Tips for College Freshmen (not mine)
As you begin your
college experience, I thought I’d leave you with the things that, in
retrospect, I think are important as you navigate the next four years. I hope
that some of them are helpful.
Here goes…
Here goes…
1.
Your friends will
change a lot over the next four years. Let them.
2.
Call someone you love
back home a few times a week, even if just for a few minutes.
3.
In college more than
ever before, songs will attach themselves to memories. Every month or two, make
a mix cd, mp3 folder, whatever - just make sure you keep copies of these songs.
Ten years out, they’ll be as effective as a journal in taking you back to your
favorite moments.
4.
Take naps in the
middle of the afternoon with reckless abandon.
5.
Adjust your schedule
around when you are most productive and creative. If
you’re nocturnal and do your best work late at night, embrace that. It may be
the only time in your life when you can.
6.
If you write your best
papers the night before they are due, don’t let people tell you that you
“should be more organized” or that you “should plan better.” Different things
work for different people. Personally, I worked best under pressure - so I
always procrastinated… and always kicked ass (which annoyed my friends to no
end). ;-) Use the freedom that comes with not having grades first semester to
experiment and see what works best for you.
7.
At least a few times
in your college career, do something fun and irresponsible when you should be
studying. The night before my freshman year psych final, my roommate somehow
scored front row seats to the Indigo Girls at a venue 2 hours away. I didn’t do
so well on the final, but I haven’t thought about psych since 1993. I’ve
thought about the experience of going to that show (with the guy who is now my
son’s godfather) at least once a month ever since.
8.
Become friends with
your favorite professors. Recognize that they can learn from you too - in fact,
that’s part of the reason they chose to be professors.
9.
Carve out an hour
every single day to be alone. (Sleeping doesn’t count.)
10.
Go on dates. Don’t
feel like every date has to turn into a relationship.
11.
Don’t date someone
your roommate has been in a relationship with.
12.
When your friends’
parents visit, include them. You’ll get free food, etc., and you’ll help them
to feel like they’re cool, hangin’ with the hip college kids.
13.
In the first month of
college, send a hand-written letter to someone who made college possible for
you and describe your adventures thus far. It will mean a lot to him/her now,
and it will mean a lot to you in ten years when he/she shows it to you.
14.
Embrace the
differences between you and your classmates. Always be asking yourself, “what
can I learn from this person?” More of your education will come from this than
from any classroom.
15.
All-nighters are
entirely overrated.
16.
For those of you who
have come to college in a long-distance relationship with someone from high
school: despite what many will tell you, it can work. The key is to not let your relationship interfere
with your college experience. If you don’t want to date anyone else, that’s
totally fine! What’s not fine, however, is missing out on a lot
of defining experiences because you’re on the phone with your
boyfriend/girlfriend for three hours every day.
17.
Working things out
between friends is best done in person, not over email. (IM does not count as
“in person.”) Often someone’s facial expressions will tell you more than
his/her words.
18.
Take risks.
19.
Don’t be afraid of (or
excited by) the co-ed bathrooms. The thrill is over in about 2 seconds.
20.
Wednesday is the
middle of the week; therefore on wednesday night the week is more than half
over. You should celebrate accordingly. (It makes thursday and friday a lot
more fun.)
21.
Welcome failure into
your lives. It’s how we grow. What matters is not that you failed, but that you
recovered.
22.
Take some classes that
have nothing to do with your major(s), purely for the fun of it.
23.
It’s important to
think about the future, but it’s more important to be present in the now. You
won’t get the most out of college if you think of it as a stepping stone.
24.
When you’re living on
a college campus with 400 things going on every second of every day, watching
TV is pretty much a waste of your time and a waste of your parents’ money. If
you’re going to watch, watch with friends so at least you can call it a “valuable
social experience.”
25.
Don’t be afraid to
fall in love. When it happens, don’t take it for granted. Celebrate it, but
don’t let it define your college experience.
26.
Much of the time you
once had for pleasure reading is going to disappear. Keep a list of the books
you would have read had you had the time, so that you can start reading them
when you graduate.
27.
Things that seem like
the end of the world really do become funny
with a little time and distance. Knowing this, forget the embarassment and skip
to the good part.
28.
Every once in awhile,
there will come an especially powerful moment when you can actually feel that
an experience has changed who you are. Embrace these, even if they are painful.
29.
No matter what your
political or religious beliefs, be open-minded. You’re going to be challenged
over the next four years in ways you can’t imagine, across all fronts. You
can’t learn if you’re closed off.
30.
If you need to get a
job, find something that you actually enjoy. Just because it’s work doesn’t
mean it has to suck.
31.
Don’t always lead.
It’s good to follow sometimes.
32.
Take a lot of
pictures. One of my major regrets in life is that I didn’t take more pictures
in college. My excuse was the cost of film and processing. Digital cameras are
cheap and you have plenty of hard drive space, so you have no excuse.
33.
Your health and safety
are more important than anything.
34.
Ask for help. Often.
35.
Half of you will be in
the bottom half of your class at any given moment. Way more than half of you
will be in the bottom half of your class at some point in the next four years.
Get used to it.
36.
In ten years very few
of you will look as good as you do right now, so secretly revel in how hot you
are before it’s too late.
37.
In the long run, where you go to college doesn’t matter as much as what you do
with the opportunities you’re given there. The MIT name on your resume won’t
mean much if that’s the only thing on your resume. As a student here,
you will have access to a variety of unique opportunities that no one else will
ever have - don’t waste them.
38.
On the flip side,
don’t try to do everything. Balance = well-being.
39.
Make perspective a
priority. If you’re too close to something to have good perspective, rely on
your friends to help you.
40.
Eat badly sometimes.
It’s the last time in your life when you can do this without feeling guilty
about it.
41.
Make a complete ass of
yourself at least once, preferably more. It builds character.
42.
Wash your sheets more
than once a year. Trust me on this one.
43.
If you are in a
relationship and none of your friends want to hang out with
you and your significant other, pay attention. They usually know better than
you do.
44.
Don’t be afraid of the
weird pizza topping combinations that your new friend from across the country
loves. Some of the truly awful ones actually taste pretty good. Expand your
horizons.
45.
Explore the campus
thoroughly. Don’t get caught.
46.
Life is too short to
stick with a course of study that you’re no longer excited about. Switch, even
if it complicates things.
47.
Tattoos are permanent.
Be very certain.
48.
Don’t make fun of
prefrosh. That was you like 2 hours ago.
49.
Enjoy every second of
the next four years. It is impossible to describe how quickly they pass.
This is the only time
in your lives when your only real responsibility is to learn. Try to
remember how lucky you are every day.
Be yourself. Create. Inspire, and be inspired. Grow. Laugh. Learn. Love.
Welcome to some of the best years of your lives.
Be yourself. Create. Inspire, and be inspired. Grow. Laugh. Learn. Love.
Welcome to some of the best years of your lives.
Comments
Post a Comment