A Heart to Heart about Freshman Year.
Entering college can be a traumatic experience to incoming freshmen. The entire fact that you have to fend for yourself is overwhelming. No matter how much you are looking forward to your new found independence, many times it is the case that when you actually get there, you feel that your hopes are unproductive, or that your room resembles a prison, and that your classes are pointless. So, for all the incoming freshmen, here are some survival-tips, which is compiled of my experiences as a freshman at Baylor University.
The first day you spend at college won't seem too hard. You"ll get to move all your belongings into a brand-new, run-down, tinny-tiny room, which not is much different than a refrigerator box. You"ll meet a few of your neighbors; and try to figure out which way to turn when you get off the elevator to get to your room. Not to hard, right? Well, at least not until your parents leave. Suddenly you realize that you are all by yourself. All alone, with a tiny room full of boxes, containing all of your possessions. As your eyes wander around the room, you can't help but notice the strange person whom you have to share the room with for the rest of the year. Now, don't panic, even though I did. The whole fact that you are on your own fending for yourself. Thinking in the back of your mind, I wish I packed extra toilet paper. Well don't worry. In a few hours you will have everything straighten out and would have moved onto much bigger issues.
When you start college, everyone will give you a huge list of things that you should and shouldn't do. By far the quintessential thing you must have at college would have to be quarters. I strongly emphasize for you to save up all the quarters you can get your hands on. From personal experience, the last thing you want to know is that you are out of clean clothes to wear, and there is not a change machine in sight.