You know, I've been kind of bitter at Colgate for a while, but this has been a summer of making peace with things. Perhaps it's just because I'm tired of being angry. But it's also partially putting things in perspective.
Last semester I spent a lot of time in a sort of oblivious fog, and I walked around campus without even seeing it. It lasted about as long as my anger lasted. But at some point in the middle of this summer I stepped out of Lathrop and really saw the chapel for the first time in a long time. And it seemed so big and beautiful and
real. Maybe it was because I was coming outside after scanning pictures for hours, I was almost surprised that the whole world wasn't made up of pixels.
Jason had to move up to Curtis Hall recently, as all the summer residents at Colgate do at the end of the summer. Three floors up, at the top of the hill, the view out his window is stunning. It reminds me of that feeling that I used to get back in fifth floor East, of flying over the hills. That heady feeling that comes from being high up in the air, close to the moon. I'm sad that I can't ever live in one of those rooms anymore. But I'm glad I'm living somewhere where there are buildings that have windows that can give you that feeling.
Last semester I kept wondering whether, had I known about all these changes, it would have affected my decision to come to Colgate. Sometimes, in my head, or aloud to other people, I'd talk about how if I'd known about all this I might not have come here at all, as though this is some threat to the school, that I could have gone somewhere else, that I could have transferred. The old "they'll be sorry" mentality. But saying that hurt me and no one else. What if I'd never come here? Every time I say it my heart aches with the negation of all that I've become over the past two years, all the people I've met and all the experiences I've had and all that I've learned from them. Would I have met good people and had good experiences elsewhere? Sure. But I wouldn't trade
these particular experiences, now that I've had them, for any others I can imagine.
For a while, as I saw the tour groups walking around campus, I'd think about what I would say to them if I were leading the tour -- the honest truth, not the happy admissions bullshit. I had it all planned out. But then, one day last week, some people in a tour said hi to me as I walked by. "Do you like Colgate?" they asked. I smiled. "Yeah. Yeah, I like Colgate." I have my beefs with the place, and if you give me a soapbox for long enough I can pick it to bits. But, the short answer? I like Colgate. It's not even a choice anymore. Colgate is a part of me.