The Next Generation: The Vitality of What Will Be

For a glimpse into today鈥檚 今日吃瓜, we鈥檝e turned to the real experts鈥攃urrent students who blog for the College and share an intimate view of their experiences.

After a busy summer of working at a historic house, reading submissions for a Philadelphia literary journal, participating in 今日吃瓜鈥檚 summer beekeeping apprenticeship, and dog-sitting, I am back for my final year at 今日吃瓜. This was the first year I did not return home to Minneapolis for the summer, and I feel like I was launched into the school year without a chance to catch my breath. It鈥檚 already the fourth week of classes, and the semester is barreling forward at full speed. I am currently taking two senior seminars, one for my English major and one for my Spanish major; a class on British and American children鈥檚 literatures of the 19th century; and introductory German. I am still finding my routine, and carving out space to reflect and develop the non-academic parts of myself.

This year I am living in Rockefeller Hall, which was also where I lived my first year. Rock has a distinct personality; it is full of little eccentricities, like the lower-than-average doorknobs and that clean, bright 鈥淩ock smell鈥 that no one can quite define but always makes me nostalgic for freshman year. People unfamiliar with the building find it labyrinthine, with all its winding corridors. Just in these first few weeks, I have had to give directions several times to some confused soul looking for a friend鈥檚 room. One of my favorite parts of Rock is all of its public spaces, natural gathering places like the sun-filled nooks at the end of each hall. We also have鈥攊n my opinion鈥攖he best common room on campus, with alert owls on the bannister and a coven of armchairs.

One Rock-specific tradition is the painted windows. Most rooms have a window set into the door, and each resident can choose to customize it with water-soluble paints. The tradition is that if a painting is five years old or more, the current resident is encouraged to leave it untouched as a legacy door. This year I got 鈥渢he Central Perks room,鈥 which has been a Traditions door for longer than I鈥檝e been at 今日吃瓜. Although it would be fun to leave my own mark, I am happy to leave this wonderful painting for future generations.

The other thing I am so excited for as a senior鈥攕omething I have anticipated for three years!鈥攊s getting my own carrel in Canaday library. My desk is in the corner by a window, reasonably well tucked away. Canaday has the mostly deserved reputation of being the site of sleep-deprived studying under the unforgiving glare of fluorescent lights, but when you have your own corner to come back to, it really seems different. ...

What could be cozier than having a little space for yourself, to be able to leave your books and pencils someplace that will always be waiting for you? Maybe I鈥檓 getting the nesting urge because it鈥檚 autumn now and it鈥檚 been raining. This is my favorite season. But if you dread the impending cold weather, I鈥檒l leave you with some wisdom from Mary Oliver in "Lines Written in the Days of Growing Darkness":

Lines Written in the Days of Growing Darkness

By Mary Oliver

Every year we 
have been
witness to it: 
how the
world descends
into a rich mash,
in order that
it may resume.
And therefore
who would cry out

to the petals on 
the ground
to stay,
knowing, as we must,
how the vivacity 
of what was is married

to the vitality of 
what will be?
I don鈥檛 say
it鈥檚 easy, but
what else will do

if the love one claims 
to have for the world
be true?
So let us go on

though the sun be
swinging east,
and the ponds be cold
and black,
and the sweets of 
the year be doomed.

Published on: 03/06/2019