 I think when you come into this little corner of Brussels Square, you immediately get this feeling that there's something unusual going on. Whether it's the people sitting out in front, or whether it's the lines waiting for the free meal at lunchtime, or in the evenings there's this kind of pulse coming out of the building, there's something always going on. So us has probably made me more critical about pretty much everything. It's given me so much more of an international focus. It's helped me ground a lot of my idealism and make it more of a realistic possibility. People have different cultures, have different norms, different values, and it's opened my mind and thoughts about that as well. People from all over the world come and study here, and in conversation with different people, I've realised so much about myself and also about the world I live in. Overall, it's given me confidence in who I am and what I believe in. So us became this huge gateway to places I never thought I'd be part of. As students leave So us, as they graduate, as they stand on the threshold of going out into the world as more informed and more able citizens than before, I think the So us experience is one of those things that make this crossing of the threshold something which is doable and above all enjoyable. Range of things that you can do outside of your studies. Last year I went to Ghana with the radio station. It's a really nice environment to express your interest and your passion for your discipline. So it's really, really diverse and not always just focused on the West. I remember wearing that silly hat. I remember wearing a suit which was too big for me. I remember my dad feeling very awkward but I remember it with an immense amount of fondness. It was really exciting to see everybody again after a few months. And we all knew that we looked slightly ridiculous but we all felt for some reason totally at home. It was also a bit of a sad feeling of course because as life goes on people can drift apart but the connections you make there will always remain. Inside of the library. The constant barrage of new and interesting information are year abroad in Beijing. I'd like to say all the cases and facts and case law that I've learnt but really it's going to be the people that I've met. I think I'll just remember the people. Mostly the people I've met. People. I'll say the people. To fulfil all the clichés, the people as well. Seeing the same familiar faces and you're together on this journey. You always have an affinity with other sources of them now. If you meet them wherever it is around here or elsewhere in the world you kind of just like get it. Our students have gone on to great things as presidents, prime ministers, ministers but also community, public intellectuals. Figures of authority and respect and learning who bring to their idealism an informed consciousness of what the world not only locally but internationally is really like. Ten years. Doing. To be a teacher. I'd like to be working or living abroad. I don't know. I'd like to go back to Indonesia and work there and be near to my family and friends. So if it's doing voluntary work or being involved in social work I really want to just give back and help those who are less fortunate than I am. I'd love to live in Senegal. The great thing about Sours is you could go anywhere because it does open so many doors in every different continent. My message to those graduating today would be that the world is a very big place so get out there and try and see as much of it as you can. Sours provides you with unique qualities unlike anywhere else. It makes you feel different, it makes you want to travel it makes you want to explore and discover the rest of the world. But most of all I think it gives you a moral compass and it gives you a set of principles which shape you for the rest of your life. Just make sure you stay in contact like join the alumni, get involved, come back and visit.