Sub-2 weeks to go
until I’m on an airplane across the ocean! It’s probably time to cool it on the episodes
of Lost I’ve been watching with my roommate, not to mention that these are
keeping me from my old Spanish notes that I’m sure would make me feel much more
comfortable if I’d been reviewing them.
And it’s definitely too early for my style of packing.
It’s been kind of a
crazy summer in, unfortunately for you all, an inexplicable way. Roaming the steam tunnels under Ohio State,
belting out my favorite boy band songs—as a weekly regular, might I add—at Karaoke
Night, scaling rooftops, throwing myself around Columbus’s trampoline park, racing
from the tips of roller coasters, making a first attempt at water skiing… these
are just words for the blur the summer has been. I’m hoping to conclude it with skydiving;
it’s not enough just to write in my last post about my experience from freshman
year!
If any of that says
anything about my mindset this summer, here’s more: one of my best friends from
Running Club was telling me about a study one of his psychology classes was
looking at, about decision-making in different age groups. The groups of people in the study who were
the most spontaneous and least forward-thinking? I could have guessed college students, or
even senior college students since they/we are notorious risk-takers. But
the answer is more specific—those students who were about to leave the country
to study abroad.
“That sounds exactly
right” is what my response to him was. Maybe
I’m an adrenaline junkie after all. Or
maybe just a temporary one. As this
friend put it, I’m “essentially about to ditch all my friends back home”, so it
does make sense that I’d need to prove I can have my own personal fun.
Yesterday I got my
final “pre-departure checklist” from my program reminding me to be patient and
flexible as I delve into a new culture, as well as careful and prepared as I
groom second-language Spanish skills that have been dormant for several
months. Maybe that’s something else to
explain why students about to embark on a study abroad adventure are incredibly
impulsive/borderline reckless. I’ve been
mentally preparing for this patience, open-mindedness and caution since I
submitted my study abroad application. But as I rounded the
corner before the final stretch at the beginning of the summer, my sprint to
the finish line—or more appropriately, the start line—became my last run in
comfortable shoes. “Remember that you
are the visitor and need to adapt to the local rhythm and customs, not vice
versa.”
So I had a whole
summer to do what I wanted when I wanted to do it; in two weeks I hope I’m
ready to conform to someone else’s values.
Nonetheless, the
accuracy of this psychology finding does not credit the other people who were
involved in making this summer the most fun of my college career. Despite the fact that yes, I can survive on
my own in a spontaneous world and yes, even after four months without my
friends and family they will all still be here when I return, as I will be for
them… despite all that, I owe a shout-out (and perhaps an apology since they’ve
had to put up with my locura this summer) to all those I’ll miss
more than anything these next four months.
Whether it’s “just four months” with a dismissing wave of the hand or “a
whole four months” exasperated emphasis on the whole, I’ll see you when I get
back.
Hi Kate... yes- people are reading this! I'm so excited for you and the adventures that lie ahead, though it sounds like you've had some great ones this summer without even leaving the country!
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