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Big moves don’t just change your address, they change your story. We sit down with Olivia as she prepares to trade senior year in Guatemala for freshman life at an art school in North Carolina, and we get honest about the mix of joy, nerves, and problem-solving it takes to cross cultures and start college strong. From finding a creative community to setting up money habits that prevent debt, we chart a path that turns unknowns into action. We dig into identity in a fresh way. In Guatemala, Olivia has long worn ready-made labels, missionary kid, bilingual student, the girl who speaks Spanish. In the States, those badges drop away. She talks about choosing what to share, anchoring in faith, and building routines that help her become known for her work, her character, and her voice in sound engineering. We also touch the very real stuff: licenses, winter roads, laws that actually get enforced, and the relief of emergency services you can trust. If you’ve ever wondered how to translate cross-cultural experience into campus confidence, this is your blueprint. The conversation gets practical and personal. We map a starter budget, plan for campus jobs, and frame help-seeking as a leadership skill. We look at food and health, why U.S. portions can sneak up on you, how to pace meals, and how to use dining halls as social hubs rather than stress triggers. And we name the mother-daughter pivot: fewer casual daily moments, more intentional check-ins, and new rituals that keep us close across miles. Along the way, Olivia shares what excites her most about art school life, collaboration, performances, and peers who speak the same creative language. Whether you’re a parent staring down a dorm drop-off or a student crafting a new beginning, you’ll find practical steps, honest perspective, and a hopeful plan. If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a friend who’s college-bound, and leave a quick review so more families can find these conversations.