I had no idea what was in store for us on the journey ahead. But I knew that I loved you with every part of my being. The journey isn't over and neither is yours and my heart is so full of love and pride I think it may burst. I will write more about this later. But for right now I want to share sweet Elsie's reflections.
NOTE: PHOTOS ARE FROM HER FRESHMAN MOVE IN DAY.
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College has ended almost as quickly as it started. I am left
to ask the simple question, “where to now”? The transition from the education
system that I have spent the past 18 years in to the real world is daunting to
say the least. You have so many ideas in your head, plans that you were so
certain would come to fruition and instead you are met with chaos and the
realization that the world is so far out of your control.
I couldn’t wait to grow up. I was always looking forward,
years down the road. Growing up was funny though because I never actually felt
older. When I was a kid in the summer, I had nannies, who were in high school.
They were 16 years old and lived in my neighborhood; they had a car and a
boyfriend. I thought they were so cool, and I couldn’t wait to be their age and
be that grown up. Well, I turned 16, I got a car, and a boyfriend and it was
nothing like 5-year-old me thought it would be. I realized that at 16 I didn’t
feel grown up and I definitely wasn’t. At 16 I had friends that were leaving
and going to college and I couldn’t wait till I got there. I thought surely
when I was in college, I would feel older, feel like an adult. Well, I went to
college and it was nothing like 16-year-old me thought it would be. I
definitely had more freedom than when I was high school, but in many ways that
freedom showed me just how easy it was to be irresponsible. Even with the
freedom I didn’t exactly feel like an adult. During college I nannied the
sweetest little boy, the two years I was with him he was in 2nd and
3rd grade. He used to say to
me, “Elsie, you’re an adult because your old but you’re not a grownup because
you aren’t old old”. I chuckle thinking back to these conversations because
somehow this 7-year-old cutie knew exactly how to describe what I was feeling.
I thought surely when I graduate college, I would feel older, I would finally
be a real adult. Well, here I am about to graduate college with a double major
and a minor (not so humble brag, I know. But come on, I worked hard) and it is
nothing like 18-year-old me thought it would be. I don’t just mean because I am
graduating college in the second year of a global pandemic.
My time in the classroom is ending, at least for now, but that doesn’t mean my education is ending. I will stop learning when I stop breathing, then and only then. My instruction has taught me tolerance, its has taught me how to bounce back from countless failures, it has helped me be more openminded, it has given me a passion, a passion to do well for myself but more importantly to do good for this world. College has shown me who I am, and I have to believe that even though 5-year-old me would be disappointed that I was wrong time and time again she would be proud of how far we have come and how far we are going to go. If I could tell my younger self anything it would be that being grown up isn’t all it’s cracked up to be.
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