By Anna-Rose Zayan
You land in a new country. You grab your suitcase, get in a car, a bus, or the Temple shuttle, surrounded by new people, then you arrive at a new campus. You take your new room key, move into your new flat. And if you’re a bit like me, you sit in your new bed, jet lagged and tired, your new pillow too stiff, and you ask yourself “What on earth am I doing here?”.
Adjusting and adapting to life in a new country—a new continent, even—is not an easy task. It is long, tiring, but so, so exciting. After my first couple of weeks at Temple, I thought I would give you what I found helped me get into a routine that suits me and go to bed without second-guessing all my life choices.
First and foremost: you’re not alone. Think of it this way: most of the faces you will see that first weekend are as lost and as new to this as you are. Some have travelled before, some have never left their hometown. Some barely speak English, some are trilingual. Everyone is different but everyone is new.