Thursday, August 13, 2020
dear frosh here are the things we want you to know
dear frosh here are the things we want you to know I asked people around me for advice, tips, tricks, and things to know. I added some of my own advice. Then I organized everything into the following categories. Some of it is excellent advice. Some of it will not make sense at the moment. A lot of items contradict each other. Here is the resulting mostly-unfiltered list of Things We Want You To Know When You Start Attending MIT. MEETING PEOPLE AND DOING THINGS When exchanging phone numbers: save peopleâs names with how you met them and how you relationally know them. Example: âSherlock Holmes, Johnâs Roommate.â This will improve your chances of remembering them later. Take selfies with people as a way to get to know them. Make it a game: try to get a selfie with someone from every state. Make friends with people outside of your living group. Sure, the ones you live with are probably all great, but there might be days when you want to switch it up and hang out with people you donât see every single day. Not to mention itâs a pretty good incentive to actually leave your hall. Of course itâs also super important to make friends with people you do see every day too. So I guess just make friends indiscriminately? Donât be scared of people. Easier said than done, especially when people are often really scary, but important. I kept a list of new experiences/fun things and every week first semester I tried to add to it, and Iâd go through it and try to remember the people who did the things with me. Say yes to things. You will get asked to do many things. You should say yes to most of them. Never say no, especially if it makes for a good story. Unless itâs a matter of health and safety â" in that case, use your best judgment. Itâs okay to say no to things too. Leave space in your schedule for spontaneous things. Donât overcommit at the beginning. Itâs okay to quit activities, especially as a fall-term froshâ"this includes UROPs. Donât be stuck working for a lab you donât want to work for or where the work environment is toxic. Upperclassmen know things but weâre still figuring ourselves out. Weâre not THAT cool. Take what we say with grain of salt. Making friends with other frosh is easy because you can be froshy together, but also make an effort to make friends with the upperclassmen. Thereâs always someone whoâs gone through the same thing you are (or something similar) and usually theyâre happy to help you. Your classmates are all incredibly interesting people. Everyone has a story and you can learn something new from talking to anyone. You wonât be able to talk to everyone, but that midsemester heart-to-heart with that acquaintance from orientation might teach you a whole new way to think about the world. This is true about all people everywhere, but talking to your classmates is a good place to start. Staying in your comfort zone is easy, but you learn the most about yourself and grow as a person when you get out of your comfort zone, so take opportunities to try new things. Finding an activity/club/whatever you love is the best feeling ever because youâve found a group of people who love doing the same thing you love doing, and itâll be a great break from the stress of school. But also donât overcommit and let your health/sanity/grades slip. Doing too many fun activities is still doing too many activities. It takes trial and error to find that happy medium, but youâll find it eventually! Upperclassmen only seem cool because youâre only seeing us after weâve gone through all of the mistakes, epiphanies, awkward encounters, failures, and showerless days that youâre going through. That weâve been through that stuff means two things: (1) most of us are happy (eager, even) to share our experiences, and (2) weâre susceptible to fucking up, too. Collect advice, but your choices should be your own. Open up first. Whether that be your arms, your mind, or your mouth, make yourself just a bit more vulnerable that youâre used toâ"especially now, before youâve settled into a more concrete path. All sorts of interesting people, ideas, adventures, and lessons will fill the space you create. Hug people. Tell them that they can talk to you. Ask detailed questions. Say what you think, even if that is âIâm not sure.â Smile and wave at everyone you know, even if theyâre only acquaintances. Especially if theyâre only acquaintances. You will not agree with everyone you meet. You will not like everyone you meet. Not everyone will agree with or like you. This is a reality of life. Deal with it how you may, but it will always be true. The time you spend agonizing over every person who marginally offends you is time you could be spending doing nice things with people you actually do like. Join a club. Dorms are nice, but clubs will give you more friends that may be a bit different from the people you always hang out with. Having club duties you enjoy can be a good way to force yourself out of bed to go do a thing because you have to, and then realize that you feel happier now that youâve gone and done it. Freshman fall, join all the clubs. Realize that this is unsustainable. Choose only your favorite clubs of the ones you join as the semesters pass. Try not to end up with many more than 1 or 2 if you have leadership roles and/or are actively involved in all of them, or they will start making your schedule require a time turner. Remember, academics still trump clubs, since in theory youâre in college primarily to learn things. Donât fall into the East Campus/West Campus battle trap. I was a sorority girl who lived in West Campus all four years who was a member of a primarily East Campus a cappella group and spent lots of time both places. Yes, theyâre different, but almost all MIT students are really cool and if you discount half of campus either way youâre going to miss out on some incredible friendships. Do Dance Troupe at least once. Itâs really fun and even if you look like a complete fool, youâll have tons of fun and meet a bunch of people. Understand that every single person you will meet at MIT (and for that matter in your life!) knows something that you donât. We can all learn from each other. GETTING AROUND Learn how to get lost. Make a semi-regular hobby of wandering around somewhere (not in a deeply sketchy way) and finding your way home (bring a phone or something but donât cheat until youâre 105% sure youâre screwed). Itâs weirdly empowering to see a landmark when youâre out with friends and say âhey! I got lost there!â and realize you know a way (possibly horribly convoluted) back home. Making sense of your environment and the context of MIT outside the bubble is very grounding. Learn the shuttles/public transport. EZ ride is free and takes you places. Get the MIT Mobile app. Especially if youâre a fast walker: when walking to class, donât take the ground floor of the Infinite. Take the tunnels or the upper floors. Boston isnât nearly as big as it seems the first time you come through. Try walking from T stops (especially the green line, and downtown Boston) since things are close together. Itâs a great moment when youâre able to navigate the city. Biking: biking in Cambridge/Somerville is great, and everything around is really bike accessible. Boston is sketchier, but still usually okay. Biking can often be faster than the T. That being said, driving and biking in the city can suck and be dangerous. Though it seems inconvenient, always wear a helmet and obey traffic laws. In sketchy intersections, donât be afraid to use crosswalks and be a pedestrian. That can often be safer than taking that left turn in a busy intersection (just dismount or straddle-walk your bike to not hit people). Also, NEVER pass large vehicles on the right. Assume that cars donât see you, and be an obnoxious biker about being seen. It can save your life. Get out to the city! And the free stuff you have access to as a student (like the MFA). Donât wait for tourists to finish taking their pictures to walk down the hall. If you wait for every selfie in front of the admissions door, youâll never get anywhere. Just accept that youâre going to be in many pictures and keep walking. STUDENT LIFE Listen to firehose chats on WMBR. They talk a lot about life hacks and general MIT experiences from the perspectives of undergrads and grads as well as non MIT college experiences. Learn about MIT mailing lists. Make your own. Make time to get off campus every once in a while. Get a foam pad for your mattress. It makes a world of difference. Do laundry in the afternoon on a weekday. You will have your pick of all of the washers and all of the dryers. Depending on your dorm, focusing may be difficult. Find a good place, whether itâs your dormâs study rooms, the student center, a library, a classroom. Just because itâs hard to focus in your room doesnât mean you should move dorms. LEARNING Donât buy textbooks before you know if you need them. Having mailing lists for study groups for each class was pretty helpful. Donât worry about sounding stupid, or getting into an area you have no experience in. This is the time to do that sort of thing. Ask questions when you donât know something. Donât just nod and smile. Ask everyoneâ"GRTs, classmates, hallmates, upperclassmen, professors, TAs, and especially research advisors if youâre doing that kind of thingâ"to clarify anything you donât understand (and canât easily clarify for yourself with a quick google search). Work with friends or classmates as often as possible. If you do research, donât be afraid to ask a ton of questions. Donât feel like you have to figure everything out by yourself. Ask people if theyâre willing to teach you things! Get your HASS breadth done early so come senior spring you donât have to take a class you dislike. Learn, at least at a basic level, how to solder, code, and use basic tools. At some point youâll be glad you did. Try all your pset questions first before getting help â" donât use others as a crutch or you wonât learn to figure things out on your own, and then the exams will nuke you (personal experience). On the flip side, donât spin your wheels for ten hours either. Talk to your professors when youâre struggling. At the very least they can point you in the right direction. Many will be willing to work with you to get back on track. You can just not go to things (like classes) and people wonât get mad. They just wonât care. Be very careful with this power. Find a person-who-is-successful-in-a-direction-you-would-like-to-be. Endear yourself to them in some way. Then when you are having a midlife-crisis-but-not-really you can talk to them and they will help you refine or mitigate your existential dread. Keep a list of mentors (professors, grad students, advisors, and faculty you like) and stay in touch with them by writing them a Christmas message every year. For some reason a lot of your professors and their ilk are on Twitter. You can learn about their thought patterns and networks of minionry this way. One time my HASS professor tweeted about how something I brought up in class made him happy. It was nice and existence-affirming. Also they have cool thoughts and cool things they read that you can learn about in this way. Also you learn that they are human and sometimes take joy in life. You should strive to emulate this. Be very careful about whipping out your phone/laptop in class to âcheck emailâ or âgoogle something the professor mentioned in passing.â Probably snapchat is more interesting right this minute than whateverâs going on in class, but you will be very interested in what was going on in lecture when you are on your __th hour of the pset. Drop date is when drop date is for a reason. The feeling you get when you have dropped a class you loathed and you realize it is not a slavering, shadowy, pustule-ridden, festering blight on your life anymore is wonderful. Donât grow overfond of dropping classes too, I guessâ"realizing that you have this power to make a terrible source of misery gone from your life is a heady, heady feelingâ¦but donât be that person taking a required class for the 3rd time. If you think a class sucks and you donât have to take it in a life-death-or-graduation way, drop it like itâs emitting alpha radiation and ebola. For the summer especially, you donât have to say yes to the first UROP or job offer you get. Interviews are not just for the professor/grad student to see if you are a good fit, but also for you to see if you might enjoy and get something out of the UROP. If it sounds like it wonât teach you skills or youâll only be doing tedious tasks without much mentorship/potential for moving on to other things, keep looking for another one if you can. Certainly sometimes you might need to work up from the bottom but if it seems really dead-end/not a good work culture, itâs okay to say no and look for others. Just because itâs MIT doesnât mean all the teachers are good teachers, or that all the classes are good classes. Look for good mentors! This can be upperclassmen, other students, professors, grad students, etc⦠On the topic of interviews, note that most of them arenât about âare you qualifiedâ but rather âdo we like each other.â Think of your interviews like a date. Is that UROP supervisor the person you want to spend the next ___ semesters with? Is that the organization I want to join? Itâll make you less nervous and more interesting. Go to office hours. You will finish your psets faster, plus they let you get to know the professors and TAs better and not fear them. Given the choice, go the fuck to class. Treat MIT like a job, because it isâ"and this is likely the last time in your life that your primary responsibility is to learn. Youâre at one of the best universities on the planet. Get your moneyâs worth. For every class you have, find someone that you genuinely enjoy learning the class material from. Hopefully, this is the professor, but sometimes thatâs not the case. Be it a TA, a fellow classmate, an upperclassman, an online lecture series, a textbookâ"find it. Being excited to learn will do far more for you in the long run. Be excited about the stuff you donât know, but want to know. Tell people that youâre excited. Thereâs a 99.99% chance that thereâs a class, a club, or a mind here that can teach you, but itâs often hard to find them if youâre not given direction. Youâre in college to learn things, but you will learn a lot of things outside of academics. Care enough about your GPA that it doesnât somehow prevent you from doing all of the other things you care about. Apart from thatâ¦well, youâre here to learn. How you learn is yours to decide. Take your estimate of how much time you think youâll need to do something, and double it. Thatâs how long itâll actually take. This is not a joke; Iâm dead serious. Donât let the career fair scare you. Companies have to pay MIT to be at the career fair. Understandable, some (read: a lot of) companies donât come to career fair. Ask upperclassmen where theyâve worked, and look online for companies that interest you. Sometimes, people who have worked at a place you want to work can refer you to their team and increase your chances of getting an interview. If you want access to the Edgerton student shop, sign up early, because it takes a few months from when you signed up to actually be offered a spot in a training session. Empty classrooms are perfectly okay to work in, and are usually unlocked for this reason. Plenty of freshmen at top-tier colleges will enter their first semesters having no idea how to study, thanks to barely needing to lift a finger in high school. It can be jarring to suddenly not be the smartest kid in the class, to be on a completely different playing field, and to suddenly need to completely revamp how you best learn. This is okay. Go to class. Even if youâre not prepared for the day, showing up is often a much better choice than the alternative. FOOD You can freeze chicken broth in ice cubes so that it lasts and you can partition them adequately. Have emergency food that is healthy and you like consumingâ"so dumplings, certain energy bars, canned soups, etc. Dominos delivers until 2AM. Learn how to cook. Cooking isnât scary, although if youâve never cooked before it can definitely seem like it (I made it through the first few weeks off of free food because I was terrified of cooking). Learn some very basic things at first (for me, that was how to make rice and cook eggs) and, as you grow more comfortable, your cooking will get better and youâll be able to expand your repertoire. Learn from watching your parents (or whoever cooks at home) and from your hallmates. You can also do your cooking by the book. If you have to be on a meal plan, milk it for all itâs worth. Meal plans are ridiculously expensive and you can always use your swipes for something. They have fruit and caffeine even if you arenât hungry for meals. And if you want to cook, you can get meat and veggies and make stir fry or somethingâ"that way you only have to buy supplementary ingredients. BODY Donât neglect yourself when you get sick. Scope out S3, mental health, and get a primary care provider (PCP) at the start of school, BEFORE you actually need any of these things. Exercise regularly in some formâ"anything! It does wonders for general sanity. Get a PCP. Also if you are really pathetic at medical urgent care, they will give you a blanket that is nice and toasty and the person who brings the blankets (inevitably if you are sick enough to merit a blanket you are too sick to remember this blessed individual) is the single kindest person in all of urgent care. Eat fruit. Tasty and healthy. There is a farmerâs market in Stata on Tuesdays that is very nice and convenient. Sleep. Exercise. You may feel that it is optional, but itâll do so much good for you that itâs worth considering it mandatory. View it as you view brushing your teeth or showering, because the regular mental cleansing that comes with it (along with the endorphin rush, the muscle tone, the weight control, the increased daily energyâ¦) will be an invaluable source of sanity and stability. Sleep. I promise you, as someone who has done everything she can to try and reduce hours spent sleeping, itâs worth it. Everything is better and works better after youâve gotten sleep, because your body will not be aching to shut down at the soonest possible second. Sleep! Even if you donât have MIT insurance, over-the-counter medication is often really cheap at MIT medical. The community wellness center has taxi vouchers if you need to go off campus for a medical reason (this saved me thousands of dollars when I had weekly physical therapy sessions an hour away). Make sure to sleep. You probably wonât, but you really should. MIND AND SPIRIT Just because nobody seems like theyâre struggling doesnât mean they arenât. Itâs okay to set up an appointment with mental health. Itâs okay to have a standing weekly appointment with mental health. Thereâs no âright amount of time to waitâ before making that appointment. If you need help, get it. Never doubt yourself. You are here for a reason. If you recognize that you donât know enough yet, thatâs fine. But never doubt your capacity to learn and grow. Donât listen to upperclassmen stereotypes about each major. Do what makes you happy. Find a time and a place every day where you can be alone. You donât have to be doing anything in particular; just spend some time in the quiet company of your own mind. Look for new music. Read a weird book. Cook. Draw. Talk a walk. Make something pointless. Teach yourself a party trick. Understand what you need to make you mentally happy (a hobby/activity, a pet, spending time with people or alone) and make it a priority. Study off-campus now and then. Especially during exam time, campus can become a roiling stresspot with people feeding off of each othersâ panic. Sometimes itâs nice to take a physical step back. Even studying on a different campus for a while can have this effect. If it is the middle of the night and youâre having a meltdown, call 617-253-1212 and ask for the Dean on Call. Someone will talk to you and help you figure out what to do. WOMEN AND UTERUS-OWNERS For the women: there are several primary care providers at medical who specialize in womenâs health. If youâre unsure about things like different types of birth control, menstruation aids, gynecological health + exams, etc. and would like to become less unsure, choose one of these people as your personal care provider. Meet with them early on and figure out whatâs right for you. For the women: most building 13 womenâs bathrooms have free tampon/pad dispensers. Women should get access to the Cheney Room. You will need a nap at some point during your time at MIT when you canât make it home. MISCELLANY Drills go in forward and reverse. You should mix wall paint before you paint with it. 2x4s are not in fact 24. (See Wikipedia.) Own a cat. Spend 100% of your free time climbing. While âdonât fuck up, donât ever fuck upâ is good advice, supplement it with âitâs okay to fuck upâ and âno fuck-up is impossible to fix.â Remember, remember, the rule of November. Play with fire. Donât talk to cops (unless you are just saying hi and catching up. They are friendly people.)
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