) will meet No. 8 UC Santa Barbara today in their last
road match before returning to Westwood to begin a three-game
homestand.

But with a losing record in the conference, the Bruins are far
from looking past today’s match. Led by driver Doug Wierenga, the
Gauchos have twice beaten No. 5 Pacific, a team UCLA lost to 6-5
last Sunday.

"The way this season is going, anyone can beat anyone," UCSB
head coach Joe Brian said. "I don’t think scores between us and UOP
and UCLA and UOP are any indication of what’s going to happen.

"That was a tough weekend for UCLA (three losses to three ranked
teams on the road), and I’d imagine they will be much more
rested."

Foremost on the minds of the Bruins is the immediate need to end
their three-game losing streak. A loss today would mean possible
elimination from the NCAA tournament.

Added adversity will come from the size of the expected Gaucho
crowd and from a unique feature to UCSB’s pool.

UCSB is one of the few schools to use a pool with a shallow end,
an attribute which can be used to a team’s advantage only if
players are used to playing on it.

"You shouldn’t be touching," Baker said of the 5 1/2-foot depth
at the shallow end of the pool. "But the goalie can use it to his
advantage. If you’re visiting it takes a bit of an adjustment. We
have a better team. If we play well we’ll win, but our biggest
obstacle is adversity."

Adding to the Bruins’ strength is the fact that goalkeeper Matt
Swanson has had a week of full conditioning for the first time
since suffering a groin injury three weeks ago.

"I’ve always been impressed with UCLA," Brian said. "I’ve
noticed that they are a great group of guys that support each other
and work together."

‘Eaters, Matadors up next for soccer

‘Eaters, Matadors up next for soccer

First place on line for No. 7 UCLA in MPSF matches

By Tim Costner

Daily Bruin Senior Staff

After an inauspicious 0-1 start in conference play, the UCLA
men’s soccer team will have a shot to move into first place this
weekend with victories over UC Santa Barbara and Cal State
Northridge.

The Bruins (10-1 overall, 2-1 in league) are currently second in
the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation behind the Gauchos (7-4,
2-0), but UCLA could take the lead with a win against UCSB tonight
at Spaulding Field.

"I think they’re a good team," UCLA head coach Sigi Schmid said
of the Gauchos. "They’re in first place which means that if we win,
we have a share of first and if we lose, we’re definitely out of
first. We haven’t really gotten to play at home this season and we
haven’t played on campus yet."

UCSB features two of the conference’s leading scorers ­
Ralph Robertson and Matt Arya ­ who are both among the MPSF’s
top 10.

Robertson is tied for the assist lead (with eight) and ­
with six goals ­ has 20 points overall. Arya is second in the
conference with 25 total points on 10 goals and five assists.

"Arya’s a good player," Schmid said. "He transferred out of
here, went to Santa Clara, went to Foothill and now he’s at Santa
Barbara to play for his brother. He’s very skillful, very talented
and has a good shot on goal. He’s the kind of player you sometimes
forget about, but who has the skills to finish and make you pay the
price."

* * *

In Sunday’s game against CSUN (6-5, 0-2), the Bruins are unsure
what type of team they will see. They may face a team that is
fighting to stay afloat in the conference or they may face a team
that will have nothing but pride to gain from beating UCLA.

It all depends on how they fare on Friday against UC Irvine.

"We beat them twice last year, so I’m sure they want to get a
piece of us," Schmid said. "They’re 0-2 in league, so depending on
how they do against Irvine, they come in with no pressure at all if
they’re 0-3 or they come into our game 1-2 and figuring this is
their last chance to get back into the race."

The Matadors lost key striker Armando Valdivia to graduation
last season, but have striker Keith Rosenberg to fill in that role
this season. Rosenberg is tied for ninth in scoring in the MPSF
with 17 points on seven goals and three assists.

* * *

Friday’s game is at 7:30 p.m. at Spaulding Field, while Sunday’s
match is at 2 p.m. on North Field. Admission to both games is
free.

Beavers’ wishbone poses problems for UCLA

Beavers’ wishbone poses problems for UCLA

Oregon State’s offense exploits

weaknesses in Bruins’ defense

By Scott Yamaguchi

Daily Bruin Senior Staff

It may be the only thing, but history will certainly be on the
side of the UCLA football team when it enters Saturday’s 7 p.m.
matchup with Oregon State at the Rose Bowl.

The Bruins (2-4 overall, 0-3 in the Pacific 10) hold a 32-10-4
advantage in the series with OSU, and have won 16 of the last 18
games between the two schools. In fact, the Beavers have never won
a game in the Rose Bowl, and their last road win over UCLA came
more than 20 years ago.

History, however, has done little to help UCLA out of its
four-game losing streak, and if the Bruins are to halt the skid
this week, it will take more than mystique.

Entering the game, OSU leads the Pac-10 in rushing offense with
278.4 yards per game. At the same time, however, the Beavers rank
seventh in total offense, eighth in scoring offense, and last in
passing offense. The discrepancy is no doubt a result of OSU’s
wishbone formation ­ which calls for three tailbacks in the
offense ­ and was a pre-season concern of Beaver head coach
Jerry Pettibone after last year’s squad produced similar
numbers.

"There’s one thing we worked on extremely hard this last spring,
and that’s to be able to be effective at throwing the ball more
often," Pettibone said in September. "Not throwing it just to be
throwing it, but to be good enough to throw it at the right times
in the game so that it can be effective for us. That’s definitely a
part of our offense that we’re trying to develop."

Pettibone might not have held true to his words ­ Oregon
State has attempted only 39 passes through five games this season.
Nevertheless, a solid running game could prove troublesome for a
UCLA squad that ranks ninth in the Pac-10 in rushing defense.

The Bruins’ task lies in finding a way to stop OSU’s combination
of Don Shanklin and J.J. Young. Shanklin, a junior quarterback, has
run the ball 42 times for 290 yards and two touchdowns in four
games. He ranks third in the Pac-10 in passing efficiency with a
rating of 138.70, although he has completed only 13 passes. Young,
a senior halfback, has rushed 57 times for 353 yards and four
touchdowns.

"The 1994 season will be my 29th in coaching and I have had the
opportunity to see some of the best running backs that have played
college football in 25 years ­ guys that have won the Heisman
Trophy and were legitimate first-team All-Americans," Pettibone
said. "I think J.J. Young is in that category. He has outstanding
speed, he has the explosiveness to be able to hit the home run
every time he touches the football, and he is an outstanding
blocker."

Last year in Corvalis, the Beavers ­ with help from Young
­ rolled up 338 yards on the ground against the Bruins, but
lost 20-17 when Bjorn Merten kicked two fourth-quarter field goals.
UCLA, which had lost its first two games of the season, improved to
5-2 with the win.

Ironically enough, this year’s game against the Beavers falls in
the same week of UCLA’s schedule as it did last year, but the
Bruins’ season is going in exactly the opposite direction.

After season-opening victories over Tennessee and Southern
Methodist, UCLA has dropped games to Nebraska, Washington State,
Washington and California. The Beavers are mired in a slump as
well, having lost consecutive games to Fresno State, Arizona and
Southern Cal.

UCLA head coach Terry Donahue has declared the Oregon State game
the beginning of a new season, but such an easy escape does not
exist. After all, the Bruins will likely be without the services of
J.J. Stokes for the fifth week in a row, and the loser of the game
will stand alone at the bottom of the conference standings.

Tiverton House provides patient, family comforts

Tiverton House provides patient, family comforts

Local guest house shelters woman as she awaits life-saving
transplant

By Gil Hopenstand

Daily Bruin Senior Staff

Becky Hammond turns and stares out the window whenever a
helicopter whisks by, wondering if it carries the lung donor for
her mother, Martha Yates. UCLA doctors will alert Yates of a donor
through a beeper clipped to her purse, after which she and Hammond
must reach the hospital within two hours.

"We watch every helicopter that goes by because the next one is
going to be for her," Hammond said in her New England accent.

Until the critical call, the duo spend most of their time in the
shadow of the Medical Center, at the Tiverton Guest House ­
UCLA’s low-cost hotel designed to accommodate medical center
patients and their families. The house is located across the street
from the center at the corner of Tiverton and Le Conte Avenues.

The guest house grew out of the need for family members of
patients to stay close to UCLA’s hospital, said Kathryn Heymann,
its general manager. Family members ­ who used to sleep in
waiting rooms, on the floor or in their cars ­ can now sleep
at Tiverton.

"The idea is that if people are ill, they do better with people
they love around them. We make it possible," she said.

Yates came with her daughter to UCLA from Maine to combat her
emphysema with a life-saving lung transplant. Hammond said that she
would have preferred to have the operation done in Massachusetts,
closer to their family and their New England home. But the hospital
there stops admitting patients after age 55, and Yates is 62.

Surrounded by plush sofas, coffee table books and fresh flowers,
Yates and Hammond described their lives during the past ten
years.

"(My mother) has asthma, she gets pneumonia a lot and bronchitis
a lot. When she first started off, she was perfectly healthy one
day and just became sick with pneumonia," Hammond said, looking
down at her restless hands.

"We just thought she’d get better. As the time progressed, she
wasn’t getting better. She was getting worse. Then she had to go on
oxygen," Hammond continued.

Emphysema is a repertory disease in which tiny air sacs in the
lungs ­ called alveoli ­ become damaged from pollutants,
especially cigarette smoke. Yates’ emphysema was brought on by
years of lung damage. Her father, a painter, kept lead-based paints
in their home which emitted toxic fumes. She was also a smoker.

Though still smiling, Yates is now confined to a wheelchair and
must be continuously supplied with oxygen. She quickly becomes
breathless, even from talking. She is also prescribed several
medications that she said do not help.

Prior to her illness she was an active woman with many friends,
Hammond described. Now she said her mother’s life has "come to a
halt."

"(Her) life is very limited," she said. "Her quality of life is
very poor. Even with simple things like bathing, she needs someone
to do that. Sometimes she needs someone to dress her and feed her.
She wouldn’t be able to go on walks. Its hard for her to get in and
out of cars at this point."

Yates’ doctors told her that without the operation, she would
have between 12 to 18 months to live.

"This is the last hope, the last thing we can do to save her,"
Hammond acknowledged.

Los Angeles is a far cry from the Yates’ hometown of Mechanic
Falls, Maine ­ a town of 2,000 residents.

"I don’t lock my doors at night," Yates said proudly. "(Until
now), I’ve never been out of my town. I’ve never even been on a
plane. I was scared because all the killings and crime (in Los
Angeles)."

Hammond, a second-grade school teacher, lives in a neighboring
Maine town. She, too, never ventured outside the area and was
admittedly apprehensive about the "big city."

However, being at Tiverton helped make her comfortable.

"I feel safe in this area," Hammond said. "If we stayed
somewhere else, I wouldn’t feel safe and we probably wouldn’t go
out. I don’t trust people. I feel so…vulnerable."

The 100-room complex, which opened just one year ago, features
an exercise room, children’s play room and coin-operated laundry.
There is daily maid service and rooms come equipped with cable
television and a small refrigerator.

Tiverton’s appeal to its guests is also financial. Room rates
average at about $65 per night, compared to $185 per night at the
Westwood Marquis hotel located just one block away. The amenities
may differ but Hammond said she is very pleased with the Tiverton
hotel and staff.

"We had other offers and people have tried to talk us into
staying at other hotels and motels in the area. We took a walk and
looked at them and always came back to this one. We felt very good
here," she said.

"We’ve made friends with a lot of other people here that are
sick," she continued. "Its good to be in a place with people that
you can relate to and talk to. They are all here for a similar
reason."

While she anxiously awaits the sound of her beeper, Yates
cherishes every piece of mail she receives from her family and
talks to them. She said she is not afraid of the long-awaited
operation and is eager to return to her life in Maine.

"I got the best doctor," she said confidently. "I’m not scared
of the process. I’d be glad to get it over with."

Doctors estimate that after the operation and the initial
hospitalization, Yates will need to remain in Los Angeles for
another two months.

Aside from her respiratory problems, Yates said that she is in
good physical health.

Regardless of their sobering mission in Los Angeles, the pair
have managed to see some of the area’s highlights.

"We went to O.J.’s house ­ we had to do that. We went to
Nicole’s condo. Those are things you have to do. We haven’t been to
the court yet," Hammond said.

They also toured downtown L.A. and Beverly Hills and saw Ronald
Reagan’s house.

"When she gets better, we’ll go to the ocean."