my email signatures + awkward college commentary

At the begininng of college, one of the most exciting things was the ability to have a “grown-up” email signature, and I think how they’ve evolved during my time here are rather telling about my experience.

It started like this: as neutral and dorky as a freshman email signature can get. I hadn’t really connected that if I was emailing someone, they wouldn’t need my email address written down below my name. I was stoked to be in college and felt weirdly in control and powerful.

Laura Sevilla

lsevilla24@wooster.edu

At least this next one means I was confident that I’d graduate on time?

Laura Elena Sevilla

(she/her/hers)

Class of 2024

Chaotic evil. I blocked this era out and will not (should not) look back. I shudder at the sight. It always started up emails that began with “Dear Professor… help/I apologize.” F tier.

Laura Elena Sevilla (she/her)

The College of Wooster ‘24

Pre-Medicine Track

Cognitive Behavioral Neuroscience Major

Writing Center Consultant

Ohhh hello little major removal! C tier. So doubtful, so meek. So necessary. <3

Laura Elena Sevilla (she/her/hers)

The College of Wooster ‘24

Writing Center Consultant

We digress from the sophmore year horror! Oh to be an English major. Terrifying yet lovely acceptance into my group of people. I remember going from classes only in Williams to classes only in Kauke. I remember going into Old Main for the first time and being flabbergasted by the mood change. To my humanities people, I love you.

Laura Elena Sevilla (she/her/hers)

The College of Wooster ‘24

English Major

Writing Center Consultant

I will be doing a close reading of my email signature, and I will be saying my bolded name and pronouns mean I’ve gained a whole lot of confidence and self assurance.

Laura Elena Sevilla (she/her/hers)

College of Wooster ‘24

English Major

English Department Assistant

Writing Center Consultant

(555)-555-5555

Yeehaw. The time has come. I have fully hatched. Watch out world! Or rather I will say “excuse me” softly because I’m still navigating the complexities of academia and continue grapple with the American educational system. Maybe I have been taught to watch out for you.

Laura Elena Sevilla (she/her/hers)

College of Wooster ‘24

English Major

Studio Art Minor

English Department Assistant

Writing Center Consultant

(555)-555-5555

If there’s anything this school has taught me, it’s that I’m the only person who can help myself. There’s countless amazing people that can guide me the best they can, but I am ultimately in control of my success and performance.

Even more groundbreaking was what this semester has proven, something I never wanted to imagine. Being in an English major, something I absolutely love, is not always fun. It’s unrealistic for me to always expect poetry rainbows and that I’d only analyze the literature I love. I expected my shift from STEM to Humanities to solve all of my issues, and that expecation was absurd.

We spend so much time enveloped in academia- worrying and studying and writing and emailing and analyzing and scheduling- that we forget we’re people outside of this. “Student” is a small part of who I am, and I still struggle to understand how all of our value is somehow decided by an A or F. It’s easy to feel helpless and small in college, and I do, but knowing that I’m more than a student keeps me going.

3 thoughts on “my email signatures + awkward college commentary

  1. I have always admired how creative your blog posts are, but this is so smart and something I have never thought of doing. I like how you included the informal “Ohhh hello little major removal! C tier. So doubtful, so meek. So necessary. <3" and the note to students in humanities. Honestly, this blog post reads more like a speech, or stand-up act, which is a cool writing style. It is also awesome to see the physical growth of your time at Wooster.

  2. What a way to look at the college experience: through the evolution of your email signature. There is so much humor in this post that I really appreciate. The idea of using a tier list to rank the signatures is very amusing! The discussion of the difficulties of being an English major at the end is also well-written. I can relate a lot to your feelings in that ending section. This semester has taught me that being an English major is indeed difficult. Good job!

  3. Laura, I love this idea so much. Email signatures are such an innocuous thing, but they really are representative of how far we’ve come. I love how you use a mundane feature of college (having to write a billion emails) to represent your journey and development. The use of color for each signature is also a brilliant way of showing your growth as a person and the fact that you finally found acceptance and a place to express your creativity. The structure and conversational tone really makes this feel like such a personal piece. Great work 🙂

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