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What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by Nobody: 3:36pm On Aug 14, 2016

This post is part of a series, “The One Thing,” which asks today’s successful leaders to identify the single most important lesson they’ve learned on a given topic.


If you remember what it’s like to be an incoming college freshman, the experience inspired just as much excitement as it did anxiety. As millions of students head off to school for the first time this month, they face a daunting transition process from navigating new levels of accountability and independence, to dealing with consuming workloads and intense social pressures.

The decisions students make during their freshman year can have a major impact on the rest of their college experience, so we asked six top women to weigh in with the unexpected advice they wish they’d heard before stepping foot onto campus for the first time.

What’s ‘The One Thing’ you wish someone had told you before starting college?



Make Top Grades Outside the Classroom

I wish someone had told me before college that it was just as important to focus on making A’s outside of the classroom as it was inside of the classroom. Too many times I, and the people around me, sacrificed our health, relationships, and our mental wellbeing to make sure we kept up in class. As long as we “made grades” everything else would be “okay,” and inevitably, life took a back seat. I now know that A’s in the class and F’s in life was not the right approach. One should never abandon their wellbeing to achieve success or rack up accolades. The only way to make the A grades count is if you are healthy, and that transcends beyond physical health. It lends itself to every corner of your life; mental health and personal relationships being at the forefront.

I wish someone had said “you don’t carry a report card around with you after your graduate. You carry around your health, your sleep patterns, your relationships and your emotional intelligence, not just your documented intelligence.”

If you remember what it’s like to be an incoming college freshman, the experience inspired just as much excitement as it did anxiety. As millions of students head off to school for the first time this month, they face a daunting transition process from navigating new levels of accountability and independence, to dealing with consuming workloads and intense social pressures.


The decisions students make during their freshman year can have a major impact on the rest of their college experience, so we asked six top women to weigh in with the unexpected advice they wish they’d heard before stepping foot onto campus for the first time.


Extend Trust Wisely


The one thing I wish someone had told me before starting college is Don’t be so trusting of people. I’m a person who naturally trusts people. If I connect with someone when I meet them; if I think they are smart, or make me laugh, or if feel like they are a good person. I don’t necessarily think they might want something from me. You should realize that no matter how unimportant or junior you may think you are, there is always something another person might want from you. As a result, I have, more often than I’d like to say, found myself in situations where after the original connection, the laughing and everything else, found that I have invested too much or myself in terms of my time, my network, or even in some cases my money. It hurts deeply when you realize that you have been taken advantage of.

In this same vein, I also wish someone had told me, as soon as you realize you have been too trusting, get out! Don’t hope that the situation will miraculously change , because it won’t and will only cause you more heartache along the way.

A graduate of Princeton University with an A.B. in History, Alexandra Lebenthal is the CEO of Lebenthal & Co., LLC.


Define the ‘Who’, Not the ‘What’

I hope that instead of asking yourself, “What do I want to do when I leave this institution of higher learning?” you instead ask yourself, “WHO do I want to be?” Ask yourself constantly, “What is the impact I want to have on this world?”


I’m telling you this as someone who, for too many years, focused on the “what” instead of the “who.” For too many years, I let others and societal expectations define me. I was really good at math and science, so I should become a doctor, right? And I did. But at the end of the day, that journey was about them, not me. A job that means nothing in your heart and soul, and not bringing the full weight of your talents should be an unacceptable compromise.

I believe that our core identity—who we truly are and what we are meant to do in this world—is as intrinsic as our DNA. It’s etched in our soul and ultimately it’s our job to figure out what it is. That is fundamentally, in my humble opinion, the work of your college years. Study hard and mine the lessons of self-reflection as deeply as you do the lessons inside the classroom. It will serve you and the world well.

Cheryl Dorsey, President of Echoing Green, received her Bachelor’s degree in History and and Science from Harvard-Radcliffe Colleges.

Ask Questions to Fuel Connections

I wish someone had emphasized the value of asking great questions over knowing the right answers. In college, and in my early career, I found myself in unfamiliar territory – first, as a woman in computer programming courses, and later, working in technology.


In those early days, I embraced the “fake it till you make it” approach. And it worked! I tackled unfamiliar tasks, I spoke confidently in meetings even when I didn’t feel that way on the inside, and I was reticent to ask others for help, or reveal gaps in my knowledge. In many ways, it served me well and gave me the chance to learn by doing, but I believe I missed something extremely important.

Asking questions – those which broaden my worldview and deepen relationships – has turned out to be one of the most important aspects of my work, both as an executive and as an investor. It starts by practicing empathy and asking questions which help me get to the heart of the matter, whether that’s understanding the risks around a product update from an engineer, to assessing a startup’s potential when I’m evaluating an investment, or gleaning insight from leaders I admire so I can be a better leader myself.

I’ve learned that asking questions isn’t a sign of weakness; rather, it demonstrates curiosity, engagement and intelligence. While this may not seem revolutionary, for me, it meant becoming comfortable with being the one listening, rather than talking, and understanding that asking questions can be the path to lasting intellectual and emotional connections with others.

April Underwood, Vice President of Product at Slack, studied Management Information Services at The University of Texas at Austin.

Push the Boundaries

Before I started college my mother told me to take a class from the best professor no matter what he or she teaches. I took this advice to heart and took Hebrew Scriptures from an amazing woman professor at Swarthmore College. As a Biopsychology and Math major, this was quite outside my comfort zone! Not only was it a great experience, which was the focus of the advice, but it also helped define me as a person. In other words it was outside my comfort zone but it expanded and built a bigger comfort zone. Of course I never would have listened to advice phrased as “Expand your comfort zone.”

Expanding your comfort zone means challenging its boundaries and doing things that you might not do other wise. But I’m not talking about experimenting with sex and drugs! I’m talking about hanging out at the Black Cultural Center, or acting in a play, or LARP’ing on a Saturday night. Through these incredible experiences, I learned my biases, my strengths, and my weaknesses. Today, I continue to expand my comfort zone through traveling, 22 years of marriage (and counting), raising two adopted children, and recently becoming a certified recreational tree-climber!

Corinna Lathan is CEO, AnthroTronix. She received her B.A. in Biopsychology and Mathematics from Swarthmore College.


Speak Up, Act Big

You have to become a supreme, verbal storyteller. So much of your career will be based on the moments you’re orating and your ability to not only get your point across but have it resonate with someone depends on your ability to hook a person. Public speaking and thinking fast on your feet are skills that are as critical as being an expert in your domain. If you’re timid, identify what’s causing that and then realize the worst thing that could happen by speaking up is that you’re ignored or challenged. Those moments will be trivial in your overall life story. If you want big things to happen to you, you need to act BIG.


Rachel Tipograph, Founder and CEO of MikMak, graduated from New York University where she received a B.A. in Entertainment Business and New Media.

Source:http://www.forbes.com/sites/moiraforbes/2016/08/10/what-i-wish-someone-had-told-me-before-starting-college/#51df201363b9

CC. Lalasticlala

14 Likes 3 Shares

Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by general111(m): 3:52pm On Aug 14, 2016
Nice post.thank God it doesn't encourage academic laziness either.
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by Nobody: 5:51pm On Aug 14, 2016
Richiez, olawalebabs, Fynestboi
Front page so all can benefit......
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by canDy4eva(f): 6:04pm On Aug 14, 2016
BRB... tongue
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by Temmi001: 6:16pm On Aug 14, 2016
Nice.
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by 573V31D(m): 6:47pm On Aug 14, 2016
Long post....in summary, good grades are good but other aspects of life also need to be attended to.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by Nobody: 6:48pm On Aug 14, 2016
573V31D:
Long post....in summary, good grades are good but other aspects of life also need to be attended to.

Did you read it..?
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by Sleekydee(m): 7:00pm On Aug 14, 2016
No track girls also, very important
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by CaptEColeJnr: 7:13pm On Aug 14, 2016
undecided If you know you read that long SH!t word for word,PM me your account details
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by Nobody: 7:19pm On Aug 14, 2016
Sleekydee:
No track girls also, very important

Lol
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by Nobody: 7:20pm On Aug 14, 2016
CaptEColeJnr:
undecided If you know you read that long SH!t word for word,PM me your account details

I did... Word for word... Back to back smiley
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by babyfaceafrica: 7:21pm On Aug 14, 2016
Maybe true or false..but this life does not play by rules...do your best and leave the rest....namaste!!!
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by mynaija123(m): 7:22pm On Aug 14, 2016
Really thoughtful for the op to share. This words if followed could really create great minds.
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by Nobody: 7:26pm On Aug 14, 2016
mynaija123:
Really thoughtful for the op to share. This words if followed could really create great minds.

True
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by CaptEColeJnr: 7:27pm On Aug 14, 2016
optimusmind:


I did... Word for word... Back to back smiley
interesting!
You deserve a chilled bottle of Orijin!

Barman!!!
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by Nobody: 7:31pm On Aug 14, 2016
CaptEColeJnr:
interesting!
You deserve a chilled bottle of Orijin!

Barman!!!
I prefer stout...
undecided
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by alex81(m): 7:36pm On Aug 14, 2016
so op, u expect me to read dat long article.....
















































dz days, I don't read articles for free ooo, especially long ones like ds.


sombori say change!!! grin
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by Nobody: 7:47pm On Aug 14, 2016
alex81:


so op, u expect me to read dat long article.....

dz days, I don't read articles for free ooo, especially long ones like ds.



sombori say change!!! grin
This would have actually brought change to your life, but you are looking for chicken change
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by Rapsowdee01(m): 10:00pm On Aug 14, 2016
That awkward moment when your lecturer starts giving you a talk on time wasting !!


pls can u epp me summarize ?

1 Like

Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by Iscoalarcon: 11:10pm On Aug 14, 2016
Thank you op

Cc lalasticlala mynd44

Password :Tonto Dike's Snake grin grin cheesy
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by Nobody: 11:14pm On Aug 14, 2016
canDy4eva:
BRB... tongue
nice post though
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by LMohd(m): 11:50pm On Aug 14, 2016
ok
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by wenebunwo(m): 12:55am On Aug 15, 2016
OP

front page




Wenebunwo again
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by Opistorincos(m): 7:16am On Aug 15, 2016
I wish I had read this post early 2013
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by Greenbuoy(m): 7:52am On Aug 15, 2016
Bravo op! I like your first point especially. It always does it for me
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by Nobody: 7:59am On Aug 15, 2016
Opistorincos:
I wish I had read this post early 2013
Then help someone else
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by alex81(m): 9:57am On Aug 15, 2016
optimusmind:

This would have actually brought change to your life, but you are looking for chicken change

so u mean reading a bunch of words put together by a fellow regretting abt his past will change my life lol grin no thanks I'll pass!


if na by reading of articles, d life of my great grandfathers n all d witches for my village for don change by now.
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by Nobody: 10:33am On Aug 15, 2016
alex81:


so u mean reading a bunch of words put together by a fellow regretting abt his past will change my life lol grin no thanks I'll pass!


if na by reading of articles, d life of my great grandfathers n all d witches for my village for don change by now.


Clearly you didn't read the article, these are not regrets but valuable advice from successful scholars such as
A graduate of Princeton University with an A.B. in History, Alexandra Lebenthal is the CEO of Lebenthal & Co., LLC.
. And surely your village people would be living better if they read and so would you. And if you can't read a single article of less than a thousand words, you need to evaluate your position about being vast, knowledgeable and exposed. Therefore, I urge you to read a book today.
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by Nobody: 11:06am On Aug 15, 2016
alex81:


so u mean reading a bunch of words put together by a fellow regretting abt his past will change my life lol grin no thanks I'll pass!


if na by reading of articles, d life of my great grandfathers n all d witches for my village for don change by now.

alex81:


so u mean reading a bunch of words put together by a fellow regretting abt his past will change my life lol grin no thanks I'll pass!


if na by reading of articles, d life of my great grandfathers n all d witches for my village for don change by now.


Clearly you didn't read the article, these are not regrets but valuable advice from successful scholars such as
A graduate of Princeton University with an A.B. in History, Alexandra Lebenthal is the CEO of Lebenthal & Co., LLC.
. And surely your village people would be living better if they read and so would you. And if you can't read a single article of less than a thousand words, you need to evaluate your position about being vast, knowledgeable and exposed. Therefore, I urge you to read a book today.
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by alex81(m): 11:30am On Aug 15, 2016
optimusmind:



Clearly you didn't read the article, these are not regrets but valuable advice from successful scholars such as
. And surely your village people would be living better if they read and so would you. And if you can't read a single article of less than a thousand words, you need to evaluate your position about being vast, knowledgeable and exposed. Therefore, I urge you to read a book today.


bros is it by force to read ur article


and
at bolded, I dont remember telling u am vast,knowledgeable or exposed.

and pls spare me ur drama don't qoute me again.

tnk u.
Re: What I Wish Someone Had Told Me Before Starting University by Nobody: 12:24pm On Aug 15, 2016
Lol... It's funny@above poster

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