By Jean Charles
Catégorie : Trips
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US University Trip
College? So much importance and meaning in that one word. So thrilling and yet so daunting. So simple and yet so complex. Who am I going to be and what am I going to do? As we are approaching are final days of high school, thoughts like this are becoming more and more common. They haunt us in our (limited) sleep, throughout dinners and study halls, follow us as we trudge to class or escape to Geneva on the weekends. We all have heard many names of eminent places, had images of glorious campuses and vague ideas and dreams about the one “dream college” we are going to of to and spend the best times of our lives in. But one cannot find the right place for himself by just following the sound of a famous name or a picture on Google Images. One has to visit the place and know how it is really like and search within ourselves to see if it would in fact be right for us. The goal of the trip was to understand the concepts behind a plethora of different colleges, their spirits, ideas, opportunities and requirements, in order to have a vision of the way we want to commence our adult lives. We certainly all want to start off on the right foot, and this trip was the first step to making sure that that would be the case.
1,739.5 kilometres, 7 days, 11 colleges. An experience and information filled journey from Atlanta to Boston, with a stop in vibrant New York. On this trip we visited a multitude of very diverse institutions — some large, others small, urban, rural, with diverse curricula, contrasting student bodies and unique quirky traditions. Our journey of exploration began in Emory, and was followed by Davidson, Duke, Princeton, NYU, Columbia, Fordham, Yale, Brown, Boston University and finished in Babson, at a point when college tours have begun to become absolutely unbearable. Yet even if our minds could no longer cope with hearing about the holistic admissions process, or the view of the standardised test scores (oh who hadn’t had enough taking those?) we were nonetheless able to understand the importance of all the information we had just gathered. For a good applicant is a prepared applicant — one that knows about the place he is applying to and sees his place in it. And what better way to gather that information than in the university from the admissions officers themselves?
Apart from touring the campuses and throughly questioning the poor student guides about what actually happens in the university (with our Brown and Babson guides cracking to reveal the most curious stories, to say the least, about how college life is actually like [you’ll be surprised…]) we (actually) had some free time to take advantage of the places we were visiting. They ranged from the-middle-of-nowhere little towns to pulsating metropolises with, as you can surely imagine, plenty of things to do, see and experience. It is the US after all, with its cities that never sleep and promises of freedom and joy for all.
Tired, jet-lagged and noticeably overwhelmed, we returned to Geneva on early Sunday morning. But with this unbearable seeming fatigue came a new energy — one of motivation, ambition and determination. For as we have seen, the fight for a place in those awe-inspiring universities is a tough one to be fought on many battlefields — in academics, extra-curriculums, in examination rooms and within ourselves against our own flaws and weaknesses. But it is one surely worth taking, in order to come return to these campuses once again, this time as a freshman of that one “dream college.” However for now, we have our university sweatshirts to remind us of our goals and hopefully helps us to keep going through all the challenging times to come.
By Katia
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Greece Humanitarian Trip
From the 30th of August to the 5th of September, I took part in a humanitarian trip to Chania, Crete, focused on a non-governmental organization called Orizondas ( Horizons in English) , whose aim is to support patients with cancer and their families which face financial issues and, hence, would not be able to afford the treatment. Besides, as there are no cancer cure centres in Chania, Orizondas also provides accommodation for the patient and for one member of the family in Athens.
I would consider the strongest moment in our trip when we visited the patient’s house for many reasons. Firstly, it showed the real social-economical condition of the patients and their families, demonstrating the harsh life that the current Greek crisis has led to and the real necessity for help provided by Orizondas. Secondly, as an aspiring med student, I found it truly interesting to see the daily life of a patient that has suffered from cancer and the difficulties they have due to the disease. These difficulties vary from economical issues, unemployment, loss of governmental health insurance, to more personal problems. Such as the fact that cancer patients who are not able to work may not receive a full Greek government’s financial support as happens with Effy, a lady diagnosed with a tumor, whose support was of just 70%, considered a good rate if analysed all the cases nowadays in Greece.
Furthermore, this trip was extremely profitable owing to the fact that it demostrated the hard task taken by volunteers of a NGO and the nobility of this task because, apart from not being paid, these volunteers devote time and energy to the cause. One day we confronted the troubles of a volunteer job by trying to distribute leaflets to tourists concerning the donation of bone marrow. This was difficult owing to the fact that the tourists were either uninterested or did not want to engage on a project while travelling.
Lastly, we visited the Pediatric Clinic of the General Hospital of Chania. This visit was particularly special to me as I could see how a hospital works and how hospitals in Greece are coping with the economic crisis. The conditions of the hospital were fairly good and, talking with patients and their families, it seemed that they were quite happy with the service provided. However, the lack of material and personel was shoking. There were not even termometers and neddles for the staff to use and, hence, we bought them a few.
In conclusion, this trip contributed to my personal grownth as it increased my awareness on how important small initiatives, as Orizondas was back in 2004, can have a huge impact on the local community, helping sectors that, otherwise, would be forgotten or passed behind. Just in a matter of numbers, since the creation of Orizondas in 2004, more than 5000 people were given aid and support, showing the true commitment of this non-governmental organization to Chania and cancer patients all over Greece.
By Matteo