11.04.2010

A Power-Failure Bringing Students Together


As a commuter student, it’s easy to feel a little left out from time to time. It’s certainly not the fault of anybody within the institution, in fact Redeemer University College, in my view, takes exceptional steps to include commuters in activities. Hennie Schoon, through the University’s student life department, sets up commuter socials with free coffee on Wednesdays. Each commuter gets set up with a ‘buddy dorm.’, one specific residence on campus that we can go to anytime, where the introductions are all already made. It’s comforting to know that anytime I’m on campus and I feel like being utterly destroyed at any video game imaginable, I have a buddy dorm that I can go to where somebody will make that happen. In fact, if it’s any indication of how much Redeemer cares about its commuting students, I’m actually writing this in the Commuter Lounge. How many universities have a commuter lounge?

Still, though, there’s something about living on campus that can’t be duplicated. With the majority of students living on campus, there’s a tight knit community here that, while it’s been very accepting of me and my fellow commuters, I’m hesitant to believe I can ever truly be a part of. Dorm dinners, Bible studies, late night coffeehouses, games tournaments, on campus worship services and prayer meetings are all features of on-campus life. While I’m obviously not prohibited in any way from going to these things, they often take place at a time or place that are difficult for me to get to, or difficult for me to go to and then get home and be in bed by a reasonable hour. That, coupled with the fact that I’m just not around as much as an on-campus student would be, keeps me a little out of the loop. It’s not something that’s a problem, or something that’s anybody’s fault, it’s just a fact of life. I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t sometimes jealous of my on-campus friends.

Yesterday, however, my enchantment with on-campus living reached its highest point. I had left campus earlier that day and was returning for a meeting with my theatre group at around 7pm. I rolled into the parking lot to see literally hundreds of students in pajamas carrying bedding and pillows into the academic building. Upon investigation, I discovered that an underground power line near Luther Court had been severed by construction equipment and that many of the dorms were without power and that students were being evacuated to the main building for the night.

Most of the people I talked to were mildly unimpressed with the power failure. Before the cause of the outage was known, one group of students jokingly planned a holy war against the campus squirrel population, who were initially suspected of causing yet another power outage. Despite all the chaos, however, most students were excited to be involved in what they characterized as ‘a giant university slumber party.’ While staff scrambled to get pizza and gym mats and direct people to their assigned sleeping areas, students laughed and joked, enjoying each both others’ company and the hilarity of the situation. I don’t think I met one person who wasn’t at least moderately happy to be there, who didn’t appreciate the situation for the community building opportunity that it was.

Crews ended up restoring the power later in the evening, and nobody slept in the school, but the experience of being there with most of the student body last night showed me something: whether they know it or not, the kids on this campus really do love each other.

Maybe I’ll apply to live in residence next year.


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