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Archived entries for Music

Clutching

I’ve been meaning to write for weeks. So much has happened, and I don’t know where to start. I’ve been listening to Tracy Chapman’s “Fast Car” on repeat. Inexplicably, the lyrics bring me to tears: “You got a fast car. I want a ticket to anywhere. Maybe we make a deal. Maybe together we can get somewhere. Any place is better. Starting from zero got nothing to lose. Maybe we’ll make something. But me myself I got nothing to prove.”

I leave London in a matter of weeks. In most ways, I’m excited to return to the US. I’m looking forward to seeing my friends, to starting grad school, to finally feeling at home. And yet, some part of me wonders what will become of the memories once I leave this place. Despite periods of loneliness and self-doubt — or perhaps because of them — I credit this year with teaching me to be more truthful with myself and less afraid of failure.

I think that it’s hard for many of us to admit that it’s natural to seek external validation. We want to be told that the things we value are as true for others as they are for ourselves. I have come to believe that I will likely always be bound — to some extent — by a need to be loved and understood. And yet, my experiences this year have helped me understand the worth of my own convictions, even as I subject them to constant scrutiny and questioning.


Edinburgh, site of the Fulbright End Cap conference. More photos here.

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Make It Rain

There is a paradox inherent in big cities: the more people there are, the less likely they are to notice or care about each other. Social psychologists have described this phenomenon as deindividuation — immersion in a group to the point where individuals lose their identities and become part of the crowd.

This is particularly true of New York, where people fight for a sense of personal space. New Yorkers generally resist any kind of contact. Even on crowded subways when squishing is inevitable, touching is prohibited and reproachable. Individuals tend to insulate themselves in the world of their magazines and iPods, seemingly unaware of the people around them.

In such a city, kindness is a rare and undervalued virtue. People are too often in a hurry to get where they need to go. If you’re not moving at their pace, you’re in their way. Though I usually enjoy New York’s vibrancy and energy, I feel lonely here on difficult days.


A street musician playing near Penn Station

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Letting Go

I’ve been thinking a lot over the last few days about leaving Princeton, and with it, everything and everyone familiar to me. As much as I know that it’s time to move on, I can’t help feeling overwhelmed by a powerful sense of loss.

There have been moments over the last few years that I have felt miserable here — moments of anxiety, regret, and fatigue that have made me resent my decision to matriculate. And yet, for whatever reason, things seemed to have changed somewhere along the way.

I honestly feel happy here. Maybe I’ve changed.

I’ve met some of the most wonderful friends that I will probably ever have at Princeton. And it scares me that I will very soon be experiencing the rest of my life without them. Maybe we’ll run into each other again somewhere along the way. But will it feel the same? Does it matter if it doesn’t? Why do I have such a hard time letting go?

I can’t stop listening to this song. It explains these feelings better than I can.



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