Something about the Mount
Leeanne Leary
Class of 2017
(5/2014) I keep asking myself and everyone around me how this year flew by so quickly. I still can’t figure it out myself to be honest. Sure, I’m still only finished with one of four years, but the time that’s passed now seems so much more meaningful than it did after my freshman year in high school. Finishing freshman year here means one step closer
to becoming a sophomore, which is one step closer to being a junior and then a senior and then, a college graduate. This, by extension, means that I am one step closer to being an adult, a fact that is not even fathomable at this point.
I ask myself how this year flew by so quickly and how it is that I am already a quarter of the way through my time here at the Mount, and it doesn’t make sense to me. It doesn’t make sense until I run around the trail behind the ARCC or walk to the basement of the library. It doesn’t make sense until I get my Banana Berry Splash smoothie at the café
or walk to PT at 6 o’clock in the morning. It doesn’t make any sense at all until I stand in the grill line in Patriot, and they know exactly how I like my sandwich – and then it makes sense. I’ve made a home here; I’ve found my place. I’ve learned where it’s most peaceful to run and where to relax. I’ve replaced my study spot at home with one in the library. I’ve adjusted
and adapted in a way that I didn’t realize was happening along the way. Looking back, it’s much easier to see how it all happened, and how it is actually possible that a year has come and gone already.
Not to be too cliché, but it actually feels like just yesterday I was moving all my stuff into my room, sitting on my bed and thinking, "What next?" Then I started classes and learned – after far too many incredibly late nights – how to study and when to study. I walked outside my room
and met some of the best people. I started playing field hockey and learned what it’s like to have fun playing a sport. I had to work harder than ever on papers for an English class where a 94 wasn’t an A; I kept all of those papers. I did all of these things that stand out to me, and even more that seemed routine at the time but upon reflection were actually pretty special.
I met my future roommates and went out to get ice cream with my friends. I cheered for my best friend in his first season of college basketball. I learned that nobody is going to tell me when to be home, and that I really can eat macaroni all the time no matter what. I had to write in a journal every day for my Veritas Symposium and discovered that everything becomes a little
more important when you put it in writing. I’ve done so many things here at the Mount that I couldn’t see myself getting to do anywhere else, and I discovered a place at Mount St. Mary’s in which I fit perfectly.
The first semester seemed to take a little longer than the second because this semester has been a whirlwind. I joined Army ROTC and after what seemed like an hour – but was actually a few months – I will be swearing in and accepting a contract at the end of April. I travelled to Robert Morris and had the time of my life watching the Mount win the NEC
championship in men’s basketball. I did Relay for Life and had the most incredible experience before having to work all day with zero hours of sleep. I got my very first speeding ticket and cried way too much about it. The Grotto held certain serenity for me that I couldn’t find anywhere else, and I discovered that I indeed do have enough Mount Flex Dollars to get a smoothie
every day. There is so much that went on in my individual experience of freshman year, it’s almost impossible trying to fathom how amazing all the other freshmen experiences were. I don’t think I could have had quite the same experience anywhere else, so after all the stress and confusion at the beginning of the year over not knowing where I should be, I do think that I found
my place at the Mount. Now, I’m sad to see the year end.
As much as I hate to leave this year behind, I am excited to move in a little early this coming August as a Peer Mentor and help incoming freshman have as great and unique an experience as I did. I also can’t wait to get back to the smoothies, but that is another story entirely. I know that when I come back in August I will feel like I’m returning to
my second home. I’ve been told that before the Mount created their four pillars – Faith, Discovery, Leadership, and Community – many would say, "There’s just something about the Mount." There is just something about the Mount and something about the experience I’ve had that I can’t put into words. It’s special and it’s different than any other college experience I’ve heard
about. I truly was immersed in a community that led me to faith, leadership, and discovery, but there is so much more that I will never be able to define with a single word. There is just something about the Mount, and I’m truly glad that I am here.
Read other articles by Leeanne Leary