Discovering your
place in university life is hard. The internet makes it harder.
Whether you move
hundreds of miles from home or simply go to the local community
college; life at college is change. Assuming you just go to a local
community college the difference in rigor is apparent from day one.
You get syllabi and you are told the grading scheme and how
calculations of grades will be made. (So suddenly math is important.)
There are deadlines. Usually, if you misread the assignment or fail
to get your work done you fail. Accountability comes as a shock to
many, many people when they leave high school. There are no safety
nets.
Take it to the next
level and add in the move away from your established support system
relocating to a distant residential college brings and things get
even more challenging. Support system is a bit of a misnomer. In
reality there are two systems you are moving away from. First, you
leave whatever is your extant family structure. You say goodbye to
Mom, and/or Dad, siblings, cousins or whatever familial universe you
have been made part of for those first 17 or 18 years of your life.
Whatever hand on shoulder, eye gazing into eye, or voice tone
guidance that was open to you 24/7 is now no longer a there for you
to seek out.
Secondly the social
hierarchy you have lived at secondary school no matter how Lord of
the Flies-esque it might have been is also changed. I initially used
the word gone instead of changed, but changed and fading is probably
the better term. Going “away” to college means you are alone
among new people who don't have the same life experiences. These are
people who haven't come to a common lexicon of humor with you. They
most likely have encountered occurrences and values from an
environment vastly if not totally different from your own. At a
point in your life when you have the greatest doubts about who you
are and what capabilities you have you are sent out to a place where
everyone is trying to define themselves in a manner that does not
leave them one down in the pecking order.
It is hard. It is
damn hard. The first night in that dorm room bed is probably the
worst for most people when the thought keeps resounding, “What have
I gotten myself into?” It may come a week or two later but in those
initial days you mostly likely will ask yourself, is this the right
choice?
Trying to peel back
the haze of my move from New Jersey to Michigan, rose colored hue
that it now is, fall 1974 was a cold lonely time for a skinny kid
with an attitude. At that point there was no e-mail and Facebook did
not exist when the blue LTD pulled away I was alone with a footlocker
that contained my possessions, all the possessions I would have
access to for the next three months. The only connection between
Salem County New Jersey and the Michigan State Universe was a Bell
telephone line. And if you were going to make that call you did it
late evening or Sunday when the rates were down all day.
Michigan, (a place I
had been two twice in my life in mid summer mind you) was a big state
with lots of open space and cold winds that came early. So long ago
was that first fall with its early snow and a blizzard on
Thanksgiving weekend it predated the sinking of the Edmund Fitzgerald
by a year. The people were different-way more laid back. To a hyper
squirrel from New Jersey I just couldn't understand their sense of
time, at all.. Michiganders had different words for common things,
sack for bag and pop for soda. They even made vowel sounds
differently then. The only culturally common touch-points were movies
and music. And even those were so startlingly different. Who was
Bob Seger I would ask and they would respond with who is Bruce
Springsteen?
By mid-October I had
sent requests out to schools all over the south east seeking
applications. I so wanted to go some location that was warn and
where if needed I could get a Tastykake. I was so lonely I hitchhiked
back one weekend and caught rides back on two other occasions. My
roommate was a great guy and he drug me out of my room to see the
movies that would show on campus. My classes were okay, nothing too
scary. But it was all so different and I felt all so all alone. Ah
and my first real girlfriend, she lived in Philadelphia.
With winter's
onslaught I found a friend, a female friend. I found contemporaries
who challenged my mind. I found a professor who cared and suddenly I
could live with what was in the footlocker. The snow sucked but there
was oases of wonder that served hot mulled wine and clam chowder.
I probably should
thank the divine that the demon's span, the internet, was not
available. Personally I think the internet has totally fucked up the
minds of this entire generation especially the young ones who have
never lived without it. Constant connectivity is a beast that never
sleeps, that has a siren song of bells and whistles and false
accolades for accomplishment in meaningless games. It distorts the
terms of what it means to be a good human and gives the bully pulpit
or maybe a megaphone to the outliers. It takes singularities and
makes them seem the norm.
What I had to fill
my life was class, the dorm, bad cafeteria food, books, newspapers,
on campus concerts and lectures followed by sleep. Okay maybe there
was the occasionally masturbation in the shower if nobody was around.
Today's students
when faced with a move to a different world have the Internet's
rabbit hole to dive down into. Their old friends with their old
values still kinda live on there at least for a time. A point will
hopefully come with the current life mutes the past for most. Those
bells and whistles which when sounded by the right strokes of the
ctrl and cursor keys release some endorphin are an addiction. The
step out of the room into the new world to see if you can face it is
made ever harder by electronic tendrils of the past.
In the past two days
I have seen two different pieces of entertainment that implied time
is the measure of reality. One asserted it is the defining unit of
measurement of the infinite and unknowable. I am not sure of that.
What I do not is that time connected in the real world at university
with the allure of the internet is something necessary to integrating
into campus. Hell is it something needed for us to integrate into
life.
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