Save time with a Gap Year
Do you think you know what you want? Or do you have no idea what to do with your life? Have you ever given yourself the chance to prove yourself in a professional context? Maybe volunteering?
Do you think that learning English at eighteen is exactly the same as learning English at thirty?
If you have more questions than answers and the world is drowning you with them, I’ll tell you one thing: IT’S NORMAL. When I was eighteen, a little while ago, I didn’t know whether to study psychology, journalism or political science. I felt more lost than an octopus in a garage, it was difficult to listen to myself under so much pressure.
I wish someone had told me: Don’t worry Elena, you have a lot of things to learn and you can start with these.
You can live in another cultural context for a year, give yourself the opportunity to work and see what you like, you can learn about social work, give yourself time to get to know yourself in a new place without pressure.
You can really learn English and have this handicap solved for the rest of your life.
That’s what a gap year is, Elena. Many young people around the world do it and it’s an essential life experience that will make you feel much calmer and more confident in your decisions.
That didn’t happen. And I had to realize it myself three years later. That’s when I did it, and I’m very happy about it today. It’s just that I went around in circles more than necessary before reaching this conclusion. Actually, I’ll tell you one thing, you can do a lot more with your life than you imagine. There are more direct paths to reach interesting goals that fulfill you more than those that they tell you are right, what happens is that many times we lack perspective.
At that time I didn’t know how to see it, but today I have it very clear: A gap year is not a waste of time, it is gaining time for oneself, culture, immersion in the language, confidence in our decisions, work experience, and valuable knowledge that we rarely have the opportunity to acquire.
Keep up the good work, it’s worth it.


