Grace Larson learned about study abroad through befriending exchange students in high
school, but she initially hesitated when considering such an experience for herself.
“You're having to travel thousands of miles away and leave your life behind, but I
knew that undergrad would be the only time I could pause my life here in the States
long enough to do something like this while still staying on track to graduate,” she
said.
“I had to see the world before it was too late.”
Larson, a Trine University psychology major from Alto, Michigan, is studying in Stockholm,
Sweden, this semester. She arrived in January and will be in the country until May.
‘Out of my comfort zone’
Larson said she chose Sweden because “I could be out of my comfort zone but not be
in too deep water.”
“Sweden is very similar in many ways to life back home, so I still have some similar
comforts versus if I had gone to a completely different country that has a different
lifestyle,” she said.
She had stayed in Stockholm once before but said she still felt some anxiety and doubt
during her flight there to study abroad.
“Upon arrival, it turned to excitement and just relief to be here and a desire to
get settled in,” she said.
She is taking a full-time load of five courses at a college in downtown Stockholm
in order to complete her degree on time.
“A typical day is I wake up and prepare for my classes, which last until early afternoon,”
she said. “From there, I go out and go for runs or long walks around the city to get
movement in, but also to get out and explore my home.”
“On weekends, I travel throughout the greater Stockholm area to see new neighborhoods
and boroughs. I live day-to-day like a typical local at this point, as I did many
of the touristy adventures when I was here prior. The weather has been warmer, so
I've even been ferrying to different islands to study on beaches or parks, since everything
is relatively easy to get to.”
Reconnecting
Her favorite memories have included reconnecting with family members who live in Stockholm
as well as on the other coast in a small village outside of Gothenburg.
“It's meant so much to meet these once-strangers and see how things could've been
in another life,” she commented.
She is looking forward to upcoming trips with her study abroad program to cities in
Lithuania that played a role in World War II, as well as other locations in Europe.
“Later on, I'll be traveling with a class to Madrid to see firsthand how clinical
psychology looks on a greater scale in varying countries,” she said.
“Overall, this has been an amazing experience,” she commented. “The chance to see
the world for a longer term than just a week is worth it, and to have an education
taught from the eyes of someone who lives outside of our little bubble is worth more
than the cost.”