 I came to Fairfield one time. I met the coaches. I walked around campus. I pulled my mom aside, mid-walkthrough, and I go, this is it. We don't cancel every other place I'm going to. I know I'm going here, that's it. I think coming in to college, I was very, like, a deer in headlights, if you will, and I didn't really know my role. And I promise you, probably, end of my sophomore year, I go, I get it. I fit. I understand. I just, something clicked. I have no idea what it was, but I was like, I'm comfortable. I feel great, you know, and from that point on, I learned to, I guess, harness what I am and my personality traits to help other people be the best that they can be, because I feel as though if I'm helping people be a better them, then I'm also becoming a better me. Our school does a really good job of growing people into productive citizens, and not only productive citizens, but great people. I never thought that I'd be reading to little kids or volunteering at the Fairfield Senior Center. I'm probably going to go there sometime before graduation, because I've got to say I had my friend George. No one ever wants college to end, and I'm one of those, but I also feel as though I need to use what I've learned to grow and do something better. It's a new chapter, you know? I don't like to think of it as the end of something good. It's the beginning of something better.