Thursday, December 18, 2014

It's Just Four Years

Forgetfulness. It happens to all of us. But, what better time to remember than the night before a very important final?  I have to do pretty well on my Physics exam tomorrow, and I don't plan on it. Oh well, I suppose it will be ok. I suppose. 
After getting back a couple of college acceptances, and after putting way too much thought into my "advice for underclassmen" for my senior bio, I have been thinking a lot about what I would have done differently if I could go back to freshman year (thank God that I don't have to). So, here are some things I would change or tell myself if it were the first day of freshman year all over again.
1. Going to dances isn't as important as you think it is. The fun of going to a dance is really dressing up and hanging out with your friends. Going to a play, or out to a nice dinner, or just taking pictures are all equally as fun and significantly less expensive than actually going to a dance. Once you get to a dance (especially with a date) is a lot of being tired, and wishing your dress was more comfortable, or feeling awkward because you just want to party with your friends, not try and find your date for that last awkward Taylor Swift slow dance. Few people actually remember of anyone being or not begin at the dance aside form those in their group and on the court anyway. No one will miss you (and I mean that as a good thing). You won't be judged for not attending a dance because you would rather do something else, and the only way people would know is from Instagram photos, and believe me, they will probably just be happy for the one non-dance picture posted from that night. 
2. High school is not as big as it seems. When you are a freshman on your first day of school, it seems like the absolute most important thing is what everyone inside those four walls thinks of you. I'd like to tell you a secret: my school campus takes up roughly 0.000000000051579% of the Earth's surface. If that doesn't put things into perspective, maybe this will: there are about 430 people currently enrolled in the high school, there are a little more than 7 billion people in the world. That means that there are millions of other places to see and billions of other people to meet out there who do not go to your high school, and do not care that you don't look great in your uniform. Stop worrying so much about what everyone thinks of you, and start just begin yourself; you will have a lot less stress and a lot more fun. As John McLaughlin correctly stated, "Be cool, be hot, be weird, it's just four years"
3. You do not need a boyfriend to get you through high school. You just don't. No matter how many times my mother tried to shove the idea that "it's fun to just date in high school" down my throat, I never quite took it to heart, and, honestly, I'm glad that I didn't. Don't worry about the boys who you don't really want to date in high school. There is a lot to be said about the fun of just hanging out with the people you actually care about, so enjoy them, and don't mess up true friendships with dating high school. Looking at it now, the chances of actually marrying your high school sweetheart are pretty slim, and while those stories are cute and what you think you want, I hate to burst your bubble, but you most likely won't be one of them, and however high school relationships end, they tend to hurt. I'm not saying that if you want to have a close guy while you're here that the worst is going to happen to you, but if you don't have a date every Friday, don't flip out, it will be ok.
4. Just one more thing on how small high school is: the friendship selection is small, so you may have to go out of your comfort zone. I believe that there are two main factors in strong friendships: 1. Similar interests and 2. Compatible personalities. Chances are that in a small high school like mine, you are only going to find one of those features in any given person at your school. This means that you either have to put up with the people who have similar interests to yours, but drive you crazy; or you will have to try new things and be enthusiastic about things that bore you in order to be friends with the people whose personalities fit yours perfectly. For example: one of my closest friends and I have personalities that some how click, despite the fact that our interests could not be more opposite, right down to the colleges we choose to apply to... seriously, we each applied to three schools, and everyone of them had a state rivalry with the school on the other person's list. But all the same, she and I are really close; she might actually be the person who knows the most about my life. But for our friendship to stay strong, sometimes I have to show interest in cheerleading, and she has to show interest in softball. And some people are just like that. All of that to say a few different things: 1. Don't write people off just because you don't share the same interests, they may become one of your best friends. 2. Don't write people off just because they can get on your nerves, because they might share the same obsession with that extremely obscure thing that you love. And 3. When you find people who share your interests and have a compatible personality, hold them tight and don't let them go. If you can have full conversations in quotes from The Office, and can trade Harry Potter conspiracy theories back and forth, and they don't drive you crazy; these are the people that will stick with you for all four years.
5. Work hard in your classes, but don't forget to have a good balance. I can't lie to you; you should work hard to make good grades. If you will make good grades early in high school, then you are set up to get into whatever college that you want to go to. Even if you only want to go to an easy to get into community college down the road, you may change your mind in later years. But, at the same time, don't spend all of your time sitting at home studying, and don't have a break down if you didn't get the grade you wanted or forgot your homework. I was the worst about that last one freshman year, I would feel physically ill at the thought of having forgotten homework, even if there wasn't homework to forget, the mere thought of it freaked me out. If you forget a homework assignment, most teachers will let you turn it in late, while they may take a few points off, they probably won't give you a zero. Keep calm, it will be fine. Find a good balance of working on school and having fun. Don't be afraid to take some time off studying to go and try on hats at Target, or eat at Waffle House after a football game. Go out and do things, have fun while your parents are still paying for it. 
6. Try new things. Try clubs and groups and sports and anything that you can fit into your schedule. The worst that can happen is that you don't enjoy something and you know not to do it next year. Plus, begin in any club or organization for even on year looks good to most colleges. Being part of groups or clubs or teams lets you get to know new people that you would not have otherwise, and it lets you meet upperclassmen, who, for the most part, will want to help you and get to know you and have fun with you. I really loved getting to know the senior girls on the softball team my freshman year, and I equally love the freshman girls on the team this year. When you are willing to try new things you are letting people know that you are available to make friendships, and some of the unexpected ones are the best. Try a new sport; even if you sit the bench, you will have some fun. Try out for a show, if you're in the ensemble, you can spend a lot of your time at rehearsals just hanging out with the cast, and theaters kids are always really fun. Join a service club, it gives you the opportunity to help others in the community, and you might find that you really enjoy it (and the world needs more people who enjoy helping others). Join the yearbook staff, you may find that you have a back for photography or for writing, and when you get to the end of the stressful year, you get a real physical book to hold and hundreds of other people get to see what you made. 
7. Get to know your teachers. This is a lot easier to do in high school than it will be in college, your classes are small and you only have 7 teachers. Get to class before the second before the bell rings, and ask them how their day has been, or what you can do to help set up for class. In my eyes at least, there is nothing wrong with being nice to teachers, and if your grade is an 89.4 at the end of the semester, they will be more inclined to give you a boost if you have been getting to know them all the while, rather than asking for a point being the first time you speak to them outside of class. (That situation is also helped if you do all your homework and any extra refit offered, so that they see you really care about their class). 
8. Find one good place to cry and one good teacher to go to. This is geared more towards the girls. It will come one day; whether it is because the girl in the hallway gave you a nasty look, or a teacher won't help you after you have been trying to get ahold of them all week, you will feel the tears start to fill up behind your eyelids, are crying in the bathroom is just not comforting. Try and find one teacher who will let you cry in their room if you need to (preferably one of keeps tissues in their room). It is an important resource, because I have met few people who have not at one time needed to cry at school. It just happens. 
9. This is the last one, and it's one everyone has heard before, but I would like for you to know the reasons that I have for it. Be yourself. The urge to change how you act and what you like is overwhelming in high school, especially freshman year. But, to be honest, the friends that you make by changing yourself won't be the people you have fun with anyway. They won't share your interest or your personality. They will just be random people who like they like you, but if they really knew you, might not be so friendly. I'm not saying that these are bad people, but they just wouldn't be naturally drawn to you, nor you to them. You won't share things the way you would with true friends. And true friends are important in high school; it can get lonely without them. So be you, make some true friends, and treasure them. That's the best thing that I can think of to tell you. 
This has been an exceptionally long post, and I apologize for that, but I would like to leave you with one last thing: some of the lyrics from John McLaughlin's Four Year, it's a really good song that I an so glad I heard before my first day of freshman year. 

"Maybe you're in or you're out, but in the end when all of your hats are in the air, no body is going to care, so fair the wait, freshman hold on, it's only four years long."

Freshman, it flies by, you don't believe me now, but it really does seem like only a few days ago that I was worried about finding classes and what my teachers would think of me; and now I'm getting letters back from my dream schools and I'm worrying about how far away from my friends I will be. So, hold on, high school is hard, but it will be ok.