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My first day in college People have life experiences that hold their strongest memories. They may be bad or good memories, however, there must be a spectacular aspect about the subject element of the experience that captures the memory and rekindles its flames. Such was my first day in college, a day that I eagerly anticipated, with joy and uncertainty. I gladly anticipated the day because of the social title that I would gain for joining the university because most of my peers derived little pleasure from academic achievements and rarely qualified for, and attained university education.
I would therefore be one of the few youths in the locality to join the university, the highest recognized academic institution. My feelings were however mixed with anxiety of freedom from parental control and separation from my friends, people that had become very close to my life and with whom I had shared my weakness for social support. My younger sister, then in elementary school, particularly noted my unstable state and teased me for behaving like a little child. She even offered to travel with me to take care of me in the new environment.
It was finally my reporting day and I had to take the step into my new life. I had packed all my belongings the previous night and was ready to bid my family goodbye. Leaving home was however, a painful experience and I broke into tears, of pain and isolation, for fear of never seeing my family again. Even my mother’s consolation that they would occasionally visit me or that I was free to visit them over the weekends would not ease my overwhelming pain. She then drove me to college, in her favorite car, and I could feel the transition in my life as we passed the city centre into the college’s main campus.
The roads were full with parents, guardians, and relatives driving their loved ones for registration. The traffic was particularly heavy because the college is the largest in the state with the highest number of students. We already felt intense exhaustion by the time we reached the main campus’ reception and the news that my course’s registration was done in a different campus greatly disappointed both of us. This meant bearing another busy traffic before a jammed process for completing the registration that was only partly online.
Free interaction among students as everyone was eager to socialize however relieved my tension and I started appreciating the new environment and overcoming the anxiety that I previously felt. We were then taken to our hostels by the school’s orientation team before being introduced to social clubs and organizations within the school. That evening, I attended a Christian Union fellowship, an association of Christians, and appreciated their love and kindness. I also liked their programs and initiatives that promised to help us settle down and to guide our social lives.
I therefore developed some hope that the fellowship would help me to overcome my fears and to develop a new social network. By the end of the day, a day that promised significant social instability, I had the confidence that like at home, the college would be a hospitable and conducive environment for me. It was such a swift change in perception and the final confidence that makes it my most memorable day.
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