Wednesday, May 13, 2020
Five ways living in university halls prepares you for adult life
Five ways living in university halls prepares you for adult life This post was written by an external contributor. Lucy Pegg looks at all the life skills you can gain from living in student halls and apparently that doesnt include living off frozen pizzas for a whole month Living in halls is a key part of the university experience. It can be a nightmare or a heavenly freedom, but in general itâs simply a weird and wonderful way of living. But perhaps halls can provide us with something other than a yearâs worth of anecdotes. Maybe it teaches us a few life lessons, and I donât just mean how to invent new sports that only use supermarket delivery crates as their equipment. Here are five ways that halls might just be getting us ready for the ârealâ world. Inconvenient fire alarms = practise for that 9-5 commute A lot of students complain when their timetable features anything at 9am, but in the working world youâre likely to be expected to start at 9am five days a week. Plus, unlike university, you canât show up in your pyjamas/onesie/last nightâs alcohol sodden clothes, either. What with having to make yourself look smart, the inevitably congested commute, and the fact that getting told off by your boss for lateness probably means a bit more than getting tutted at by your lecturer, youâll need to be up bright and early. But you can do it youâve done it involuntarily before, after all. As youâre crawling out of bed during your first week of work, call on that strength you used to go outside when some idiot decided to burn their chicken nuggets at 4am, setting the fire alarm off. Is getting up for work worse than the realisation that you canât just sleep through that alarm and risk burning to death? Perhaps it is, but at least this time youâre getting paid for it. Learning to live peacefully with random flatmates = learning to work peacefully with random colleagues I can think of few other situations in life where you turn up at your new flat and have no idea who it is youâll be living with. They might be your new best friends for life, but thereâs a high chance at least a few really wonât be. Whichever it is, you have to learn to at least tolerate each other, and learning to do that is a skill thatâll come in handy for the rest of your life. In your workplace thereâs going to be colleagues you really like, as well as those youâre not so keen on â" and youâre probably going to have to learn to work with all of them. Itâll be fine though, because you lived in halls, so you know how to get along with a whole range of people. And the advantage of the workplace is you get to leave, so you can return home to a home hopefully filled with people you actually like. Sleeping through parties = ability to live in that cheap, but noisy, neighbourhood In freshers week you swore you were going to be the life and soul of every party and pre-drinks, but by mid-October youâre realising you canât sustain that promise. Unfortunately, just because youâve opted for some responsible shut-eye of an evening, that doesnât others have. Over the course of your year in halls you develop the ability to sleep through raucous noise â" and letâs just say partying isnât the worst you might hear⦠All of this will come in handy when you graduate and have to find somewhere to live with a likely limited budget. Yes, that reasonably priced flat is next to a motorway, a train line and a building site, but after halls you know itâs no big deal. Dealing with club promoters = developing assertiveness Club promoters are the city bankers of student life; they seem to be hanging out at glossy parties, they probably have more money than you, but 90% of people hate them with a passion. Everyone knows theyâre not meant to be covering university accommodation with their flyers, but somehow no source of authority actually stops them doing it. So when they keep bothering you (or sneaking into your kitchen during freshers and covering the fridge in posters, a scenario I wish I didnât have first-hand experience of) standing up to them is up to you. Itâs an opportunity to develop your assertiveness and resolve a conflict in a mature manner. Once you move out of halls, pesky landlords will provide yet another opportunity to exercise these valuable skills. Small talk with your cleaner = small talk with anyone In adult life, there are lots of people youâre expected to engage in small talk with to seem like a mature human being; supermarket cashiers, unfamiliar colleagues, your friendâs new significant other. Anyone whoâs lived in halls will be prepped for this though, having had a weekly session of small talk practise whenever they encounter the hallsâ cleaner. You want to be friendly to make up for the fact theyâre cleaning up your mess, but itâs hard to chat to someone you know nothing about. Instead you desperately make conversation about the weather, the university, the weather⦠If you still canât deal with small talk after that, just move to London instead â" apparently no-one makes conversation with you there. So there you have it â" halls wasnât just a year of overpriced accommodation, it was a training ground for the next stage of your life. Connect with Debut on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn for more careers insights.
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