2012 Senior Trustees Dinner at Champlain College

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I had the honor of speaking at the 2012 Champlain College Trustees Dinner for graduating seniors a couple weeks back, representing the Division of Business. I was unable to get a hold of video footage for the event, however I managed to snag some photos that Stephen Mease took and posted on the Champlain College Facebook Page. Below is my speech for those of you that missed the event. Just picture me speaking it in front of 200 students and trustees in a really awesome tone and you won’t even need the video footage! Here it goes:

As graduation grows near, the cliché of “finding yourself”’ keeps coming to mind, wondering if I have finally achieved it after four years at Champlain College. What does that even mean? “Finding yourself?” Should I have been lost to begin with?

Well, I suppose as a young freshman, first stepping foot on Champlain soil, I did feel a little lost. Though there were many things I could not find, like where my first class in Joyce Hall was located, or where I put that really expensive Marketing book, there were many things I did find.

I found that making friends is a lot easier than it sounds—all you need is the same area code or a really awesome band tee and BOOM, you’re friends! I know because this is how I found my roommates. The three of us have lived together since sophomore year and all it took was one simple moment.

Junior year, we took a break from living with each other to study abroad. During this break, I found that it’s still just as simple to make friends, even if you speak totally different languages—all you need to have in common is that you’re both eating a sandwich. Silly, I know, but this is how I made my first friends abroad.

So if I can find friends under ridiculously simple circumstances, how hard could it be to find myself? To find something is to “discover or perceive it by chance or unexpectedly.” I’ll tell you what’s unexpected is reflecting back on freshman year all-nighters during finals week and saying, “Hey, that was fun!” Even more unexpected is wishing I still had a pass to the dining hall to get a hold of those deep-fried Snickers bars. Who would have thought that was a good idea?

As I think about these simple moments that made up my college experience, I wonder what I must have been thinking as a young high school student, about to embark on the world of higher education. I definitely had dreams and perceptions of what this exciting new life at Champlain might be like. But to be honest, I know that my college experience was BETTER than anything I could have dreamed up in my head.

How do I know this? Because I found everything I was looking for, but also everything I wasn’t looking for. It’s this piece of what you’re not looking for that we can’t possibly place in our wildest dreams. So thank you, Champlain College, because each and every moment and experience here has somehow helped me find what I didn’t even know I needed. You helped me find “myself.”

I really appreciate having the opportunity to speak and I wish all graduating seniors the best of luck in their future endeavors!

A Thank You to Champlain College

I wanted to thank Champlain College for both allowing and encouraging me to have the amazing experience of studying abroad. The college’s study abroad program has always proven exceptional in its consistent marketing and recruitment. If I ever had any questions whatsoever, the coordinators working for the program were there to help with immediate responses and moral support.

I also wanted to thank Champlain for featuring my blog in the International Education section of their website!

Exchange Programs

Champlain College’s Exchange Programs allow Burlington students to spend a semester immersed in another culture as they live and study at one of our exchange institutions. This also an excellent opportunity to diversify our Burlington campus as we welcome students from our exchange partners for a semester or full academic year.

Check out the blog of Brittany Leaning ’12 who is studying at Champlain’s Exchange Program in the Netherlands: http://ventureabroad.wordpress.com/

For more information on third party/exchange programs such as the one I did in Amsterdam, or to see where Champlain mentioned Venture Abroad, click the link and check it out here.

Pre-departure Homesickness

This weekend I drove up to Vermont to see my Champlain friends for one last time before I depart. Once I hit Interstate 89, I was awestruck by the breathtaking Vermont mountains I once knew and loved. It had been far too long since I had last seen them. The smile on my face grew larger and larger as I got nearer and nearer to the little city that will always have a piece of my heart.

Walking through campus, I realized I would miss the buildings where my classes should be held. I would miss the library where I used to work. I would even miss the dining hall where each of my meals were monotonously consumed.

Hearing my roommates talk about the upcoming semester made me feel a little melancholy. They will be living with someone else, planning exciting adventures with them and not me. I started to feel like I might be missing out on life in Burlington in the fall, but then I remembered where I am going. This is just another chapter. I will make new friends and have new experiences that are even better than any routine I might have had before. Breaking routine has never bothered me; it’s tradition that I will miss.

I’ll miss apple picking and Vermont foliage. I’ll miss jumping in Lake Champlain, Halloween weekend, and birthday celebrations. Some will be missed physically, while others are missed emotionally.

The Champlain Ski and Ride club will go on without me. Watching snowboard videos with the past President of the Club this weekend made me realize I will miss that too.

The fact of the matter is, I have not graduated. I have not transferred. I have not dropped out. I WILL be back. Yes, life in Vermont will go on without me, but life in Amsterdam is just waiting for me to arrive!