Embracing the Sophomore Slump

Sophomore year: you’re not new, you’re not graduating, you’re probably to studying abroad, and you’re not writing a thesis.  So, what are you doing for a full year? Homework?  Riveting.  Welcome to the sophomore slump.

The sophomore slump mentality is definitely real, but if there is one piece of advice I would give first years, it’s to take advantage of this weird limbo year.  If fact, the sophomore slump is more of a blessing than a curse.  This is the year we declare our major, and in doing so start to consider the paths we could take as emerging professionals.  However, the jobs or internships you apply to for the summer do not make or break your future career.  Part of figuring out what we want to do entails figuring out what we do not want to do, so get a little crazy with your internship search.

Here I was, obsessing over finding different political campaigns or legal firms to apply to.  As a politics major, I was stuck on the idea of ensuring whatever internship I have this summer would directly pave the path to becoming President of the United States. In the mean time, one of my best friends, also a politics major, had just applied to intern at Cosmopolitan.  I asked her how her job search was going, and she said that a lot of her stress was relieved when a junior told her that sophomore year was about “figuring out what you don’t like.”

After my friend gave me this advice that she herself received from an older friend, I expanded my search.  For my Core 3 course last semester, Capitalism and Critique, I made a 35 minute movie with my three friends as our final project.  Digital editing, film making, and screenwriting are three things that have very little to do with my major, yet I thoroughly enjoyed each one, so why not try out a career in the media production industry? I applied to a marketing internship, a digital media internship, internships in New York, in D.C., a CNN broadcasting internship, and considered anything that sparked my interest.  As a sophomore, the world is my oyster.  Even though I do not meet every single desired skill or experience of each internship, I can amp up the experience I do have and use past experiences to tailor both my resume and cover letter, depending on where I am applying.

Don’t be afraid to send an application.  Whatever looks interesting, whether or not it directly relates to your exact field of study, is fair game during your summer intern search.  In other words, we know what we want to study, but do not know exactly what we want to do with it, and that is perfectly ok.

The Slump hit me pretty hard, especially at the beginning of second semester.  However, turning a negative into a positive was easy with the network of friendly peers and helpful faculty we have here at Scripps College.  Even alumnae want to help; Search the Scripps Community Network to see where different alumnae work in order to gain some inspiration and potential connections for my internship search.  Embrace sophomore year with excitement, know that having multiple career directions you want to explore is an awesome thing, and it is ok to feel the Slump.

How My Parents Influenced My Gap Year Decision

Have you ever had a moment when you realized that your parents have had a far more profound effect on your decisions than you previously realized? I’m not talking about the conversations where your parents subtly (or maybe not so subtly) hint at what they would like you to do with your life. I’m talking about those moments when you realize that without realizing it, you’re following your parents’ example.

I had one of those very recently, when I was trying to make an important decision about my post-graduation plans.

It was September. I had just arrived at Scripps, and was excited and relieved that I had finally decided on the graduate degree I would pursue. However, I was immediately met by another hard choice: would I apply to grad programs after graduating Scripps, taking a year to travel and work, or apply now, launching myself right back into academia?

There were pros and cons to either choice. By going straight to grad school, I would maintain the momentum I’ve built up over my time at Scripps, and find out sooner about whether I would get into my top choice grad school, which would relieve some anxiety. However, every time I considered this option, I had a unsettling feeling of doubt and discomfort. I kept coming back to the idea of the gap year.

The decision began to weigh heavily on me, growing to existential proportions. It seemed to me that whatever choice I made would be a reflection of my values in life. By considering taking a gap year to travel and work, I felt like I was once and for all giving up my high school identity as a hyper ambitious go-getter, an idea I haven’t entirely let go of. I worried (irrationally) that my family would see me as a “slacker,” or (more realistically) that I would begin to see myself that way.

But at the same time, I imagined all the stories of adventures my parents had from their twenties, and realized that many of their best life experiences would never have happened if they hadn’t have taken risks- like taking a year off. That’s when I realized that the way my parents have lived their lives have had a far greater impact on me than I imagined before.

My mum (right) and her friend, hitch hiking in Corsica.

My mum (right) and her friend, hitch hiking in Corsica.

My mum still talks wistfully about how she spent her early twenties rock climbing, how she camped out illegally for weeks on a beach in Greece, how she rode her Harley Davidson across Santorini and her dingy little road bike across Turkey. I thought about how she deferred her first teaching job (in England, her country of origin) to travel across the Atlantic for the first time, take a Greyhound bus from Toronto to San Francisco, and then backpack across Mexico for two months.

Mum, about 20, bike touring across Turkey

Mum, about 20, bike touring across Turkey

I thought about my Dad and how in his early twenties, he quit his first job and got his pilot’s license, flying back and forth between LAX and Catalina Island. And I thought about his fabled windsurfing adventures in Aruba.

My dad, the windsurfer

My dad, the windsurfer.

Finally, I thought about how together, my parents quit their jobs, left the USA, and bike toured across the entirety of the UK, Greece, and New Zealand.

Mum on her tour with Dad in New Zealand.

Mum on her tour with Dad in New Zealand.

In those few months of trying to make this decision about grad school and whether to take some time to travel and work, I realized just how big an impact my parents’ attitudes towards life and adventure have had on me. And I worried that if I were to dive straight into grad school, I would miss out on a crucial opportunity to collect a few of my own experiences. Worst of all, what if by giving up this opportunity, I inadvertently set the tone for a post college life where my career always took priority, no matter what.

I realize that even if I were to go straight into grad school, I would still probably have adventures, that education and life experience aren’t mutually exclusive. In fact, adventure, risk, and occasional danger has already been an important part of my college years. There was the time my best friend and I backpacked part of the Pacific Crest Trail, got stalked by a mountain lion, and had to have my dad bail us out. Or the summer that I spent 15 hour days trekking solo into canyons at Crater Lake National Park in order to search for an elusive species of frog. There was the other time that, via Facebook, I joined up with a group of female cyclists from Long Beach whom I’d never met, rode the train up to Santa Barbara, stayed the night in a dingy motel, then tried to ride with them all the way down the coast back to LA only to crash my bike and end up in the ER.

My summer job a year ago, when I regularly hiked miles with my waders through a river at the bottom of a 300 foot canyon.

My summer job a year ago, when I regularly hiked miles (with my waders) through a river at the bottom of a 300 foot canyon.

These are the stories from college upon which I already fondly reminisce. Call me greedy, but I want more.

While I realize that sometimes, the best adventures are not planned, I think taking a year to act spontaneously, and do things I would not normally do definitely won’t hurt my prospects of stumbling across experience.

When I enter the academic world once more, I expect to still have a little of that go-getter inside myself. I don’t think that part of me will ever completely go away. But there’s another part of me, the adventurous side that I inherited from my parents, that’s telling me that the year following my graduation from Scripps is a crucial year for adventure and experience, and that while grad school can wait twelve months, my gap year won’t.

Being Your Own Cheerleader

Cool means being able to hang with yourself. All you have to ask yourself is ‘Is there anybody I`m afraid of? Is there anybody who if I walked into a room and saw, I’d get nervous?’ If not, then you’re cool.” — Prince

With nearly less than three weeks before graduation, it has become more surreal that I will soon be leaving Scripps. After finishing my senior recital last weekend, I had a moment of static happiness and joy for something that I had put so much time and effort into. What my audience may not have known about was the callouses on my left fingers, the self-doubt of walking on staging and crashing despite the 2-5 hours I spent practicing daily, the inner reflections that emerged out of isolation in a practice room. But through this preparation, reframing the self-undermining uncertainty into positive self-talk, I have been able to become more comfortable with myself and confident in working on areas of personal growth.

Senior year has taught me a very important lesson in being my own cheerleader, striving to relentlessly love myself through hard times and celebrate myself after completing amazing (big or small) feats. My support network has been nothing but compassionate, caring, and always there when I called upon them. At the end of the day, all the advice, guidance, mentoring, suggestions, and affirmations that I was told by others, could only do so much. All these words, while important and I am immensely blessed for, would only push me to take initiative if I believed them fully and truly, telling them to myself as well. I have always been a huge self-critic. This semester, my inner cheerleader has really had its challenges, through numerous job rejections, unanswered phone calls and emails, feeling isolated from people I love the most simply because we are not in the same situations.

As I prepare to move across the country, I have been reflecting about this transitional period, this crossroads of my life. I am lucky to have arranged an apartment, two temporary and part-time jobs, and a support system in DC. But this has all been an immensely circuitous process, for many reasons out of my control, despite having done all I could do in the proper moment and time. Never have I ever felt so much hard work without any payback or relief of it all “being worth it.” One of the most difficult things has been to talk to my inner critic by also being my biggest cheerleader, especially when I needed to withhold my feelings inside myself for fear of them not being received fully by another person. To anyone who is in limbo about a summer internship, post-graduate opportunity, or simply feeling the flux and vitality of a changing environment during this busy time; You are not alone, your thoughts and feelings are valid, and you are strong.

Congratulations, seniors, on turning in thesis and rounding the final lap of our college careers. The future isn’t just bright, it’s blinding, and I hope whatever the next steps are, you are wildly excited, celebrating yourself, and being your own cheerleader.

 

Doubting Yourself? Don’t.

Most of us college students can share that one fateful moment when we get our papers or exams back and just want to curl into a ball and sulk for days on end about our less than perfect score.

Well you’re right… that feeling definitely is not the best one and I can say personally that I have been more than tempted to do just that with loads of sugary sweets by my side. But today I was reminded of the importance of not letting a number define me.

While visiting my professor in office hours and feeling a tad defeated, I was asking her about the questions that I had answered incorrectly and she assuaged my bits of sadness. She told me to never let a test grade define my self worth.

Let’s have that settle for a second. Ready *breathe in* *breathe out*

Ahhhh. Okay so starting to feel a little relieved and I was a little more hopeful but still had those doubts in the back of my mind. Lets expand the zoom on our lives, shall we?

In five years, heck, in two years, no employer will/can see your exam and have any reason to act differently based on a couple of test scores way back when! Yes, while GPA does matter, your grade is *hopefully* not based on one single exam. Take a breather, realize your future is still just as bright and beautiful, and don’t let a number lessen your self-worth.

Remember: you are more than a number, and if you don’t believe me just believe my professor because she know more things than I could ever fathom, mmkay?

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So use your experiences to help you create work you are proud of, and remember “success usually comes to those who are too busy to be looking for it.”

So get busy, get studying, and stop worrying. You are in control of your life and a few lower numbers in the scheme of the universe won’t change that. YOU can do this you wonderfully inspired citizen of the world, don’t doubt yourself.

Until then, smile lots, study until your brains fall out, and drink lots and lots of tea!

And don’t forget to…

KEEP CALM AND EXPECTO PATRONUM.

Over and out folks, happy last full week before break!

Stay positive,

Isabella

What I Want to do for Thesis

About a year and a half ago, I was working as a lab assistant in a professor’s lab at Keck science. One friday afternoon, we were about to start our weekly lab meeting, a time normally utilized to debrief and discuss our lab’s projects and goals for the coming months. However, on this particular day, we had a visitor drop by our meeting. She was a senior student who was just putting the finishing touches on her thesis project. She had asked my professor if she could stop in on our meeting to practice presenting her poster to all of us. As we all listened attentively to her presentation, I noticed something intriguing about the content of her project. It seemed as though she had worked in a hospital in between her academic semesters and had gathered research alongside a clinical mentor about the head sizes of pre-mature babies under specific conditions. As you can probably guess, I was immediately taken aback by the structure of her project. Since the beginning of that semester, I had begun to feel uninspired by the research I was conducting at my lab bench and this type of project was exactly the wake up call I needed. I became inspired by the work of this singular individual (whose name I can’t even remember…) to completely change the direction of my efforts.

Now I know thesis is can be an extremely stressful time of year for many students. But, to tell you the truth, right now I’m quite excited for it. The shear number of possibilities that can stem from the vague and multidirectional prompt of “thesis” is exciting, though a tad overwhelming. Because of this, I began seeing Jill Jones, the incredible pre-med counselor at Keck and she slowly began coaching me in the art of clinical exploration. She showed me how to aim for positions within my interests and skill set, while also encouraging me not settle because of my age or degree. She advised that I find unique, alternative experiences that would really help to expose me to my career goals and that would inspire me to perform excellent research. So I began searching everywhere! I called up every clinical profession within a 10 mile radius of campus, scouring for opportunities. I asked professors and administrators for advice and possible connections. I would actively wait every Sunday for CP&R’s Career Courier email for any applications or position openings I could find! You can maybe now understand why I was so thankful when I was contacted by a long time family friend who wanted to help me in my search. As a geneticist, she was not only interested in recruiting me for volunteer research, she also had a wide range of connections with doctors and professionals doing active research, people who I never would have been able to get a hold on on my own.

What I think I’m trying to say is that when it comes to thesis, and many other academic endeavors, exploring new and unlikely paths may just get you to exactly where you’re going. The inspiration, advice, and aid I’ve received for each of the women in my journey has been instrumental in igniting my thesis drive and, as a rising senior, I just can’t wait to get started.