I should be writing my methods material for the study that I
am planning on launching this fall for my master’s thesis en pursuit towards my
PhD in social psychology. I should probably study for the two finals I have
next week. And yet, I have this nagging bit of nostalgia to that summer that I studied
abroad with Semester at Sea. As I wear my Summer 2010 SAS voyage shirt (the
white one with the flags of all of the countries that we visited while spending
68 days exploring the world).
FYI. This post is inspired by Anna G., a friend who recently
updated her blog to talk about her and her boyfriend’s journey after SAS and
where they are at now. If you know her, find her blog and see what she wrote.
It is a great read.
Anyways, a point that I do not think Semester at Sea uses
enough to recruit new participants is this: the initial lure of Semester at Sea
is the chance to have a comparative study abroad experience. In the relatively short
span of 2-3 months, SAS gives you the chance to observe up to 10 different
perspectives on how to live and how places are more similar than expected. You
can learn from the best professors about some concept relevant to your career
or to better your knowledge, and you leave SAS with the idea that the world is
smaller than you can ever imagine.
That was what I was sold on when I watched the 18 minute
video promoting Semester at Sea in the fall of 2009. That was got me to submit
my deposit, followed my tuition, and the travel and life arrangement that come with
going off the grid for 70 days. I left for Halifax on June 13th,
2010 expecting to see the world.
I came back on August 22nd, 2010 realizing that I
got much more than that. I wish Semester at Sea would have promoted this when I
signed up. It would have made the decision to go that much easier, and the
roadmap to life after SAS that much more understandable. So, for the benefit of
anyone who finds this post, here is what I learned from that summer I decided
to go on a boat for a few months.
1.
Life is always a choice between “roots” and “wings.”
However, no one ever says just how fast people who choose “wings” tend to form
roots. Being in an environment where you are forced to create bonds to survive
and thrive has the byproduct of making long-lasting relationships for when you
return home. It gets glossed over, but some of the best friends that I made in
life came from being in situations that were “adapt or go home” situations.
Semester at Sea started that.
2.
Technology is a tool. Not a crutch. We can survive
without it. Knowing this changes your approach to how you live in the digital
age moving forward. This isn’t to say that we should give up Facebook or
Google, or that the information age is bad. But life is worth living through
your eyes looking outward. Life should not consist of the reflection of a
computer or cell phone screen.
3.
Your environment creates you. Self-determination
only goes as far as the context around you lets it. Building communities that
allow you to function and grow should be the goal of life, and learning the
tools how to do can change the life of you and everyone around you (who lets
it).
4.
Crazy dreams seem less crazy. Once you are given
a chance to live out a dream, newer dreams seem less far-fetched.
5.
Learning that there are people who are similar
to you in that they want to change the world, yet different in how they want to
do so, will forever change who you are, what you want to do, and the mark you
will leave in your life. It will make you a better person in ways you have to
live to believe. No one gets it except for those who have gone through it
themselves.
6.
People are weirder and crazier than what you
think everyone was like in high school. It turns out that everyone actually is
as weird as you are. However, the difference comes from how it is handled and
expressed.
7.
You find out real fast what matters and what
does not. You end up keeping that perspective forever.
8.
It is pragmatic to be kind. It is pragmatic to
help out your friend. It is pragmatic to support someone with the knowledge
that they will help you out someday soon. Pragmatism tends to be related to kindness
and honesty. You learn that first hand when you need someone to be pragmatic
towards you.
9.
Tell your love ones that you love them as often
as you can. Nothing lasts forever, and nothing is guaranteed.
P.S. Thanks, mom and dad!
P.S. Thanks, mom and dad!
10. People
who were the most important entities in your life today can be out of your life
within three months. It is fast and unexpected, and your contact is reduced to
an automated “happy birthday” message on Facebook or an obituary notice. It is
weird, but you find this balance where you aim to make the world a better place
tomorrow while living for today. It is scary and won’t make sense many times.
But every now and then, there will be these moments of deafening clarity where
life makes sense. Those are the moments worth living for. Those are the moments
that come from living. This is what I learned from Semester at Sea.
11. Life
is not worth living in a vacuum. Neither is love. Or friendship. Or business.
12. Semester
at Sea gives you a chance to see the world for what it and the potential for
what it could be. That changes how you view others. That changes who you are
yourself.
13. Finally,
four years ago, 821 individuals left with the goal of changing the world.
Today, many of us are working to do so (via many different paths). Semester at
Sea facilitated this.
This went longer than I planned, but I feel it is worth
writing. If you are thinking of following your dream, do your best to make it
happen. If you are thinking of doing Semester at Sea, do it. Just do it. And if
you find yourself four years later wondering where the time went, take a moment
to reflect and give thanks.
Time to head back to work.
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