Sunday, August 19, 2012

One year ago; Freshmen year.


One year ago my room was in boxes and I was headed for Utah State. I definitely did not feel ready to leave home, but I did it anyways. Pretty much as soon as I settled in at USU I realized that was not where I needed to be.

It was wrong. It felt wrong. When I was walking on the beautiful campus from class to class, I didn’t feel like I belonged there.

Every single Friday (sometimes Thursday, I would ditch my Friday class, naughty I know) I would drive home to see family and friends. And ever single Sunday night I would drive back to Logan bawling my eyes out to my Mom.

It was hard. So hard. It felt so unnatural. 

Once I started spring semester at the U, I felt like I was home again. I felt like I belonged there.

At the same time, I felt like I did things so backwards. I felt like I missed so much of what my friends were doing because I was at USU for fall semester. I didn’t have the kind of friends I wanted and I felt a little disconnected.

To sum up my freshmen year, I would say it was a learning experience. It was hard, but I don’t regret any of the choices I made.

Now, for all of you incoming freshmen I have a few pointers/ some advice

1.        If you’re going away from home, BYU, USU, SUU, or Dixie, stay there for weekends:
That was something I didn’t do, and I know I would have had a much better experience if I had stayed there during weekends. You make more friends, you have a YSA ward that you’re involved in, and you are part of the community. It may seem hard but try to stay, because it will make a difference.

2.      Always follow your heart; not your emotions
When choosing to go to USU I didn’t follow my heart, I followed my friends choices and emotions. Ya know the feeling you get when you know you are where you’re supposed to be? Look for that, because that is what you need.

3.       Make decisions for YOURSELF, not for family or friends:
Part of the reason I went to USU is because my family didn’t want me to, and because my best friend was going to BYU and I wanted to have a similar experience.  Always to be true to who you are and what you want.

4.       Make new friends, but keep the old:
I know this sounds dumb… I am all for making new friends. But my freshmen year I lost one of my very best friends. She went to BYU and made tons of new friends, and pretty much forgot about our friendship. Even when you make new friends (which you will!) remember to spend time on old one.

5.       Things are going to change:
Be ready for change, because it happens.  This year will be full of it. Soak it up and stay positive because things do get better.

6.      Be open to all sorts of people:
In high school we all had our little groups, and in college it still stays that way a little bit. But being open to everyone will benefit you so much! I promise.

7.       If you’re LDS, go to church:
It doesn’t matter if go to a YSA ward or your home ward. Just go. This year is the easiest year to stop going, and if you stop going you will loose your testimony, and if you loose your testimony it makes things 10x harder. Just go.

8.      Spoil yourself:
I know you’re a poor college student. But… when you get married and have kids (if you plan on doing that in the future) you can’t spoil yourself as much. Get new clothes, jewelry; anything that makes you happy, because you’re young and you can do that right now. Make spending money available.

9.      Freshmen 15:
Is a myth (for me anyways), I didn’t gain ANY weight! And I lived away from home, ate microwave mac and cheese, top ramen, and nasty cafeteria food for 6 months and didn’t gain a pound. But I did get sick, really sick from not eating right. My advice is to just eat right, whether you gain weight or get sick from it, it’s not worth it.

10.                                   Have fun:
You only have this time once. “All you need is 20 seconds of insane courage. Just 20 seconds of embarrassing bravery” Be brave, have fun, make new friends, laugh a lot, don’t be scared, don’t let people make you nervous they are just people, let your heart lead you, and don’t have an regrets.

If I had known some of these things my freshmen year things would have been different. I definitely did not have the best year, but it was a learning experience and I’m grateful I had it then rather than later.

I hope something I said helped someone.
Just be yourself and find yourself
It’ll be worth it.

xoxo