Drawing Memes

Posts tagged with Drawing

The Great Triangle Conspiracy

The Great Triangle Conspiracy
Ever notice how triangles in real life look nothing like the ones in math worksheets? That second triangle looks like it was drawn by someone having a seizure while riding a mechanical bull! 😂 Teachers expect us to calculate the hypotenuse when we can barely see where the lines are supposed to meet. Next time your geometry teacher asks why you got the answer wrong, just blame it on their artistic skills!

The Benzene Identity Crisis

The Benzene Identity Crisis
Poor benzene. The molecular equivalent of being tagged in unflattering photos by thousands of undergrads every semester. That perfect hexagonal structure with its delightful pi bonds reduced to some misshapen polygon that looks like it was drawn during an earthquake. No wonder it appears so dejected! Chemistry professors worldwide have nightmares about the benzene rings they'll have to decipher on tomorrow's exams. It's not a circle with three lines inside. It's not a hexagon with random double bonds. It's a beautiful, symmetrical, aromatic masterpiece that deserves better than being butchered by students who spent more time memorizing the lyrics to "The Elements" song than learning to draw basic structures.

When Your Engineering Drawing Professor Is Old Fashioned...

When Your Engineering Drawing Professor Is Old Fashioned...
The eternal battle between tradition and technology! Engineering professors stubbornly clinging to compasses and triangles like they're sacred relics while students dream of CAD software. It's like forcing kids to use abacuses when calculators exist! The professor's one-liner defense is both hilarious and infuriating - "You do not learn engineering drawing on CAD." Translation: "Back in MY day, we drew perfect circles with our BARE HANDS and LIKED IT!" Meanwhile, industry professionals are designing rocket ships with software while students develop calluses from mechanical pencils. The academic equivalent of insisting everyone learn to ride horses before driving cars!

The Hexagon Superiority Complex

The Hexagon Superiority Complex
Drawing a perfect hexagon in organic chemistry is like finding the philosopher's stone! Those benzene rings are the bane of every O-chem student's existence - wobbly, lopsided, looking more like modern art than molecular structures. But that ONE time you draw a symmetrical hexagon? Instant transformation! You're not just a student anymore - you're a "kemist" with a capital K! The sheer validation from creating six equal sides and angles is enough to make anyone feel like they've mastered the secrets of carbon bonding. Meanwhile, your professor is watching your newfound confidence with mild amusement, knowing you'll be humbled again when resonance structures enter the chat.

Textbook Vs. Microscope: The Great Cellular Disappointment

Textbook Vs. Microscope: The Great Cellular Disappointment
The eternal struggle between textbook expectations and microscope reality. Teachers show us these gorgeous, colorful cell illustrations that look like they were designed by Pixar, then expect us to identify the same structures in what's essentially a yellow blob with texture issues. Then we draw what we actually saw - a circle with another circle inside it - and label it with whatever cellular components we memorized from chapter 4. The professor marks it "excellent observation skills" because they can't see anything in that yellow smudge either.

Did They Do The Calculations Right?

Did They Do The Calculations Right?
When the physics homework asks for "time" but you end up designing an entire locomotive propulsion system! This student took a simple inclined plane problem and transformed it into a masterpiece of engineering overkill. The beautiful hand-drawn truck with exhaust vectors is what happens when you've had way too much caffeine during finals week. The equations are technically correct, but this is like using a nuclear reactor to toast a sandwich. Props for the artistic talent though—that truck deserves to be framed alongside the solution!

According To General Relativity, I Am A Great Artist

According To General Relativity, I Am A Great Artist
This is what happens when physics and art collide! The meme brilliantly pokes fun at General Relativity's effect on our perception of space. That "perfect square" looks like a quadrilateral that got caught in a gravitational field! The joke hinges on the fact that in curved spacetime, what appears straight locally can be bent globally. Writing down the metric tensor (which describes this curvature mathematically) is indeed the challenging part - it's basically trying to explain why your "square" looks like it was drawn by a kindergartner after three juice boxes. Einstein would be proud... of your attempt, at least.

Drawing Hexagons Is A Must

Drawing Hexagons Is A Must
The progression of drawing a benzene ring is a universal organic chemistry experience! First, you start with a confident line, then struggle with angles, eventually form a hexagon, and finally... Joey gets it completely wrong with that pentagon abomination. Every chem student knows the sacred rule: benzene rings must be perfectly hexagonal with that satisfying alternating double bond notation. That last panel is triggering every organic chemistry professor on the planet right now.

Cellular Artistry: Expectations Vs. Reality

Cellular Artistry: Expectations Vs. Reality
Who needs fancy diagrams when you've got pure artistic genius? The top image shows a detailed, labeled cell diagram with all its complicated parts—nuclear pore complex, chromosomes, and other cellular wizardry. BUT WAIT! The stick figure cell drawing below? That's what biology students actually remember after cramming all night! It's the difference between what professors expect vs. what your brain decides to keep. That crude masterpiece is what appears on your exam paper when you confidently wrote "I totally understand cells" in your notes. Science teachers everywhere are crying into their microscopes right now!

Me Trying To Draw Benzene Ring Or Anything Else In Organic Chemistry

Me Trying To Draw Benzene Ring Or Anything Else In Organic Chemistry
Drawing a perfect hexagon with delocalized π electrons? Mission impossible! That wonky benzene attempt is every chem student's reality. The beautiful C 6 H 6 structure with its alternating double bonds that we're supposed to sketch elegantly on exams? Yeah right. My benzene rings look like they were drawn during an earthquake after 3 energy drinks. But hey, resonance structures don't judge—they just resonate with our artistic failures. Chemistry professors somehow expect us to channel Leonardo da Vinci when all we have is the hand-eye coordination of a caffeinated squirrel.