Written by 10:24 am Letters • 31 Comments

An Anonymous Conn Student Offers an Alternative Perspective on Fishbowl

“Dear Conn. I hate you.” This was the status of someone I [used to] respect after the announcement was made about Fishbowl this Wednesday afternoon. Before my eyes, my newsfeed filled up with angry commentary and conspiracy theories from students who I [used to] see as mature campus leaders. Hundreds of angry and immature comments later, I had only seen one suggestion of a petition. Camels – I’m not impressed.

Before I go any further, I would like to point out that I am not writing this because I worship the administrators, or am secretly an undercover College Relations staff member. I am also not one of the students who were notified of this decision before the rest of the campus community.

I have chosen to remain anonymous so that my identity doesn’t influence the way this letter is read. However, I would like to make it known that as far as our campus community is concerned, I tend to be on the more radical end of the spectrum – a claim you will probably question by the time you are finished reading. But as you read on, please try to keep two things in mind:

First, the goal of this piece is not to change anyone’s mind about the issue, but rather to ask you to take a step back and look at this from another angle, since I have noticed that not many students have taken the initiative to do that on their own.

Second, please consider that while I encourage my peers to question anything and everything that happens on this campus, that includes resistance movements: being subversive just because your friends are is, in many cases, worse than doing nothing at all.

All that being said, I believe that for those students who are angry about the cancellation of Fishbowl, the strongest argument you have in your favor is that this decision was made with relatively little student input. Although a select group of students were informed of the decision, little was done to discuss the issue with SGA or any other student leaders in a dialectic format before the email was sent out.

I cannot and will not defend the administration’s choice to bypass student input on this decision. Simultaneously, however, I would like to remind everyone that even in the shared governance model, the administration always has the final say, especially when it comes to health and safety issues. SGA resolutions, when it comes down to it, are just suggestions that the students make to the administration for policy changes that they would like to see, and they do not go on the books without an OK from someone with more power.

Although it would have been nice to be offered the chance to voice our opinions, I do not find it hard to understand why the administration would want to avoid the negative, unproductive, and whiney conversations that I have been witness to since the announcement. This is especially true given that with all the arguments against continuing to host Fishbowl, no matter what the student recommendation ultimately was, the administration still probably would have been forced to ignore our vote.

Every year, on average, two seniors are transported on the night of Fishbowl. These statistics alone should make students do a double take: it is rare enough for a senior to get transported, but the fact that it happens twice in one night, and that this repeats itself without fail every year, is not something easily shaken.

For a school working hard to reduce the binge-drinking culture on campus, Fishbowl makes no sense. In fact, I would argue that Fishbowl was the exact opposite: school-sponsored binge drinking. Students were literally locked in Cro until they finished all the alcohol and their inhibitions were low enough (read: blackout) to run across campus naked. Yet much of the backlash I have seen is from student leaders who hold positions in which they have agreed to look out for the health and safety of themselves and their peers: Housefellows, campus EMTs, etc.. Somewhere, there is a disconnect.

Along with this alcohol abuse comes a host of other problems. Students were not given medical attention only because of overconsumption of alcohol; the intoxication levels that many students aim for on the night of Fishbowl often leads to other health and safety concerns. In past years, I have heard stories of people tripping and breaking bones, and even more disturbing, getting trampled by their drunk classmates as they rush across campus. In addition, although I commend the Community of Care for their eye-catching “Just because I’m naked doesn’t mean I want you to touch me” campaign last year, Fishbowl is the perfect storm, so to speak, for sexual misconduct or assault.

In my conversations with students, they counter the above points by saying, “but students like that [getting drunk and out of control] so the school should sponsor it.” While I would love for this to be the case, the school cannot offer anything that the student body would like to see happen, simply because of demand. While we love Conn because it’s position as a private institution affords us many freedoms that we would not get anywhere else, they cannot simply allow us to run wild. In that same vein, to those of you who want to “get out of here” because you feel like Conn is taking away all your fun, I ask you this: where are you going where you will be afforded more freedoms than here? Is there somewhere that I don’t know about that is throwing all-expenses-paid nude parties where you’re headed off to?

Finally, if everyone really does want to stick to their naïve idea that the concept of “nakedess” is the one reason that this event was cancelled (“Fishbowl has been eliminated. Really ConnColl? Nakedness is clearly the biggest problem we have on this campus.”), then please consider this. For some of us, being exposed is extremely painful, embarrassing, and humiliating. While you might argue that anyone is allowed to keep their clothes on, the culture and circumstances of Fishbowl  – that is, the weight of “tradition” that it holds coupled with excessive intoxication – breeds heavy peer pressure to conform, or get naked.

If nothing else, the cancellation of Fishbowl has assured me that this Spring, I won’t feel pressured to spend extra time counting calories and dragging my butt to the gym with the rest of the girls of the Class of 2013 in order to feel like I will be “prepared” for Fishbowl.  And even though you might deny it now, ask last year’s graduating class – because I promise you, they did it too. In fact, some administrators have alluded to the fact that the number of students seeking counseling through the Health Center tends to soar in the week or so after Fishbowl due to the mental and emotional stress it places on students. Now, thanks to Dean Denard and the rest of the group that made this decision, the score is now Body Image: 1 Fishbowl: 0.

So get drunk and naked if you’d like, and run down and ring the gong on your own accord. But in this age of liability, please don’t expect the College to sponsor Fishbowl when they are aware of all of the above problems.

And most of all, please don’t take this out on the poor individuals who were forced to make this decision. Dean Denard and the other senior administrators sought out positions here because they love this school and want to protect and foster our traditions to the best of their abilities. They do not want to change the culture of Conn, ruin our traditions, “sterilize anything weird we do as a community,” or any of the other absurd claims that have been laid against them. They were simply forced into enacting a decision that has been a long time coming. It was only a matter of time before one of you got transported, trampled, or worse, and your parents sued the school. You probably wouldn’t think that Fishbowl was so great then, would you?

We’re seniors. It’s time to grow up and see the realities of this decision, rather than ranting about it on Facebook. Welcome to the real world, Class of 2013!

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