I have dreaded this day for as long as I have worked for GRIT. The day I would have to plop myself down in front of my computer and write my last word. It鈥檚 not that I鈥檓 having trouble coming to terms with the fact that I鈥檓 graduating鈥攓uite the contrary actually. I鈥檝e been counting down the days 鈥檛il graduation since I was a sophomore. Rather, I鈥檝e feared that I wouldn鈥檛 be able to conjure up something glittery or 鈥渋nspirational鈥 enough for you to read. I鈥檝e feared that my last words might not be enough for you women to glean anything from鈥攖hat my experience at Biola was far too niche for anyone to be able to relate to.

You see, I鈥檝e never been what they might鈥檝e called a 鈥淏iola Betty鈥 back in the day. I don鈥檛 wear Birkenstocks or own a Hydroflask. I hate GYRAD鈥檚. And if I鈥檓 being honest I鈥檝e picked up a swear word or two in the past couple years. In so many ways, I often feel like an outsider on Biola鈥檚 campus. When I was an RA the boys on my staff would make fun of me for always insisting on opening doors for myself and carrying heavy furniture. And it wasn鈥檛 unusual for me to look around any given classroom I was in and notice that I was the only Black student there. Sometimes it felt like even the things I cared about were the wrong things. I went to protests instead of missions trips. In my screenwriting classes I wrote stories about racism instead of faith. I often felt like social justice was viewed as a 鈥渟ecular鈥 cause, and racism as nonexistent.

My passions were continually questioned by other students, professors, and yes, at times even my parents. On top of it all, I decided in the middle of my junior year that I no longer wanted to pursue film, the area of study I would graduate with a degree in. Instead, I began to pursue writing, and eventually found GRIT (which I鈥檒l get to later). Though, I felt confident in this new path I was taking, the switch only contributed to my perpetual feelings of outsiderness.

When you feel like an outsider in a community of believers, its easy to feel like an outsider to the faith. Sometimes raising my hands during worship or even bowing my head for prayer before class left me feeling like an imposter. All I could ever think was: You don鈥檛 belong here. You don鈥檛 belong here. You don鈥檛 belong here. Yet, amongst that voice yelling in my head came the steady whispers begging the contrary with: Oh, but you do.

These whispers came to me in the form of girls huddled in circles outside Commons or on the infamous Metzger lawn, sharing stories, laughing and sometimes crying. We were all 鈥渙utsiders鈥 in our own ways鈥攊n our departments, on our floors, in our on-campus jobs. But somehow whenever we came together that outsiderness seemed to fade into oblivion. Our differences with the majority became the glue that bonded us. These differences birthed new projects such as Shotgun Magazine and even GRIT, allowing us to share our stories even more and find solidarity with others.

These whispers also came unexpectedly in the form professors in classrooms. Professors like Tom Crisp and Brad Christenson in Social Problems, and Nancy Yuen with her phenomenal tweets about race, class and gender. These whispers came in the form of women of color in leadership like Tamra Malone whose entire job is dedicated to making Biola a better place for students of color. Not to mention the voices of the amazing Lisa Igram and Sarah Schwartz who have allowed me to cry on their shoulders more times than I can count.

These voices reiterated the ways in which my beliefs, my passions and my convictions were just as biblical as that of the vast majority I felt so separated from. These people who think like me, look like me, and feel like me affirmed that my passions weren鈥檛 wrong, just different.

I don鈥檛 have a bullet point list of helpful tips for surviving Biola. I can鈥檛 promise you that it won鈥檛 be hard, because quite honestly, it probably will be. But I will leave you with this: When your faith seems to be hanging by a thread, find the people you see God in. And cling to them. Whether it be a professor or a friend, an RD or someone who works in spiritual development. When you find the people who remind you what God looks like, make the most of your time with them. Forget about GYRADs or what outfits are trendy on campus. Because when you finally walk across that stage at commencement, what really matters is who you鈥檙e going to be carrying with you.