Welcome to The GradCafe
|
You're welcome to look around the forums and view posts. However, like most online communities you must register before you can create your own posts. This is a simple, free process that requires minimal information. Benefits of membership:
|
|
| Guest Message © 2010 DevFuse | |
Notices
- [September 2010] August stats: Did you make it to the top ten posters? Check here
Homesick...
#1
Posted 04 September 2009 - 10:04 PM
but I miss home SO badly.
This DOES go away at some point...right?
Attending: University of South Carolina. GO COCKS!
#2
Posted 04 September 2009 - 10:52 PM
((MDLee))
#3
Posted 05 September 2009 - 02:35 AM
I was going to start a new thread, but I suppose I might as well post my question here: What is everyone doing to make their new residence feel like home?
I'm looking for ideas. I haven't done much yet, but I am spending quite a bit to have some framed pictures that I like and that have been on my walls for years sent across the country so that they can be on my new walls too.
#4
Posted 05 September 2009 - 02:43 PM
Oh, and I keep a countdown of the days til I go back for a conference in October. 35 days til Long Island!
So I think all in all I'm handling it rather well.
#5
Posted 05 September 2009 - 03:11 PM
This weekend kicks off college football. While it's a big deal here, our first game is away (oddly enough facing one of my old conference opponents). Back "home," it's a home game. After 15 years, I can describe the atmosphere of College Station down to the finite details. All of my friends are pouring into town this morning, gearing up for some awesome tailgating. The roads are jam packed with 80,000 other fans clamoring to find a parking space and get to the tailgates, too. There will be ribs and sausage and potato salad and cookies and pies galore. The beer will floweth forth as different friends float from tailgate to tailgate catching up on summer stories and talking about the season to come. Hugs and handshakes will close the gap of time. There will be satellite dishes set up with generators and big 60" flat screen tvs to watch all of the other games that are on before and after ours. About an hour before kickoff, they'll hear the firing of the canon signaling march-in by the Corps of Cadets. Lines at the turnstiles will start to fill-up making the wait to get inside Kyle Field 30 minutes or more. A dear sweet friend of mine who is a local police sergeant will be working security at the gate I used to use for entry. Somewhere in section 116, my old next door neighbor will be sitting down with his brother in my season ticket seats that I've held since 2000. The same family who has sit next to and behind me for all those years will show up and have new stories to tell of weddings and grandchildren. Down on the field, Parson's Mounted Cavalry will make the rounds of the outer track followed by each unit of the Corps as the Fightin' Texas Aggie Band plays faithfully from the stands. On the east side, thousands of students file into the seats ready to be the 12th Man. Scattered throughout the stadium, the faces of sweet little Aggies to be watch the pageantry gleefully waiting for their day to be one of those students. And as the clock ticks down to kick-off, you hear the drumline start up in the background. A roar starts to rise from the south end as the team starts making the journey from Bright to the field. Months of pent-up fanaticism boils over, for nigh is the launch of a new season...new hope...new memories.
And I'm not there with them this time. It hurts. I miss them, a lot. But I have new memories of my own to make.
#6
Posted 05 September 2009 - 06:01 PM
"You can think I'm wrong, but that's no reason to quit thinking." - House
#7
Posted 05 September 2009 - 09:57 PM
I'm dealing by belatedly returning phone calls, and getting in touch with those I said I would stay in touch with, but have been lousy at so far. It's only working a little. There is familiarity on the other side of this bleak moment.
#8
Posted 13 September 2009 - 11:03 AM
#9
Posted 17 September 2009 - 01:10 AM
#10
Posted 17 September 2009 - 03:32 AM
Canofbeans said:
Amen.
#11
Posted 17 September 2009 - 03:14 PM
Sgt. Pepper said:
Oh, and I keep a countdown of the days til I go back for a conference in October. 35 days til Long Island!
So I think all in all I'm handling it rather well.
I was all too glad to change my license and registration over...but I am definitely with you on the countdown. I'm trying to plan a trip home for my birthday, but since that happens so close to the holidays I may just wait. Sigh. Love it here. Still miss home :)
Attending: University of South Carolina. GO COCKS!
#12
Posted 17 September 2009 - 03:16 PM
anthro2009 said:
WOW...I thought my 2300 mile move from home was a big deal. At least I'm in the same country (or so they tell me, heh). I can relate to the missing family and friends though. My colleagues here are awesome, but my lifeblood is at home.
Attending: University of South Carolina. GO COCKS!
#13
Posted 17 September 2009 - 03:23 PM
I do find that as time goes on (and I get busier) I find small things to keep me occupied in my off time, I go out a little, and even though I miss home this is becoming a little more like home every day. I really have a couple of people I wish I could just transplant, but now at least I have a good excuse to visit my home city whenever I can afford it. Trouble is that very few of us are independently wealthy and trying to fund trips home AND trips to conferences on a grad student budget is damned near miracle-working.
And we proceed :)
Attending: University of South Carolina. GO COCKS!
#14
Posted 08 October 2009 - 08:03 PM
#15
Posted 17 October 2009 - 05:41 AM
Visited: Baruch, Hunter, UIC, VCU, Wagner
Applied & accepted to: Baruch and Wagner
Will be attending: Baruch
#16
Posted 17 October 2009 - 06:49 PM
I fell in love with Colorado the day I moved there. I never wanted to come back to California again.
Alas, my family (that would be husband and kids) is STILL living in CA--probably won't move out until December at the earliest. So I am forced to fly back here every couple of weeks. Yes, I love them and want to see them, but I want to see them IN COLORADO.
I do admit to missing real Chinese food, though probably not as much as my Chinese officemates.
#18
Posted 20 April 2010 - 02:50 PM
UnlikelyGrad, on 17 October 2009 - 06:49 PM, said:
I fell in love with Colorado the day I moved there. I never wanted to come back to California again.
Alas, my family (that would be husband and kids) is STILL living in CA--probably won't move out until December at the earliest. So I am forced to fly back here every couple of weeks. Yes, I love them and want to see them, but I want to see them IN COLORADO.
I do admit to missing real Chinese food, though probably not as much as my Chinese officemates.
This is me, too. I love my PhD city desperately. I'm really homesick for my friends, though. Kind of forgot that it took me seven years to build up the relationships I had in my last town, and that it would take some time here, too.
#19
Posted 21 April 2010 - 12:04 AM
rising_star, on 05 September 2009 - 06:01 PM, said:
I was really looking forward to gamedays at UGA, but I can say without a doubt (now) that I'll be skipping campus next season. I've never been more embarrassed for a school in my entire life. Sixteen years of SWC/Big 12 football must have spoiled me. Never have I seen so much underage drinking and general disrespect for fellow man. Kids were strung out on North Campus passed out or close to it. Those that could walk would trip and land in a gutter while their friends just kept walking. Trash was thrown everywhere without any regard. And that was before I got to Sanford. Trying to get into student seating without being puked on or pushed around was a vain effort and I left both games early (Arizona State and LSU). I remember when Texas A&M used to play LSU the first game of every season. While they're not the greatest fans in the world, they certainly weren't that bad in Aggieland (or even in Jacksonville when they were in the NCAA tournament a few years ago; yes, I'm mixing sports). Truth be told, I never want to experience Bulldog football again in person. I'll be content to tailgate with my department OFF campus and watch televised games.
#20
Posted 21 April 2010 - 12:39 AM
dacey, on 21 April 2010 - 12:04 AM, said:
Ahhhhh.... Fond memories of my alma mater. (not UGA, but an SEC school). Good thing the clean-up crew was there bright and early on Sunday mornings. Truth be told, SEC sports is a totally different animal from Big 12...more rabid. Cheers.

Help
Sign In »
Register Now!


MultiQuote












