Mr. Oswald 

Moreau FYE 

3 December 2021 

Finding Family and Balance 

 Due to Cross Country being a fall sport, I arrived at campus a week before the student 

body. I remember getting dropped off at the teams off campus house and right before knocking 

on the door thinking, “I am about to meet my best friends for the next four years of my life.” 

While this was an exciting moment, as one can imagine it was also quite nerve wracking. From 

that moment on, the week went by in a blur of excitement and exhaustion. Thinking back on the 

time that has passed since that first knock on the door to where I am now, nearly done with my 

first semester of college, I am amazed at the growth I have been able to achieve. It feels like I 

have been here a lifetime when it really has only been four and a half months. Fred DeVito once 

said, “If it doesn’t challenge you, it doesn’t change you,” and this is how I would best describe 

my last few months as I transitioned into a new life. It has been a fantastic experience that makes 

me extremely excited for the rest of my time here, but it has also presented its fair share of 

challenges. From the freshman plague, doing laundry on my own, to more challenging issues like 

times of loneliness and experiencing imposter syndrome, I have encountered a lot that required 

responding too. But through these encounters I have adapted, grown, and learned how be ready 

to respond better in the future. 

One of the things I was most nervous about coming into college was finding good 

friends. I knew I would have plenty of friends because I had a team, but there is a difference 



between being acquaintances with people and having real relationships. This was a concern of 

mine because I have always struggled to form deeper relationships with others. I have a hard 

time trusting people and opening up because I have been hurt in the past, but a quote from 

Kirston Helgesen has helped me see this vulnerability in a new light, “A breakable heart is a 

good thing because it allows you to grow and expand,” (Women Find Healing Through Kintsugi 

Workshop by Kirston Helgesen- Moreau FYE Week 10). This is the concept behind Kintsugi, an 

artform which is intended to rebuild the soul. I had never heard of Kintsugi before, but am 

absolutely in love with the idea of it. It offers a creative way to reflect on the pieces of yourself 

that maybe aren’t whole. And by channeling these emotions into the cup and letting them “break 

the cup”, the healing process can begin. Because if the emotions can break the cup, but the gold 

glue can put the cup back together, than that is representative of your soul having the ability to 

be glued back together too. I have switched my mindset to view the new relationships I am 

forming as glue for my soul rather than a force that can break it. And I can say so far, that it has 

worked excellently. I would do anything for all my teammates, and I know they would do 

anything for me.  

It has been so comforting through this transition to have a team that has become a family 

away from home. In week eleven, we explored the idea of encountering community and I found 

the following quote especially helpful in my journey, “Community begins not externally but in 

the recesses of the human heart,” (Thirteen Ways of Looking at Community by Parker Palmer- 

Moreau FYE Week 11). I feel this idea gives more purpose to the personal growth I have been 

trying to achieve because it shows that my personal growth effects more than just me. It 

improves the community and family I am in, which only adds motivation to keep trying to get 

better. 

https://grottonetwork.com/make-an-impact/heal/find-healing-through-kintsugi-art/
https://grottonetwork.com/make-an-impact/heal/find-healing-through-kintsugi-art/
http://couragerenewal.org/parker/writings/13-ways-of-looking-at-community/


While I love a good challenge and wanting to improve myself is something engrained 

into me, sometimes I need to step back and be happy with who I am now. My whole life I have 

been dedicated to being an athlete and student. Over the years I think I started to lose my sense 

of identity and I began to let my sports and academics define me rather than just being something 

I did. I was told that if I worked hard all the time I would get where I needed to go. Well, I got to 

the place I worked the first 18 years of life towards and now just feel pressure to achieve the next 

big thing. Elizabeth Cox says in her TedEd, “There’s often no threshold of accomplishment.” 

(What is Imposter Syndrome? By Elizabeth Cox- Moreau FYE Week 9). This is something that I 

am recently coming to realize, and I’ve decided it is time to figure out the fine line between work 

and enjoyment in life. I do still believe having reasonable expectations, aspirations, and goals are 

healthy for producing a drive to succeed. It is just when these become consuming that they are no 

longer healthy. To combat this consumption in work, I have instilled a routine in my week 

consisting of little things that I know I will enjoy. For example, Sunday mornings are for getting 

a smoothie bowl at purely pressed and Sunday nights are for getting dinner with a few seniors on 

the team. Monday mornings are for a warm coffee and Thursday mornings are for a bagel for 

breakfast. It is these little things that are beginning to make a big difference in my work-life 

balance. 

Here at Notre Dame, we as students are at a critical point in our lives. We are formed by 

our encounters and experiences over the next four years. The goal over the course of our time 

here is not necessarily to grow into the person we are destined to be the rest of our lives, but 

rather learn how to stand up on our own and take life head on. The following quote from C.S. 

Lewis’s Screwtape letters sums this up perfectly, “He leaves the creature to stand up on its own 

legs- to carry out from the will alone duties which have lost all relish,” (The Screw Tape Letters 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZQUxL4Jm1Lo
https://canvas.nd.edu/courses/28199/files/192826?module_item_id=109705


by C.S. Lewis- Moreau FYE Week 12). Life is not easy and I know I will be continuously 

challenged, but I am confident that I will learn how to respond well to these challenges during 

my time here at Notre Dame.