WHAT WEEKLY

College Daze

07 May 2014

★ Shawn Binder

I remember moving into my freshman year dorm. My parents had driven me all the way up to college blasting the Dixie Chicks and reminiscing about how I used to climb into toilet bowls with all my clothes on as a child. When we finally arrived on campus, they carried box after box up six flights of stairs to my walk-in-closet sized room. They hung up all my clothes and posters. They made sure I had enough bottled water to last me a month. I, in return, had a panic attack in a Jimmy John’s (if you’ve never heard of Jimmy Johns, first of all shame on you. They’re a sub shop that makes your sandwich ridiculously fast) and asked them to leave three hours earlier than they had planned because they were, “stressing me out.”

Last Friday I put on the cap and gown and did the damn thing- I graduated college. Since that day, I’ve been trying to piece together what it really means that it’s all over. My first indication that college wasn’t the defining time of my life was me trying to fit everything I had accumulated over four years into my car. I was surprised that it was so easy. I was surprised that materialistically, the four years had amounted to a slightly new wardrobe, stem less wine glasses, a few books, and shot glasses that read, “I WAS IN MIAMI, BITCH.”

It is a novel idea that we cling to that college will define us for the rest of our lives. Yet, it is easy to forget how we used to think high school would do the same for us. We used to think that every club t-shirt we kept we would sleep in until we were old. That all the friendships that meant the world to us at the time would remain just as strong as they were when we had to suffer through ninth grade Geometry together.

I don’t really feel like a radically different person but no one is able to go through four years without drastically changing who they feel they are. I think the changes feel so subtle because personal growth often happens slowly so we don’t even realize it is occurring. This time when I left college, I packed up my own apartment. I didn’t ask my parents to leave early because they were stressing me out; instead of breaking down at a Jimmy John’s I ordered one drunkenly on my last night in town and woke up with crumbs covering my face.

We are told that if we do our four years, we will walk out the other side of college more prepared for the real world. I’m still attempting to figure out how much weight that holds. Sure, I know how to make a delicious stir fry and check my oil now. I know how to go on a first date and I definitely know I don’t like women in a sexual way, which was something I was still unsure of when I entered college. But wouldn’t I have figured that out on my own even without higher education?



fashion

RAW Artists: Cultivating Creativity

It seems like every day a new “unconventional” art gallery opens up in Baltimore. This is great news for any…

Behind the Fence

From Russia, With Lace

Tailor Made Cocktails

LOT 201

Panoptic Fashion Show- MICA

nightlife

Bent Ear

In the Bent Ear, Baynard Woods follows the great writer Joseph Mitchell, in allowing Baltimore's quirkier citizens to bend his…

Shodekeh at The Meyerhoff

Boite: Show and Tell

Emily Wells: Symphony 1 In the Barrel of a Gun

Mobtown Microshow: Celebration

Gateway at Ruintown

social innovation

A Dream in Cherry Hill

“Who controls the media in Baltimore City?” reads the construction-paper sign, in a basement computer lab in Cherry Hill Public Homes.…

Elf Night

What is a Tool Library?

Capitalism with a Conscience: All Tesla Patents are Now Open Source

The “Mad Women” of the 307 Collective

Both-And

artist profiles

Peace of Mind

Baltimore artist Scott Pennington has been working out of a 2,000-square-foot woodworking shop and studio for about three years, holding…

Loring Cornish

Nikkuu Design

Dr. Bob: Life on the Fringe

Sean E. Conroy

Sonya Renee Taylor

sustainability

Baltimore Free Farm

All photos by David London Nestled just blocks from The Avenue in Hanpden is a leafy utopia known as the…

Fixing The Future

An Ambitious New Charter School Comes to West Baltimore

Strange Folks at Ash Street Garden

Small Time

Big Green Pirate Party

technology

Halpern: On Tour and Online

This is a story about my favorite Baltimore artist.   Matt Halpern has quickly emerged as one of rock music’s…

Smart Textiles

Common Curriculum Launch

Betamore

The God Particle

How to See the Party Before You Arrive