dcentity2000
<font color=red>Simba Cub<br><font color=green>Is
- Joined
- Jul 22, 2003
- Messages
- 10,057
This is quite a long, emotional thing, so feel free not to read. I'll try and keep it interesting for you all 
At the start of October 2003 I moved to Southampton to start my studies at the university. As every fresher does I moved into halls - Gateley Hall in my case, a southern and quiet halls of residence. This was of course an intimidating time - I was studying quite far away from my girlfriend who I missed the day she left, I was being thrown in to a new residence, a new city, a new county, a new regime and all - seemingly - without anyone around me to help! How intimidating things can be...
Time passed and I got to know other members of my flat. I finally understood that the stereotypical view that students drank a lot and went clubbing all the time was complete rubbish - students weren't (at least here) anything like that, they were ordinary people, and absolutely wonderful to know! We all grew accustomed to propping our doors open and wondering in and out within our flat; meals became social things and we started to throw mini style flat parties. We became not friends but family.
I'm at university now, typing this, in my room, now stripped bare. No posters on the wall, no photographs with glossed smiles painted on their lacquered surface. No soft toys from my girlfriend, no letters from my family. Not even the dream catchers, incense sticks or tiny candles. Not even the voices of my friends.
My flat is now empty.
I cannot describe or even begin to describe to you the overwhelming sadness I felt climbing up the stairs to our front door this evening, knowing that the laughter of the people I knew would be in the walls, no longer floating in the air. The lights were all off, the windows all shut and locked. The place has a dull echo to it.
I miss how things were.
Rich::

At the start of October 2003 I moved to Southampton to start my studies at the university. As every fresher does I moved into halls - Gateley Hall in my case, a southern and quiet halls of residence. This was of course an intimidating time - I was studying quite far away from my girlfriend who I missed the day she left, I was being thrown in to a new residence, a new city, a new county, a new regime and all - seemingly - without anyone around me to help! How intimidating things can be...
Time passed and I got to know other members of my flat. I finally understood that the stereotypical view that students drank a lot and went clubbing all the time was complete rubbish - students weren't (at least here) anything like that, they were ordinary people, and absolutely wonderful to know! We all grew accustomed to propping our doors open and wondering in and out within our flat; meals became social things and we started to throw mini style flat parties. We became not friends but family.
I'm at university now, typing this, in my room, now stripped bare. No posters on the wall, no photographs with glossed smiles painted on their lacquered surface. No soft toys from my girlfriend, no letters from my family. Not even the dream catchers, incense sticks or tiny candles. Not even the voices of my friends.
My flat is now empty.
I cannot describe or even begin to describe to you the overwhelming sadness I felt climbing up the stairs to our front door this evening, knowing that the laughter of the people I knew would be in the walls, no longer floating in the air. The lights were all off, the windows all shut and locked. The place has a dull echo to it.
I miss how things were.
Rich::