At the end of my senior year in college, I was
terrified. I had people warning me about
this thing called “The Real World,” which was not an outdated television show,
but instead this scary abstract idea of the dark beyond that exists after I
earned my diploma. This was the world of
bills, rent, full-time work, and building your own furniture to look like
everyone else’s. Up until that moment,
it was a distant worry, something I’d have to deal with “one day when I get old,”
but as my senior year ended, the end of my life was about to begin.
I’m here to tell you that the Real World is fucking amazing. Sorry for the spoiler alert, but graduating
from college rocks. There’s no need to
sign up for a grad school program that you aren’t sure about in order to
prolong your perceived downfall, because your life is about to get a whole lot
better.
I think a common misconception about the Real World is that once
you walk through its doors, you automatically transform into some sort of old
person who goes to bed at 9:00 and eats bowls of steamed vegetables for every
meal. With maybe a plain baked potato
every now and then for variety.
The truth is that you don’t really change all that much
after you get that diploma. You’re still
pretty much the same bundle of problems with hopes and dreams. Sure, you get a few more responsibilities now
that you’re on your own, but you lose a lot of responsibility as well.
Gone are the books you are mandated to read on subjects with
feigned interest. Gone are the essays
and tests and projects and the nights reserved for all previously stated
tragedies. Gone are the hungover
mornings spent in the library, huddled over a study guide for a test scheduled
later that day. Gone is the stress and
the perpetual sense of urgency that comes with weekly deadlines. When you are in school, there is always
something you should be doing instead of having fun.
The Real World is different.
The Real World offers you a chance to relax. There are no surprise tests or assignments
that you can’t handle. If you think you
experienced freedom like none other during your transition from high school to
college, you are about to be pleasantly surprised. In the Real World, freedom is given out like
dumpling samples at the H-Mart. The only
deadlines you have are work-related, and can be confined to the hours of 9AM
and 5PM (unless you work one of those insane jobs, then your life is pretty
much over in the Real World…but then you might be rich). Outside of those hours, you are free to plank
on mountains and in refrigerators, whatever it is that kids these days are up
to.
The point is that you finally have untainted time. You may pay bills and work long hours, but at
the end of the day, you have your own time.
Some people use this time to meet new people, to get drunk 7 days a
week, or even to start a blog. Just the
idea of doing whatever I want in my time makes me excited.
I could travel to faraway lands, or use my time to help
others. I could finally write that novel
I’ve been dying to get onto paper, or actually read for pleasure. I could sit in my pajamas all weekend and
watch something on my roommate’s Netflix.
You shouldn’t be afraid of the Real World because once you
enter it, you are finally free. The only
institution that has you in its grasp ends at 5PM, and you can finally begin to
follow your dreams.
Dream big and wish for more than just steamed vegetables and
baked potatoes.
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