A lot of students head to college with good intentions.
They say things like:
- “I’m going to stay grounded.”
- “I’ll find a good community.”
- “I won’t lose who I am.”
And they mean it.
But then… life happens.
Schedules fill up.
New friendships form quickly.
Opportunities (and pressure) show up out of nowhere.
And before they realize it, they’ve drifted into a version of college they never actually chose.
The Problem Isn’t Lack of Intentions
It’s lack of preparation.
Most students don’t realize how intense the transition really is.
You’re suddenly:
- Making all your own decisions
- Surrounded by brand new influences
- Trying to figure out who you are without structure
And in that environment, whatever is easiest usually wins.
That’s how drifting happens.
The First 72 Hours Are Real
There’s a reason people say the first few days of college matter so much.
Because they do.
In a very short window, you:
- Meet the first people you’ll hang out with
- Decide what environments feel “normal”
- Start building routines (whether you realize it or not)
You don’t need to panic about it—but you should be aware of it.
So What Can You Do Differently?
You don’t need a perfect plan. You just need a starting point.
Here are a few simple ways to stay intentional:
- Don’t wait to find community
Look for it early—even before you move in if possible - Have a few non-negotiables
Things you know you want to stay consistent in (values, habits, priorities) - Pay attention to who you’re around
Not because you’re judging—but because influence is real - Be willing to go first
Introduce yourself, invite someone, start the conversation
One Small Decision Can Change Everything
A lot of students think big life change comes from huge decisions.
But in college, it’s usually small ones:
- Who you sit next to
- Who you say yes to
- Where you show up consistently
Those choices shape your entire experience.
You Don’t Have to Drift
The goal isn’t to control everything.
It’s to walk in aware.
Because when you’re intentional early, you don’t just avoid the wrong path—you actually create a better one.
And that kind of college experience?
It doesn’t happen by accident.


