It felt as if I had been eighteen forever, and sometimes, I found myself thinking that I was already nineteen. The last few weeks of my eighteenth year included some pretty monumental events. I waited out a tornado with nine hundred other girls and lived to tell the tale. I turned on and watched the news by myself for the first time ever. I became slightly obsessive about the royal wedding and woke up at 4:30 am to watch it. I pulled my first legitimate all-nighter and managed to stay up until 2 am the next night. That same night, I succeeded in filling up my entire Facebook profile with posts all from a twelve hour span. These two events may or may not be related… I got to be the one to tell my parents about the death of Osama Bin Laden, AND I watched the news again. Clearly, I’m growing up.
Nineteen marks the end of my teenage years. In exactly one year, I will no longer be allowed to be “Young and wild and free.” Instead, I’ll be twenty and practically washed up. Granted, my teenage years have not been incredibly eventful, but they have been filled with their share of mistakes and “what was I thinkings?” In exactly one year, any child that I have can no longer be considered the product of a teenage pregnancy. Go me! In exactly one year, any incredibly stupid thing that I do can no longer be justified with the response “she’s just a teenager.” In exactly one year, any relative who uninterestedly asks me how old I am will choke on their sausage ball and say, “Twenty?! You’re twenty?! God, I feel old.” Thanks, now I do too.
Finally, the moment that I’ve been dreading since August has arrived. In less than 48 hours, I will no longer be a freshman. Last night, I filled both my parent’s Tahoe and my car, Baby Jude, with the contents of my dorm. Now, I’m living in a soulless box. My closet has one shirt and three pairs of shoes remaining (naturally, my boots are sticking it out until the end). After a lot of blood (yes), sweat (oh yes), and tears (sadly, yes), my bed has been successfully unlofted thanks to a hallwide effort. Saddest of all, without my legions of nametags and constantly scrawled on dry erase board, my door is as bare and nondescript as all of the other doors along my hall. I imagine that this is how it feels to be a prisoner on death row. The end is so close, and I honestly have no idea what’s on the other side; life after freshman years just seems unfathomable. Fortunately, it’s not goodbye forever, and in the grand scheme of things, this journey is just beginning. So, with that optimistic mindset, I’m venturing into summer with reckless abandon.

