 I think it's actually the freshest week, the first week of being at Saoas, because it's the time when I met most of my friends and the people I spend the next few years with really. I think actually, to be honest, this, the library rave, which was last year when we had about 200 people to a silent disco in the library and even though I mean I've learned a lot here and this was really a life changing experience, one thing about Saoas is that it was more than just a place where I learn but a place where I live and raving in the library is definitely part of that. You want to find in one institution where you have so many people, so many different languages, cultures, religions, faiths, beliefs, arguments, debates. I came to Saoas, I was very arrogant and I thought I knew a lot about the world and after three years I think that I don't know anything about the world. At the same time I think I know a lot of stuff now that I didn't know when I came here, so I think I've come to the realisation that I don't know that much but I do know more than when I start. I think Saoas has given me a more rounded perspective. Because Saoas is quite small and you really have the chance of getting to know your course mates and the teachers, I think it has made me really appreciate how important the ties that you build are. I love the fact that it's in the middle of central London, I love the fact that it's quite small, you can see everyone in one place. That's great potential here, most of the teachers are amazing. Diversity is probably the thing that I really enjoy most about it, not only the diversity in where people come from but the diversity in ideas, the diversity in beliefs and the diversity in perceptions as well. I love the fact that you can literally talk about anything in the union and with anybody. I love the fact that you can make friends with literally anyone from everywhere. I love the bar downstairs, it is fantastic. Friday nights they play some jam and music and I just go out and dance, it's a good time. There's something unique about it, you leave for five years, you come back, you still have that Saoas feeling, basically the students make Saoas. I love the fact that you can be right next to Birkbeck or UCL and meet students from everywhere, I love that. Where can I stop? There's so much love about this place. After that particular little speech about how much I love this place, I wouldn't be surprised if I'm still here in ten years time. I hope to be somewhere warm, warmer than London, hopefully travelling the world, doing some amazing things, maybe helping some people along the way, that would be really good. I think like other Saoas students, it's really hard to think of leaving this place. So yeah, I think kind of sad almost. You don't want to really let go. To find a job or do a masters, do the masters, do the masters, it makes more sense. As a master students I'm telling them to go do a PhD. So we're just about to get the big Saoas photo. We're putting everyone here on Senate House lawn. The idea is to capture Saoas in its basic essence in one shot. We've got one of the best educations in the world. So let's not just become cogs and mechanisms. I'm sure we've all learned that we don't want to become that. But we're young, inspired, and even if your body's not young, I'm sure your mind after leaving Saoas is young and your heart and your spirit is young. So yeah, I hope we meet somehow in the land of the curious, in the land of the energetic, in the land of the inspired. That's what we'll meet, whatever country they may call it.