 The most challenging part was the kick, like the kick-starting of it, like going there. I just booked a flight and went there on my own. I don't have relatives or family there, so that was the toughest part. But once you get there, everything just moves on and gets easier. I ended up going to Boston College for my abroad semester in Spring 2017. I went on exchange to George Washington University at Washington, D.C. My favorite memory from the exchange. A lot of memories. I can't choose one or two. But the favorite memory was that of the snow, because I went to the Spring semester and it was a totally different experience from what I'm experiencing at AUS. So the constant snow, the cold weather, the people I've met from all around the world, my Korean roommate, my American roommates, all great memories, great memories about Boston. My favorite memory from exchange was just basically traveling around everywhere. I got to go to a lot of states. I went to New York, Philadelphia, Miami, New Jersey. That was the best part. I got to go around a lot. The one thing I missed the most, I would say I would miss my roommates. Because in AUS, I don't have any roommates because I live off campus. So I missed my roommates because we used to share our moments every single day of the semester. We shared the happy moments, sad moments, the troubles. So they were more of brothers than roommates. If I would go back in time, that advice I'd give myself is to make wise decisions. My best friend on exchange would be this Italian girl called Sylvia. She was also an exchange student from a university in Italy. My craziest memory was we went to a future concert, you know, future. We had Migos. I was in Washington D.C. and the concert was in Virginia. That's like a two-hour drive. So going there was fine. You know, in school we went. We had a good time on the way back. Uber is crashing and there's no cars. There's no right. So we just had to try to catch the right from anyone. It was a crazy night. Believe it or not, the moment I set foot in Boston, I felt like I'd been here before. I didn't feel any culture shock because, you know, now with globalization and, you know, traveling around, if I can go back in time, what would I do differently? I would say I would do the exact thing I did, except that I wish that I studied abroad more, like an additional semester, because being abroad, you know, it changes you. The one thing that I really missed the most is just the overall vibe you have there. It's so different than here at A.O.S. Like, you just feel it once you go there. You're free to be whoever you want to be. It's different. Everything is different. So I really missed that.