Last year, I spent my freshman year marooned in the corner dorm of the remote BC island called Newton. Duchesne sits at the bottom of a hill, in the shadows of the hallowed Boston College Law Schoolβa far cry and an uncomfortable bus ride from the Heights. There is a certain allegiance that literally everyone finds in common among Newton alumni. I could never wrap my head around it. Why is it so exciting to bond over unfortunate isolation, uneventful weekends, and uncomfortable commutes?
When I heard about sophomore housing, I became officially disillusioned with BCβs housing. Forget finals, the BC housing process is when your mental health will truly be put to the test. As a second-semester freshman, I watched my friends and cohorts experience the traumatizing days leading up to housing decision. Suddenly, the entire freshman class was in a whirlwindβestablished friend-groups were in flux, meltdowns in the Rat were semi-regular, and the topic of conversation at every party was the coveted βeight-man.β The concept of the βeight-manβ still eludes me. I understand the appealβbigger common areas, larger social circles, kitchenettes, etc.βbut I did not want to deal with the pressure of fabricating friendships out of desperation only to fill this quota.
The selection process made me imagine a middle school gym class when the teacher orders everyone to make their own teams. Before the teacher could blow the whistle, friends already make eye-contact and strategies are set. Swarms of gym pennies scramble to slide into lines, forming unexpected alliances and betraying friendships in split-second decisions. Katie switching groups would be the hot-topic at lunch that day. Add six years and a βpick-timeβ and you have BCβs sophomore housing process. I simply did not want to play the game, so I opted out.
My best friend was a sophomore at the time, and she was looking for people to live with her in an off-campus house. I jumped at the opportunity, and chose to take myself out of the middle school gym situation. I signed a lease, and moved into my new home this past fall. Some of my friends thought that it was strange that I chose to take myself off-campus after my grievances with the isolation of the βNewton Life.β I saw it as protecting myself from the fate of CoRo and overthrowing the misconceptions that I had about how I was supposed to βdoβ college. I knew that I was deviating from the normal sophomore experience, but I took a leap of faith over Commonwealth Avenue and a few doors down Lake Street to live with my best friend and five other juniors that I had never met.
Now, every day, I get to go home to my own room, a full kitchen, and my best friends. I have learned how to live a (semi)functional adult life on my own. I expanded my social circle by living with people who have already been through sophomore year and can share their sage advice. I can also visit Walsh if I miss my sophomore friends and the dorm-life.
There is something about the physical act of stepping off campus that makes it easier for me to break out of the βBC Bubbleβ and explore. It gives me the Β sense of independence that I craved. That being said, sometimes I do feel like I am missing out on the βtypicalβ sophomore social scene, but really, who cares? By leaving campus, I figured out what I need out of college, and I found my place at BC.