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College Graduation Offers Reason To Celebrate—And Feel Uncertain Of New Beginnings

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College Graduation Offers Reason To Celebrate—And Feel Uncertain Of New Beginnings

Taylor Wooten poses on May 21—her graduation day—in front of Shirk Hall, home to Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism.

I just graduated from Franklin College this past weekend. I moved all of my stuff home the same day.

Everything I own is back in my childhood bedroom. Lots of it, sentimental of my time at Franklin. Dozens of newspapers, magazines, clips, and other work I did at internships and with The Franklin, the college’s student newsmagazine, and The Statehouse File are packed into boxes. Drawers are stuffed with FC-branded gear from track and cross country. My cap and gown still hang on my door hook.

I’m not one to throw things away.

I lived at the college over the summer, and many breaks were taken up by track and cross-country trips. My dorms became more familiar than my bedroom. Now I have to choose whether I’d rather have a walkway through my room or a bed to sleep on. The lack of room in my childhood bedroom feels like a metaphor for how I’m quickly outgrowing the space I filled in my parents’ home for 22 years.

I’m momentarily stuck in a weird in-between. I’ve turned in the key to my dorm, left the numerous work-related and running-related group chats I’ve had for years, and am now awaiting the resolution to, “What’s next?” I’ve been in an anxious, squirrelly state of constantly checking my email, hoping for responses to job interviews or updates on ongoing interview processes. Hoping for reassurance or a glimpse of stability at the end of the tunnel.

I don’t completely doubt my abilities or my employability. But this time is confusing, scary, and mostly weird. I don’t know what to change my email signature too. Unemployed?

I won’t be sitting here for long, though. I get the opportunity to learn from journalists at POLITICO next week. This will be just my third time on a plane, my first alone. It’ll be my first time in D.C., and I’m hoping to not mix up all the white buildings or take the wrong train.

I’m sure this period of uncertainty is just another stage in the grand scheme of things. Having parents, friends, and a significant another worry about where you’ll be in a few weeks. Experiencing the pressure of making correct decisions. Wondering when you’ll actually be back in a routine.

I’m hopeful that I’ll find a place to put all of my newspapers soon. They can’t keep taking up my bed.

FOOTNOTE: Taylor Wooten is a recently graduated alumna of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students, and Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism.

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