If Only I’d Known
So now that I’ve been home for a few days and have had sometime to reflect on my incredible first year at Vanderbilt, I have figured out 6 major lessons I wish someone had told me this time last year. And then again in August. And probably reminded me throughout the year too.
- You will make friends. Pretty easily. I came to Vanderbilt knowing essentially no one here. I had this admittedly insane notion that everyone else was coming in with their high school best friends and somehow I would inevitably be the only one with no high school friends there. Wrong. From my experience, everyone shows up in August ready and excited to meet new people and make new friends. Seriously.
- Academics matter and do require a lot of time and effort, but you should not be hesitant to branch out and get involved in other things. Join some clubs, take some breaks. I was pretty sure that my classes and the work they’d require would engulf my entire life and leave me with almost no free time. That is not the case. There is definitely plenty of free time for other things, especially if you can prioritize and schedule your days well. Don’t try to commit to 10 clubs and activities or whatever, but find a few you care about and stick with them. You’ll meet so many great people in the process and hopefully find some lasting activities to love.
- You are not inferior to everyone around you. It’s so easy to be intimidated by the incredible students that surround you. Yea, they’re super cool and accomplished, and they got into Vanderbilt. But so did you. Just because you aren’t the captain of two sports and head of three clubs at the end of the first semester like you might have been in high school does not mean you aren’t still talented, bright and capable. There’s that whole cliché about being a big fish in a small pond and then being a small fish in a big pond, but, in reality, you’re still the same sized, accomplished, awesome fish regardless of the pond. Ok, maybe I stretched that metaphor a little far, but seriously the point is: keep your perspective and don’t be too hard on yourself.