“You’re so cynical today,” said my friend from high school at brunch today.
“I swear she’s not usually this cynical,” he told his friend from college.
Before sophomore year even began, I promised myself that I would not experience “sophomore slump,” which is characterized by a drop in GPA, a feeling of disconnection from college life, and the idea that the second year of college fails to live up to the first. I made a five-year plan for myself, mapped out my class schedules until graduation, made a spreadsheet of graduate school scholarships and fellowships I wanted to apply to, and kept a list of running achievements and honors I could ever potentially boast about in my life. It was my supposedly fail-proof plan to keep myself on track. Freshman year was good, but sophomore year would be better, I decided.
And so, it didn’t make sense for me to be up at 4am last night, feeling all sorts of misery, and blasting Selena Gomez’s “Who Says” on repeat. Honestly, did I need a Disney Channel star to tell me that I “have every right to live a beautiful life?” Apparently, yes I do. Seriously. Listen to the song. The lyrics aren’t that much better than Rebecca Black’s “Friday.”
Anyway, I decided that next summer in 2012, I’m going to spend my entire summer in Paris, studying French at the Sorbonne, and studying creative writing and French with the Columbia program at Reid Hall (if I get in). If I can fit in an archaeological dig to participate in for a few weeks (and get into a program), I’m going to do that too.
It’s not a particularly practical decision to make for the summer before senior year of college. French isn’t the most thriving or useful language nowadays. Writing with great French writers will not make me a great writer. I probably couldn’t last forever in an archaeological dig — unless they let me bring an air mattress. Before the senior year of high school, everyone I knew was scrambling to find an internship or research opportunity that appeared impressive on paper. In college, most people are trying to find an internship that leads to a job.
I had planned to give everything up for the pursuit of a career in fashion magazines. Study. Intern. Graduate. Work.
When I was little, I dreamed of writing novels in Paris and discovering ancient ruins in swamplands. I wrote terribly simplistic poetry after school every day, and read National Geographic voraciously, way more than I read any fashion magazine. There was a world beyond that I could not comprehend. The truth is, I couldn’t even comprehend the world I was living in.
This summer, I’ll be at Vogue and Teen Vogue, being a good career girl because working at a fashion magazine has been my dream since forever.
But I had other dreams too. Some dreams will never into fruition — like being Aaron Carter’s backup dancer (hey Bieber, I’m still available for hire). But why not spend a summer in Paris? Why not be an archaeologist for a few weeks? Why not overload on baguettes? I’m only young once. Do I not feel an inexplicable joy in my anthropology and art history classes? Didn’t I dream of Pompeii and Giza and Babylon? That must mean something.
Today, I spend the day with some friends from high school. Apart from eating really good food (croissant French toast from Danal, linguine with sea urchin from Basta Pasta, Momofuku Milk Bar crack pie, gelato at St. Mark’s — I will gladly eat instant ramen for the next two weeks), we talked about sophomore slump.
People from our high school were failing their classes in college. They were taking the year off to find a break from academics. They were panicking about summer plans, study abroad programs, and the awful notion about finding a calling in life.
Let’s be real. We have it pretty good.
But instead of trivializing everyone’s problems, I’m going to admit that we’re all struggling inside.
I don’t really know what I’m trying to say here (wow, I can’t even write anything with a point anymore), except I remember how hopeful we were when we graduated high school.
And here we are halfway through, and we just figured out that there may be nothing to figure out.