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The writing on the wall: A letter to a freshman

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Ceremony

Ceremony

I see my mom. s he’s the photo cut from the prayer book she gave me before my own college move-in.

Welcome to the pages of The o bserver, and welcome to the tri-campus. We’re so glad you’re here.

When I think about move-in, I imagine freshmen unpacking their things. I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but many of those posters, twinkling lights and cheekily worded flags are about to fall off the sticky s outh b end summer walls, over and over again.

d uring my first week on campus, I made one of my best friends by asking her about the Pinterest collage on the wall. o ne of the photos was a woman with dark hair in a long white dress, running through a flower petal lane. Another featured a yellow “cool bus” with a sneaky missing “s.” m y own first-year decor was nothing to write home about. b ut one meditative day during my sophomore year, I spent a few hours collecting free posters and slips of paper, anything that I’d call art: a well-designed coaster, a ticket stub, a poem inside a campus publication, a photo of the m ichigan lilacs, a forgotten sticky note.

It’s a habit I picked up from a summer roommate on m ackinac Island. b ut it’s not new. I’ve always liked to treasure things.

When I look at my cancerous collage now, my eyes brim with a glinting kaleidoscope of memory. I’ve diagnosed myself: I’m a walking symbolism machine.

I see my good friend, newspaper mentor and former d allas summer roommate. s he’s in the soda can sticker that says “It’s called pop.”

I see another friend and o bserver editor, now abroad. h e’s the gradient oval that screams

“ h I s T or Y I s F re AKI n G coo L. -LIZZ o .” c ut with yearning hands, I see every newspaper masthead I ever wanted to write for. r ight now, I see all of you too — students on the tri-campus and especially the c lass of 2027.

I see one of the very first friends I met at n otre d ame in the rainbow watercolor paper she once gave me. Another hides in the Florida postcard.

I see a little girl who held onto her 2017 n otre d ame football ticket, hoping she could one day attend. (That was back when this University still had paper tickets.)

A little antique “Letter c arrier” badge graces the behemoth’s top left corner. That’s the one that always falls down. I pick it up, again and again. It torments me, reminding me of what I love to do. And I just keep writing letters to the world. “The world never wrote me,” as e mily d ickinson would say. I think that’s my next addition, a page from her poetry book.

A smattering of pressed flowers makes me smile too, although they remind me that some beautiful things don’t last forever. The faded memory contains a wonder all its own.

You’re hidden away on a cardboard rectangle with black-ink type set, a quote from Jack London that reads: “I would rather be ashes than dust! I would rather that my spark should be stifled by dry rot. I would rather be a superb meteor, every atom of me in magnificent glow, than a sleepy and permanent planet. The proper function of man is to live, not to exist.” d uring your time here, you will be scared. You will be lonely. You will be angry. You might learn — if you haven’t already — that caring deeply means you get hurt. n ever apologize for those things that set your heart alight. They are your greatest strength. e nroll in the club. s end the letter. c all your grandpa. Talk to your dorm custodian. s tart the petition. s ign up for the retreat. b elly laugh. Go to office hours with the professor you admire. b e the friend that suggests dining hall soft serve, with sprinkles. Take the challenging class. Learn how to box. s lay the Jabberwocky. Join the newspaper! b ut that’s addressed by another sticky note on the wall, the one that says:

I’m no philosophy major, and I couldn’t tell you the precise difference between living and existing. s till, I see each one of the first-year students in these words. It’s the best advice I can offer.

These will be some of the shortest and fullest four years of your life. There’s going to be a lot of things to tape to your wall.

Will you be ashes or dust?

Whatever you’re passionate about, don’t shy away from the fire.

Want to know the real writing on the wall? The truth that takes more courage to read?

I can’t promise you it will be easy. It’s worth it. e ven as a senior, I admit I’m still figuring it out. e ven working a job I’ve always wanted, I’m still just learning how to swim.

Flowers duck-taped to my wall like me and you. Yeah, life is far from perfect, but I think it’s better to display the gray strip holding it all together. Flowers are pretty, but let’s not pretend we can beat gravity.

Unironically, the sticky note also includes a crossed-out line, a failed attempt at writing it. I promise that no one has it all together. I certainly don’t.

We’re learning. Isn’t that a beautiful thing? Growing pains are worth it. A little longing is good for body and soul.

Welcome to the tri-campus. If you’re worried about making friends, just ask your section mates about their wall decor. It worked for me. And if you want your own o bserver byline to hang on the wall, check out the s outh d ining h all basement. s end me a carrier pigeon (or an email) anytime. I’ll write you back.

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