I’m proud to say that interning at TBC has been such an experience. Today is my last day, and I feel immense sadness that I won’t be working in the office anymore after today, and at the same time, the magnitude of this sadness is the best reminder of how amazing this experience has been. I want to say thank you to everyone in the office for being part of this experience and part of my life, most of all my direct supervisor John. John, you are reading this before it gets published, and I want you to be the first to know I thankful I am for you. You have been the best supervisor I could have ever hoped for. Over the past seven months you have put up with so much of my inadequacies and taught me more than I could have ever hoped to learn. Thank you for not only being my supervisor, but also my friend.
Okay, I’ve made it sound like this is goodbye forever when I’ll probably still see everyone on a daily basis, but that is exactly how you live your life – boldly, unapologetically and ritualistically. Life is nothing but a string of routine events illustrated by very few truly important turning points, and the best way to live it is to feel, brave and unafraid, everything it throws your way, even the sad parts, knowing it will eventually be over.
Also, before I started writing this post, I asked a few TBC alumni to write down how they felt when they said goodbye to TBC. I wanted to work these responses organically into the article at first, but it didn’t work. So here I’ll just share the responses that I got:
“In my last few days at TBC, I was numb to all that was happening. I didn’t feel sad, I didn’t feel like I was going home, and I sure didn’t feel like I wasn’t going to see these best friends that I had made. When I stepped foot on that plane, it became real. I had a sinking feeling, like a heavy weight was tethered to my chest. I would never have an experience like that again. These new best friends that I have all go to school all around the world, and although I know and hope our paths will cross again sometime, nothing can take away the experience we had together on our journey with TBC.” – Brian Vollert
“The days before leaving TBC were slow and sad. I knew my life in America was easier than for most, but I realized more than ever how excruciatingly boring it would be to live in familiar surroundings again. I wish I could go back to those last days and soak in old and new parts of China, as well as all the people I miss.” – Zach Fetcher
“I was the very last person to leave TBC from our program and it was a very emotional experience for me. I waited in the office for a while until my brother arrived in China and I kept trying to distract myself because every time I thought too hard about TBC and all the experiences it brought me I would start to cry. I would finally pull myself together and then immediately start crying again. Before coming to China, I studied for a semester in italy as well and the program was not supportive and I had a really hard time there. TBC was like a breath of fresh air, because every single staff member cared about the students and really tried to give us an authentic experience. It surpassed all of my expectations and I will remember it forever.” – Cailin Touseull
A heartfelt thank you to everyone. This is goodbye.