Laura
If I could back in time to give myself advice, I would tell myself that life is bigger than the clothes you wear and the people you hang out with. I would tell myself to help others more often and to forget about what is "cool". In a couple of years, you will not remember the petty arguments with peers, the day you didn't wear name brand jeans, or the humiliation when the teacher called on you. You have the ability to stand up and be a leader. You have the strength to do what is right regardless of who is watching. You are beautiful and smart, no matter what anyone else says. Be confident and make a difference in the lives of the people around you. Don't worry about what anyone else thinks. The transition from high school to college is a culture shock. You don't have to worry about the same things anymore. It's okay to have an opinion and your own style. You will find that your peers don't judge you the same. While learning to be an adult has it's own pressures, the stress of high school is finally gone.
Austin
Don't be afraid to leave your comfort zone. There are many great things to experience in college and it goes by much quicker than you could imagine so push yourself to meet as many new people, participate in as many activities, clubs, sports, and social events as possible. When it comes to academics, don't settle and take work lightly or procrastinate. Set a strong work ethic from the beginning and push yourself to stay on your work and complete all assignments on time and to your best ability. Finally, I would tell myself to start thinking about your career early on and network as much as possible. Don't find out when it is too late that you do not know what you want to do with your major. Job shadowing, internships, informational interviews all are key aspects to finding a career that best fits you and your personality. Finally, enjoy your time at college. Studying and hard work is essential but don't forget to have fun and enjoy college while you are there, because it will be over before you know it. Good luck!
Jessica
As a college junior looking back at myself in high school, I now can see things I wish I had done differently. I would not be quite as serious and I would not worry as much as I did about keeping my 4.0 GPA. I thought that joining extra cirricular activities , in high school,would take time away from my studies. While that may be true, there are other benefits to be gained . I would encourage my high school self to step out of my comfort zone, and reach beyond my circle of friends. Had I risked trying out for a sport, or joining a club, I would of learned things about myself and others that I wasn't able to learn from my textbooks. I would of gained self confidence and leadership skills that I know would of helped make my transition to college easier. I would of learned how to handle myself in different situations and most importantly I would have come to believe that I can trust in myself.
Makena
Looking back on my college experience I would say I recieved a very well-rounded and challenging education. I found that much of my success had to do with my professors working with me outside of the classroom, as well as the small class size. Being in a small classroom I felt as if I could be heard by my professor as well as my students. If I were to go back in time and talk to myself about college life and making the transition I would tell myself that it was one of the best, as well as the hardest, decisions I have made in my life thus far. I would tell myself to pick a college that was extremely persistant in trying to find out if I had chosen where I would like to attend college. This persistance is what contributes to a great transition into life as an independent as well as feeling like you belong on that campus. I would address the fact that going to college is what brought out my inner voice. It helped me see the place I hold in this world, and how important it is to know your own opinion.
Carrie
-Life after high school is not a race to get done with school as fast as possible and get a job if that job is one that you dread getting up to go to every day.
-Find something you are passionate about and then figure out what it takes to be successful doing that.
-Take your time. Select a path that you believe will fulfill your dreams and follow it for a while. If you find it is not fueling your soul, select another path, regardless of how close you are to being "done" on the first path.
-Life is too short to make your choices based on someone elses dreams. Listen to your gut instinct and fulfill your own dreams.
-Drink it all in! Experience dorm life, make new friends, get involved in student groups related to your chosen field, take advantage of the activities, facilities and opportunities available at your school. You are paying for the experience and all the resources available at the campus, so utilize them. Make connections with others in your field, including students, faculty and experts in the community. Those connections may help you land the perfect job some day!
Michaela
College is a nervewracking but exciting step in your life! If I can give you a simple piece of advice, it would be to keep an open mind. You will meet a variety of people and experience many, many different things. So stay open to new things, and step out of your comfort zone because you never know what great thing can come out of doing so. College will be the time of your life, so make friends, go to sporting events, join a club, and challenge yourself to become a better person everyday. You will do great!
Julie
There is a lie that many people believe. I used to be one of the believers in this lie and so I am intimately acquainted with it and the damage it does. The lie is simply this: the pain of transformation is worse than the pain of not being transformed. In other words, the easy way out in the present is more comfortable than going through the necessary hard work to reach your goals for the future. The problem with this thinking is that when you reach the “future,” you realize your current situation is most definitely worse and more painful than the transformation process you avoided. This little nugget of truth is what I would tell myself as a high school senior, and I would advise myself to stay in school even if I didn’t feel like it.
After high school, I assumed I could drop out of college because it required a lot of discipline, and I didn’t know what I wanted to be, and I was exhausted from high school. I lamented that college was too hard and too long. Years later, I realized that yes, college is hard - but being uneducated is definitely harder!
Jonathan
Dear slightly younger self, have a plan and run with it. There are too many instances when a lack of goal setting has led to a wandering. A wandering is though necessary to the place that one must come to, yet the awareness of the potential to meander off onto a less rewarding environment is highly possible. Distractions along the way easily indulged offer brief satisfaction, but ultimate disapointment. With that, younger self, find the balance. The university is the place to orient yourself with the perfect mediation between gaining life experience through the fields in which could push you in the direction of deeper understanding and potential opportunity for participating in helping create a global shift. The opportunity to approach life with the right perspective to embrace hardships and trials, yet pursue an artistic passion and academic knowledge await with the right discipline, tools, and resources already at your disposal if you choose to wield them.
Melissa
Dear past Melissa,
As you are about to enter college, make sure you have all of your forms turned in! Especially financial aid forms. You don't want to make the same mistake I did by not submitting them on time and end up not going for the first year. Also, be sure to get to know your counselor! They will help you so much. If it weren't for my counselor, I would be so lost and confused, even more than I am right now. But overall, enjoy college. It will be one of the best experiences of your life. And beware of not having too much fun, because you will need to make time for studying! You don't want to fail out of college now do you?
Sincerely, Future Melissa
Jovelle
The number one advice I would give my high school senior self is to pick the college that offers the BEST financial aid throughout the four years of college. I did the mistake in believing that what I was given in Freshmen year would continue on for the following years. Because of this mistake, I had to work constantly, averaging twenty hours a week and balancing 15-18 credit hours. This is not the college experience that I thought I would have. By informing my past self about seeing the big picture, I am enabling her to have a true college experience---free of sweat, tears, and exhaustion.
Cecilia
WOW. It is harder than it seems. Make sure to always have an extra $500 hidden in your wallet, just in case. And make sure to buy a few boxes of tissue paper, homesickness is real and it happens at the most unexpected times. Its okay to bomb the first exam, you'll get them next time! Don't have sex on your roommates bed, people hate when you do that, oh so I have heard. Drinking isn't fun when you get a MIP or get arrested, so if you are planning of doing , be smart about it. And last but not least. DON'T DRINK AND DRIVE!!! Also, professors are secretly ninjas/mind readers and they know when you have plagerized. Never doubt there skills!
Diana
Something I wish I could tell my high school self is prepare yourself. College is a life changing experience, both academically and socially. You will study...a lot. You will participate in many extracurricular activities. You will meet a variety of people from all around the world. And lastly, you will serve. Serve your new community both on and off campus.
It will require more ambition than you can ever imagine. Know what you want, make goals for yourself, both long and shortime. For example, a secret piece of advice, schedual out your day. I mean everything; the days you go to class, your designated study time, exercise, eat, sleep. (You get the idea. ) This will help you manage your time, especially in the beginning of your first year, when everything is hectic. Eventually, you will learn what works best for you.
You will be tempted to study all day long, but don't forget to make friends. Get involved!! Join clubs, be active in your residence hall, and find organizations that interest you. Whenever you see an new event check it out, you will not regret it.
This will be your new home, so make the best of it.
Stephen
Apply to more than three schools and for more than only a couple of scholarships. Push hard in your classes in high school and develop better study habits. Save your money; you will need it later for more important reasons.
Samantha
I would tell myself not to expect so much from myself right from the getgo. There is no way that I could be involved in as many things as I was in high school, not only because you have to dedicate more time to studying, but you have to allow yourself time to adjust to all of the new surroundings. New friends will come in time as everyone else gets more adjusted with their schedules and teachers really do want you to succeed in their class. I would remind myself to take it easy and focus on doing the best that I can in school, but at the same time, enjoy this new chapter in my life. The college transition is new and scary all at once and everyone is feeling nervous and a little homesick. The college experience will get better with time and new studying habbits will be made. It is important to be open to all new and different types of teaching and people to allow for the best college experience possible! Don't be afriad and do the best that you can do!
McKenna
I would tell myself to enjoy every moment that I am given. That sums up everything that one needs to suceed in a transition. To enjoy life is such an easy thing to say, but just as I learned last semester, it is a very hard concept to live out- especially during a transition. Had I truly focused on enjoying my first semester, I would have had a better roommate experience, I would have attained better grades, and I would have been ultimately happier. Now that it is second semester, I have taken my own advice of enjoying every moment. I am proud to say that already I am focused on my studies, I am getting along with my roommate really well, and I am truly happy.
Mackenzie
Hold on tight—because your whole world is about to change. Food: your responsibility; money: your responsibility; getting out of bed: you guessed it, your responsibility. Mom isn’t there to be the “back-up alarm” and your sister won’t be there when you lock yourself out, again. You’re almost out of suburbia but you’ll miss it (just a little). So delight in your mom’s cooking and give your dad a hug because their world is changing too. Instead of complaining about carting the laundry up one flight of stairs, savor it, four flights of stairs or a full elevator is so much worse. Relish the time you have with your childhood friends when they’re just down the road because Skype with a slow internet connection just isn’t the same. Don’t forget to call Grandma, she misses you and she has some great stories to tell. Most importantly, make mistakes because it might be exactly what you need. If not, at least you’ll have a great story to share.
Fausto
High school, a time that many people look back upon and wish they could go back and change it all. I would also change many things. If I could go back in time and talk to myself as a high school senior I would give myself two great pieces of advice. First I would tell myself enjoy high school while you're still there. I am not talking about parties and friends, I am talking about joining different types of clubs and activities in high school. In high school I was only part of two activities and looking back and knowing what I know now, I would have joined numerous and at least one more sport. The second piece of advice I would give myself would be to set priorities and think about my future. As a high school senior you can quickly lose sight of what is important and beneficial in the long run and what seems like a good idea at that present moment. Looking back at my senior year in high school I would change several things, but overall my high school senior year was one of the greatest years of my young life.
Samuel
I would tell myself not to stress out and worry as much and that everything will be taken care of in due time. Also i would like to have told myself the importance of getting college textbooks ahead of time and to have saved up money for that purpose. I would have also liked to know what was all involved in getting a degree from college and the specific classes needed to be taken. I would have also liked to have told myself to not wait till the last minute and to check my email from my college sooner than a week before classes but months ahead of time instead or as soon as it becomes available.
Jeffery
If I could go back and speak with my high-school self, there is a lot I would say. First, I would keep myself on track to graduate from my high-school, instead of dropping out to work full-time and pursuing my G.E.D. I would tell myself not to "take a break" and work for a few years before enrolling in college and would get right on track. I would tell myself to study more and fight less. I would tell myself to slow down, and enjoy what's left of my childhood. I would tell myself to stop smoking and tell your family that you love them everyday you have the privalige to see them. I'd tell myself not to be in such a hurry to move out of my parents, to stick around and save up some money as well as enjoy time with them. Although there is alot I would tell myself to change where I stand today, I accept every challenge in my life completely and stand tall in the face of adversity, and that, I would thank myself for. ~J.N.S
taylor
College should be fun and enjoyable as well as difficult and challenging. As a high school student, I did not recognize as much as I should have that a nursing degree, though very rewarding, would be a rigorous major that requires ample amounts of studying and preparation. It is critical to stay on top of your work even if that means staying up late and skipping the hall social, basketball game, or just a movie with friends. Schooling is the main focus of college but on the same page, it should be fun. I believe that it is much harder than I realized to find a balance between keeping in touch with old friends, a campus job, schoolwork, and making new friends. I wish I would have known that college was going to be much harder trying to even out my time in all that I need to get accomplished. My main advice I would give myself is to remain positive and know that the end of the journey will only be that much more rewarding.