It seems almost impossible to maintain a healthy balance between college work and everything else.

When I started college three years ago, I had a lot of expectations. I had expectations that Iโ€™d spend more time having fun and going to parties than doing schoolwork. I had expectations that Iโ€™d fall in love and meet my husband.

I now realize these expectations were unrealistic.

I have found that many relationships in my life have suffered because of my heavy workload at RIT. Whether itโ€™s a friendship, a relationship with a family member, or a romance โ€“ I canโ€™t seem to juggle, let alone nurture, these relationships and my schoolwork.

I found out I wasnโ€™t alone in this situation when a friend in my major opened up to me over Christmas break and told me his girlfriend of five and a half years was leaving him and moving out of their apartment.

โ€œI think a large part of it was due to the fact that I had immersed myself in school,โ€ said Matt Burkhartt, a third-year photojournalism major at RIT. โ€œAt the end of the day, I had so little left to give because of how emotionally draining the program โ€ฆ is.โ€

Burkhartt said now that he is single he will have a lot more time to dedicate to school.

โ€œI can be at my apartment by myself and work without worrying about whether or not Iโ€™m neglecting my girlfriend while sheโ€™s home,โ€ Burkhartt said. โ€œBut if you want them both to exist simultaneously it takes a lot of concentration and a lot of dedication. I think going forward I need to strategize somehow and make both of those parts of my life work together.โ€

I was also surprised and impressed to find out a different classmate recently got married. Carol Klineโ€™s husband is an Army ranger stationed in Seattle.

โ€œI see him twice a year for two weeks,โ€ said Kline.

Although she doesnโ€™t have to choose between schoolwork and spending time with her husband, Kline still has some difficult decisions to make.

โ€œThereโ€™s definitely times when heโ€™ll be deployed and heโ€™s calling me and Iโ€™m in the middle of a really important critique or lecture or something,โ€ said Kline. โ€œIโ€™m sitting there looking at my phone like โ€˜Ugh, Iโ€™d really love to answer my phone because I know I canโ€™t call you back โ€“ youโ€™re deployed.โ€™ But my schoolโ€™s really important to me.โ€

Personally, Iโ€™m still not sure how to find that healthy medium between time spent on schoolwork and time spent on relationships. I only have a few months left of school until graduation and I am doing what I think is right: immersing myself in my work.

Weโ€™ll see if my personal relationships can hang on for the rest of the ride.