| ARCHIVE
:: FEBRUARY 2003 :: ON CAMPUS
The
Search
For True Love
College
Is a Chance
To Take Risks
And Discover Your Passion
By
HARLAN COHEN
SPECIAL TO THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Valentine’s season
has arrived. Love is running wild in the residence halls, in the
classrooms, in the cafeterias, in the libraries, and in poorly lit
corners on campuses across the country. For those with someone special
to spoil—there is no greater time of year. This month, a lucky few
might even find their true love, a soulmate, and start looking toward
a life after graduation.
This is, in a way,
what you’re supposed to do in college—discover a passion that
will be with you for the rest of your life. After four years on
campus, you might not have a job lined up, or even have
qualifications for a particular line of work. But at the least, you
should leave with some sense of what it is you really love to do.
College is filled with opportunities to discover that passion. It
could happen anywhere, or anytime—during orientation week, or
during the commencement speech, in Conversational French 201, or
waiting for food in the cafeteria. The key is to let it happen, by
being willing to explore, change, take risks and follow your heart.
No Chemistry
Erin Nigh thought
she had found her passion in seventh grade. More than anything, she
wanted to be a doctor. So when she started as a freshman at Indiana
University five years later, she set out to do just that, majoring
in biology.
But two years into
her pre-med program, Erin felt like she was on a blind date gone
bad. She and biology didn’t have much chemistry after all. “I
hated it,” she recalls.
That’s when Ms.
Nigh contemplated what would be the biggest risk of her college
career. After two years of taking an intense load of science
courses—and doing quite well in them—she wanted to explore other
options. She made an appointment with her college adviser and talked
about the possibility of pursuing a business degree instead of
medicine.
Her adviser urged
her not to make the change, but to stick it out in pre-med. After
all, she was good at biology and halfway done with her coursework
already. Her friends from her pre-med courses didn’t want her to
switch either. As for Erin’s parents (her mom is a nurse), they
just wanted their daughter to be sure she was making the right
decision.
Erin knew she was.
“I took a risk after two years and switched my major to
business,” she says. “In the end—I’m really happy.”
The secret to
taking risks in college is to start slowly. At first, it can be
daunting to think about making big changes when you’re just
getting used to your surroundings. But understand that taking a risk
may end up making you more comfortable in your surroundings, and the
more comfortable you can get, the easier it will be to leap into
other unfamiliar, uncomfortable situations, and take more risks.
The summer after
switching to a more satisfying major, in fact, Erin left the comfort
of Bloomington, Ind., and headed off to Spain for a study-abroad
program to finish her foreign-language requirement. “That was a
big risk,” she recalls. “Where I’m from, a lot of people
don’t even go to college. A lot of people [at home] didn’t
understand or accept the decision” to go abroad.
But Erin didn’t
let others sway her. She kept putting herself out there, taking
risks and seeking out new experiences. After coming back from Spain,
the next fall, Erin took an internship in Washington, working at
Indiana Sen. Richard Lugar’s office. The internship was cut short
following the anthrax scares, but she found the whole experience
fascinating. And each risk she took, each outside experience she
sought gave her confidence to try new things.
Erin didn’t
shrink from checking out new extracurricular activities on her own.
She approached the introductory meetings with the understanding that
“If I don’t like it, I can leave.” But she never left. In some
cases, she would end up seeing someone from one of her classes. And
if she didn’t see anyone she knew, she’d bring a friend or two
along to the next meeting. As a result, a lot of her friends got
involved in similar clubs and activities, and they were able to
enjoy the experience together.
‘Take the
Plunge’
Her advice to
incoming students: “Remember you’re not alone—especially as a
freshman. No one knows where they are and what is out there. Just
take the plunge, knowing that someone else will be there in your
position.”
Erin’s
risk-taking hasn’t been without a price. As a result of switching
majors midstream, she has had to attend school throughout the summer
to catch up on required coursework. She has also had to carry a
heavy courseload through the school year to stay on schedule to
graduate in four years.
But
there have been unexpected benefits as well. Last summer, while
working on an intensive group project for the business school, she
met someone—a boy, who would later become her boyfriend. Their
group ended up getting one of the top grades in the class. Erin, it
turns out, found her passion, and her Valentine.
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