Oh my God, I’m going to get really emotional writing this!!!
In 2012, STiBA merged with FBS (now FLA; Faculty of Language and Arts) of UKSW. For your note, FBS was one of the busiest faculty in UKSW, like, really, they had so many events in one term year, even after excluding the general University events. Two of the biggest faculty events were about ‘battle of the batches” in which each batch had to sent teams to compete in various competitions to determine the best batch of the year. I’m not gonna lie, they took the title very seriously.
My first involvement with this started with the event called LoVED (Loading Via English Days), which basically a series of competitions about the English subjects we had been learning —if I haven’t told you clearly, my major was English Literature- like spelling bee, drama, story-telling, trivia, etc (Idk, I generally only join one competition beside the opening march —each batch marched in costumes according to their theme and screaming their slogans). And there is one particular competition that was only known to be held by this faculty: dance.
So basically, the dance competition is more like a cabaret/musical story-telling, we need to tell a story that reflects our batch theme, through dancing. The students of FBS were told to ask the students from formerly STiBa to join them, as it would also be their events since the merger. Me and one of my friend (I’ll tell you why it was only both of us on the next post) joined the batch 2011 team, as a “token of friendship” they offered me to be the leading lady.
The theme was “Indonesia” so we picked Ramayana as our storyline, with a (lot of) twist. I remember we were a bit awkward at first —for a side note, somehow there was some kind of invisible tension between FBS and STiBA students, lol, dramas!- but after spending so much time together for the sake of the performance, it kind of melted away.
I remember we used to hang out on a small shop until late at night (many times I had to start over because of my boardinghouse’s curfew) and just had fun, like playing cards or talking shit. Oh those times when your biggest problem is how you were gonna wake up for a morning class!
And the rest was history, these people instantly became my best friends. It was a drastic change for me as I used to be so bored in my Uni life, after Eleveners happened, I felt like 24 hours in a day wasn’t enough! I wanted to hang out more, dance more, and just be young and stupid more! I can’t describe how much love I have for every single person in this picture.
Fun fact: there were so many talented dancers in the faculty that we never get to win the dance competition until our last year!!! We went all out for that year and we also (finally) became the best batch. I swear it felt like winning some sort of Nobel Prize or something! So much tears!!! I can still remember the feelings of joy even when I’m only reminiscing like now (and I’m deliberately using so many punctuation marks to show my excitement).
That’s a story of LoVED and there’s another story of EDO (English Department Olympics) which from the name, you can guess, is a sport competition. I’m really bad at sport but y’all know what I’m good at: shaking my ass dancing! There isn’t any dance competition in EDO, but there’s cheerleading.
/pəˈteɪtoʊ/ - /pəˈteɪtəʊ/ (if you’re an English major, you’ll get this joke)
Long story short, I became cheerleader once a year for three years.
Again, we never won the competition for three years. On our last year, the rule suddenly changed —I seriously can never understand how the most annoying people ALWAYS get their way to be in a committee and fuck things up???- we couldn’t perform cheerleadance (which is hard cheerleading-half dancing) and it had to be pure cheerleading. We were pissed off, like really pissed off.
I mean, how do you expect 10 amateur girls or more who mostly can’t even do the splits (including me) to do pure cheerleading, which consists of many difficult gymnastic moves and dangerous manoeuvre for straight 10 minutes??? I wouldn’t even last for three, honestly. And it was our last year, too!!! Our only chance to win the fucking thing once and for all!!!
But sis, oh how we snapped! We hired a cheerleading coach, and we said, fuck the rules, we’re fucking doing the cheerleadance. And it was the craziest, most intense training I’ve ever done in my life! I mean, physically, I was pretty strong already from all the dancing I did, but mentally, it was on another level. And I am still trembling with pride remembering how much we were determined to win, and kept going on trough those hellish training! (I wish we had the same excitement to study, but, lol)
The craziest part of that was: we were training with the whole song on slower tempo until D-2!!! And we couldn’t get it right. On D-2, our coach came with a happy face, saying, I finished the song!! And it was twice the tempo we had been training. It was chaotic. Yet it turned out so good on the performance day!!! I wish I had the video and can show you guys the golden era of my physical abilities!!!
AND WE FUCKING WIN!!! FINALLY!!!
I couldn’t get any prouder of these girls (including myself —girl, I fucking cartwheeled! It was bad, but still, I did it!)
And yes, we also won the best batch that year. That was crazy. We finished our last active year as students —since most of us would be busy individually with final projects afterwards- REIGNING AND PROUD!!! I always remember how resilient my fellow eleveners were, we were the batch with the least number, there were prolly not even 20 boys —they worked extra hard since they had to enter more competitions with no subs. And no shit, we had to work extra hard for almost everything in the battle of the batches, and it was all worth it in the end. We took the crown once, and once was enough to remember for a lifetime.
DAMNNN I GOT THE CHILLS!!! I MISS ALL OF THESE MFS!!!
So yeah, it’s also probably why I feel that I belong there, we’re kinda alike —batch 2011 and I. We’re good, but not effortless good that we gotta work our ass off to reach the top. To think back on how I’ve been living my life, I’m glad I learnt and trained with eleveners, the underdog that raise to the top, and become the legends of our own.