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    Home » ‘You’re a Trailblazer, Honey’: Behind-the-Scenes of Family Goodbyes and Move-In 2023
    Study Abroad

    ‘You’re a Trailblazer, Honey’: Behind-the-Scenes of Family Goodbyes and Move-In 2023

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    ‘You’re a Trailblazer, Honey’: Behind-the-Scenes of Family Goodbyes and Move-In 2023
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    ***

    Chloe Holter (H’27) is a first-year student studying human science in the School of Health. She was joined by her dad, Corey Holter (SFS’91), an alumnus who graduated from the School of Foreign Service in 1991. They traveled to Georgetown from Michigan.

    Chloe: My dad went to Georgetown for undergrad. We did a tour [during] spring break of my junior year, and I just loved it. I immediately fell in love with the campus and the area.

    Interviewer: Was Georgetown something your dad talked about when you were little? A close-up of a beaded bracelet on a young woman's arm that says "Hoya Saxa!"

    Chloe: Oh yeah. He watches the basketball games still. He has a ton of gear he wears all the time, the whole thing.

    Interviewer: Did you always want her to go to Georgetown?

    Corey: I wanted her to have the option and make sure she knew about Georgetown, because of the global nature, the emphasis on service and the kind of kids she’d meet. Talking about Georgetown as much as I do, I probably naturally brainwashed her <laughs>, but it wasn’t purposeful.

    Being back here, it brings back memories. In a way, I get to relive those being back here. I need to find the right balance between reliving my youth and intruding on her experience. <laughs>. It’s a delicate balance.

    I’m just super excited and proud.

    ***

    A male college student lugs a large suitcase onto his bed in his dorm room.

    Rai Muhammad Hasen Masoud (C’27) is a first-year student studying government and economics. 

    Rai: I’m from Lahore, Pakistan. I flew in two days ago. The journey was tiring. I had to take three transit flights to get here. It was around 28 hours of traveling.

    Interviewer: How did you feel like leaving Pakistan and your family to come to the U.S.?

    A male college student unpacks a green sweatshirt that says "Pakistan" across the front.Rai: It was hard, because in Pakistan, we have very close familial systems. Our grandparents live with us, so we are all really close. It was hard for my extended family as well. They all came to the airport. There were like 50 people at the airport <laughs>. I’m the first generation, so it was the first time someone went to the U.S. to pursue an undergraduate [degree].

    It was surreal, but at the same time, a bit emotional. That was the first time I left my family, and this is my first time in the states. It’s really far. I [won’t be able to] go back to my country [until] next summer.

    Interviewer: What made you choose Georgetown?

    Rai: My ultimate plan is to pursue politics in Pakistan. So for politics and government and foreign service, this school was the perfect place for me. I chose Georgetown because they have a wonderful Alumni Association. I wanted to follow their footsteps and immerse myself in the political experience right across White House.

    For me, power is like real estate, right? The closer you are to the center of power, the [more] powerful you are. That’s how I chose, ultimately.

    A male college student holds up a large tapestry of Vincent van Gogh's painting, "The Starry Night."

    Rai: This is The Starry Night. I always had it in my room. I just loved Starry Night and the concept behind it. Vincent van Gogh suffered from schizophrenia. He was in this rehab place, and the only thing he could see wasn’t as pretty as this [painting] is. So he imagined it all inside his head and painted this in his rehab prison. He didn’t have the perfect view from his place, but it was all about imagination. Transcending the normal boundary of imagination. That the sky’s not limited.

    Interviewer: Is that a reminder for you?

    Rai: Exactly. It’s a reminder for me that life is all about perception. You only lose when you accept that you’ve been defeated. So that’s my motto to always keep on pursuing what I’m after.

    Ultimately, I wish to become the prime minister of Pakistan. I want to pursue the executive and since there’s a lot of corruption in Pakistan, I don’t want to stop. That’s the end goal. I just want to go in and strike the system and try my luck.

    ***

    Two sisters smile at one another inside a dorm room at Georgetown.

    Grace Kearns (C’24) (right) is a senior studying biology and global health, and her sister, Juliette Kearns (C’27) (left), is a first-year studying history. Grace spent her first year at Georgetown learning virtually from Southampton, New York, due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Her senior year, she accompanied her sister through the gates for her move-in.

    Interviewer: What was it like to see your sister drive through the Georgetown gates for the first time?

    Grace: It’s a mix because I can’t believe she’s that grown up already. I still think she’s in eighth grade and I’m in high school. But it’s the best. I can’t wait to see her grow and experience the year. Because it was so life-changing for me to be here. So I’m really excited for her.

    She’s just always worked really hard ever since we were little. She’s just amazing. I’m so proud of everything she does.

    Juliette: Same to her <laughs>.

    Grace: I want it to be her school now too. So she’ll be able to forge her own path. I’ll just be here to help for the year.

    ***

    A male student smiles off-camera while unpacking in his dorm room during move-in.

    David Stewart (SFS’27) is a first-year student studying global business in the School of Foreign Services. He was joined by his mother, Yolande McKay, from Orlando, Florida.

    David: Georgetown was my number one dream college.

    Yolande: We thought the dream wasn’t going to happen because he was placed on the wait list. And then the second wait list.

    David: By the time early June came about, I was like, OK this isn’t going to happen. We were actually at orientation [at another school] when I got an email saying, ‘We’d like to discuss your position on the waitlist.’ It was like a sign. It was like divine intervention.

    Yolande: I had told him it was going to happen. In April I said, we’re going to manifest this. He knows what he wants. He always knows what he wants. So I was like, it’s going to happen. Let’s believe it.

    A mother holds up a flip flop and smiles as her son laughs in the background in his dorm room as they move in for the first time.

    Interviewer: How did you manifest it?

    Yolande: I wrote it down on index cards that I carried around with me. That he was going to go to Georgetown. That the financial aid would work out. He was going to get everything he needed for it to happen.

    It was coming down to the end because that was close to mid-June. That’s how we ended up at orientation.

    David: I got the call and stepped outside of the orientation classroom. She said the selection committee was convening and would I still be interested?

    A few days later, I got the call and she was like, “I want to be the first to congratulate you on your acceptance,” I was so happy. I was over the moon. It was a dream come true. Things like that don’t happen. And for that to happen, it didn’t feel real. When my mom came home, she was screaming, I was screaming.

    Yolande: I was screaming.

    Interviewer: What are your hopes for David in his first year and at Georgetown?

    Yolande: I always say when people ask that he’s going to run the world. That’s how I look at him. I see so much for him. I can’t wait to see what he does because I’m going to be like, ‘That’s my son.’ I just see great things.

    A mother smiles proudly at her son in a dorm at Georgetown.

    ***

    A male college student wearing glasses and a navy blue Georgetown T-shirt smiles off-camera in his dorm room on the first day of move-in.

    Adrian Frauca Arenas (C’27) is a first-year student who’s studying computer science and is part of the Georgetown Scholars Program.

    Adrian: I’m from Panama. This is my first time traveling alone.

    I got here at 4 a.m. But I was greeted by a volunteer from GSP [the Georgetown Scholars Program]. She offered me somewhere to nap, to get something to eat, and helped me get set up.  

    It meant everything to me. Maybe I felt a little scared, maybe a little alone, but she was there to help me. That’s something I could only have gotten at Georgetown from all the colleges I considered when I was thinking about applying abroad.

    I couldn’t have ever imagined being able to be here when I was younger. I like to think that I’m doing it not just for myself, but for my parents, for my grandparents. I want to represent the things that they taught me in the way I am, the way I interact, in the efforts I make. Their support has stuck with me.

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