The Silent Group Chat and My Routine

A routine is something that many of us cannot help but have.  It comes with the inevitable structure of our time, whether professional or academic.  We have class from 10:00am – 10:50am, then from 1:15pm – 2:30pm.  One day will probably work from 9am – 5pm.  I know that I am not the only one who creates a pattern in my daily actions that correlates to certain times of the day.  What I didn’t know, however, was how much I rely on that routine to get stuff done.  How did I come to this realization, you ask?  Parents weekend.

I love Family weekend.  Not only because I normally get free food out of it, but also because I enjoy the company of my family.  This Family weekend was a little different than my last, however, because last time my parents didn’t exactly come.  I am pretty sure they went skiing, which is honestly a fair alternative that I would probably choose over visiting myself given the opportunity.  This time around, I got the whole gang, including my little brother who happened to be touring both Pitzer College and Claremont McKenna College.  On top of my family actually being here, two of my friends flew home to Seattle to see visit home, and another two of my friends had their families come visit.

Now I can see how one would fail to find the problem in this scenario, but my friends play a huge role in the upkeep of my routine.  We get every meal together, go to the gym together, and do our homework together every day.  Yes, we are a productive group.  If something happens and someone’s schedule changes, we have the group chat to coordinate timing and meet-ups.  This past weekend, the group chat was silent.  I’ve never experienced the silent group chat.  Sure, I have no idea when I’m supposed to eat lunch, but everything’s fine.

So, without the group chat constantly reminding me of how my friends are managing their time, I somehow naturally forget how to manage my own.  The consequences consisted of spending an entire Saturday long boarding around campus with my dad and brother as opposed to writing a five page essay on the role of institutions within varying economic theories.  I do not regret procrastinating in order to spend time with my family, because this is just one weekend out of the year.  I do however realize the importance of sticking to my routine even when key factors to my schedule are missing, such as my friends.

The biggest consequence, at least for me, of mismanaging my time would be the emails.  I can make up for lost time when writing an essay, mainly because I simply enjoy writing, but ignoring my email for a day was the biggest mistake of my week.  I opened my computer Sunday morning to about 47 unread emails, each one a notification of a potential internship from job boards on LinkedIn and Glassdoor.

So the majority of my Sunday was spent not on actual homework but on catching up with internship suggestions and organizing my options.  With the added work of internship applications on top of our academic homework, time management becomes even more important.  While I love spending every moment that I can with my friends, I need to focus on my individual routine the next time I decide to ignore my work for a day.  It is great to have others to help support your organization and motivate you to go workout or write your essay, but I would advise not becoming too reliant on that support system, or you may have to read through 47 job emails.

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.

Getting Where I’m Going

For my job this summer, I’m going to have to commute in to New York City with my dad at five am every morning. I’m dreading it, but anticipating this daily journey had made me think about the ways in which my parents have helped me to be who I am today. I’ve always felt like I was a fairly self-sufficient, self-motivated person, but growing up, my parents placed an emphasis on me getting great grades and trying everything. They have always supported me in whatever I’ve done, whether it be Girl Scouts or Soccer or Volunteer Work, so long as I was happy. For me, being happy means working hard, and being the best possible version of myself that I can possibly be. That’s kind of just who I am as a person. So while they would have supported me had I just gone to a mid-rate college, or not taken challenging classes in high school, it was myself who worked constantly to get into a school as good as Scripps.

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Talking with my friends, it’s interesting to see how different our parental experiences are, especially in terms of entering the professional world. Some have the benefit of being able to work at their family’s companies to gain experience, or have family friends that have offered them jobs. With both my parents being finance majors, I probably could get some professional experience through their connections, although not doing anything that I would particularly enjoy. One of my other friends even has her parents questioning her about grad school in her freshman year, as they believe a law degree will increase her chances of getting a job with her undergraduate degree being in Philosophy. I can’t even imagine my parents doing this– if anything, it was me that was panicking about the usefulness of my degree in English in the modern-day workforce. Sometimes I worry about my parent’s optimism. Though they both came from humble beginnings, the status of the job market was very different in 1993 (when they graduated college) than it is today. When applying to colleges, they told me to put Stanford as my reach school; in reality, it was Scripps that was my reach.

When I told my dad that my job was going to be teaching this summer, he asked if I wanted to be a teacher. I would love to be an English teacher, or even better, an English professor, but I’ve had several people tell me not to be- one of them being my favorite English teacher in high school. Knowing that only 4% of people who get a Master’s Degree in the humanities end up getting a job in their field, I think I would be a lot better off pursuing one of the many other things that I’m interested in as a career. Still, there’s something to be said for people who will support you no matter what. Even if I feel like that support can be a little blind at times, it’s when I doubt myself that I need it the most.