The disparity of rooms

Contributing Writer
Last Updated Sunday, 05 September 2010 17:32
the jist


Over the past week that I have been at F&M, I have participated in Orientation, made friends, and realized that even though the four Houses are quite different, they all share the same spirit and pride.



Over the past week that I have been at F&M, I have participated in Orientation, made friends, and realized that even though the four Houses are quite different, they all share the same spirit and pride.

As an incoming first-year, I believe I have the right to nerdily state that I am super excited about showing my school spirit, and no, I am not being sarcastic. 

However, in my very short time here, I have come to realize that there is one very large difference between the Houses. 

Last night, when my friend announced it was time to head back to the broom closet after we had all been studying in the Ware Commons, I recognized that, despite her love of Harry Potter, this particular reference to brooms was not a good thing. I hold great pride in being a Warian and, in all honesty, was quite surprised when I walked into my room last Tuesday to see the copious amount of space that stretched on before me. With closets built into the wall, expansive desk and shelf space, a few nicely sized drawers, and storage space above the closets, I found that with some cramming, most of my things fit quite nicely. 

I love my roommate, and since we established that our me-time is important to each of us, such a spacious room leaves us an area to be close while not getting in each other’s way. When we sit on our respective beds, we are each in our own spaces and have no trouble navigating the room when we are each getting ready in the morning or otherwise. I feel very fortunate for the room in which we live. But as I have mentioned, this is clearly not the case with all first-year dormitories. Several of my friends live in rooms that have moveable furniture. Because of this and the extremely limited amount of space, they were forced to reorganize the beds and out-of-wall cabinets several times in order to find an arrangement that allowed for personal space and perhaps a bit of floor room.

Now, I am definitely not trying to sound like a spoiled brat who expects the nicest of accommodations for everyone and perhaps room service dining to accompany it. I realize  the rooms anyone here at the College has are really quite nice in terms of dormitory standards, but what really surprises me is the large disparity between the small, linoleum-floored rooms as opposed to the spacious, carpeted rooms. For a school that so greatly emphasizes equality, this difference seems very interesting.

Perhaps the people in certain unnamed dormitories will, in turn, be feeling sorry for me next year once their bigger, better, nicer, neater buildings are built and they are living in suites, while I live in a space akin to my room this year. However, for now, one has to wonder where this large difference originated or how it got this bad. I am sure there is a plethora of information and research that could go into finding out why some rooms are just downright nicer than others, ranging from when they were built, to what the rooms previously were, even to their previous inhabitants.

For now, I am not complaining, as I feel very grateful to live in such a nice room at such a wonderful school. Similarly, I’m not trying to brag or announce that Ware is the best house (which it is) or sound ungrateful. Rather, I am simply wondering why it is okay for students to live in such drastically different environments, even if it is only for one year.

What it boils down to is that I am a strong believer that living habitats and overall feeling of environments greatly affect one’s mood and productivity. I feel if one’s living environment is not suitable (i.e., too little room, too cramped, too cluttered, etc.), it can have harsh and negative effects on the student. I feel this can be magnified by the stress of being a first-year and living away from home for the first time. 

What is the immediate solution? Obviously, the conditions are not unlivable; it is just simply interesting to observe how the Houses diverge. I hope that in the future, with the building of the new houses, this problem will be fixed and no one student will have better accommodations than any others.



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