Baccaliegia • Trending
You return to campus to return a library book you never opened. The hallways are empty. The student union, once a roaring marketplace of ramen noodles and anxiety, is now a sterile tomb. You see a freshman—a creature so young they look like a middle schooler—walking by with a massive textbook. You feel a deep, patronizing pity for them. "You have no idea," you mutter, "what is coming for you."
And you will realize: wasn't a mistake or a typo. It was the necessary storm before the calm. It was the death rattle of your childhood and the first hiccup of your adulthood, all wrapped in an ill-fitting black robe. Baccaliegia
Baccaliegia (pronounced Back-ah-lee-gee-ah ) is the 72-hour to two-week period where a student has technically passed their requirements but has not yet walked across the stage. In this void, time collapses. You are simultaneously a stressed academic animal and a liberated ghost haunting the hallways of an institution that no longer has power over you. As a psychological phenomenon, Baccaliegia is not a single emotion but a cyclical process. Psychologists (hypothetically) have identified four distinct phases. Stage One: The Hangover of Completion (Days 1-2) The first stage is characterized by physical inertia. After submitting the final thesis or turning in the last Scantron sheet, the student enters a state of cerebral flatlining . You sit in your childhood bedroom or empty dormitory staring at a wall. You attempt to watch Netflix, but you cannot follow the plot. You attempt to sleep, but your amygdala is still convinced you have an 8:00 AM lecture. You return to campus to return a library
This is the Bacchanalia half of the word. The rules no longer apply. You hug a professor for the first time. You tell the cafeteria lady you love her. You take a photo with the security guard who once wrote you a parking ticket. No discussion of this period is complete without acknowledging the wardrobe malfunction. The graduation gown—a shapeless, black polyester tabard—is designed specifically to humiliate. It is 90 degrees outside, and the gown is made of plastic. It is 40 degrees and raining, and the gown is made of tissue paper. You see a freshman—a creature so young they