by Austin Torain, 2024, Senior Colloquium Winner

“…all we owe anyone including ourselves is to show up with kindness and a desire to understand.”

Growing up, I was surrounded by music. My mother played the clarinet when she was in middle school, and to this day she can light up the dance floor like nobody else. My father was in our church choir and would constantly fill our home with singing. So of course, my sister and I inevitably followed in their footsteps when we saw how beautiful it was to not just hear music, but to create it and share it with others. It was magical to watch the way music connected people, and I have tried to carry that magic of music into everything that I do.

I joined the choir at my church when I was in the 4th grade, and I joined my middle school band in the 6th grade when I first picked up a trombone. Like my mom, I had also been gifted with the ability to nail a two-step whenever I heard a good song, so in high school, I joined a hip-hop dance group. For me, music was never just music. It was an extension of my soul, and I loved being able to create and experience music with people who loved it just as much as I did. It always made me feel connected to something larger than myself.


When I came to Wake Forest, it was in the middle of a pandemic. The world was still moving, but people had begun to stand still. We were confined to our dorms and interacting with people was seen as a risk of safety. So while feeling disconnected from the greater community, I decided I would keep doing what I had been doing in high school. I started walking around campus with a speaker in my backpack in the fall of 2020, and it did exactly what I hoped it would do. It made me and a few others around me feel like there was belonging in a time of isolation.


Wake itself was a pretty isolating place for me in the beginning. There were not too many people who looked like me, and it was hard to make it feel like a place I could call home. Somewhere that I was safe to be my authentic self. So I turned to the one thing that had always brought me connection, music. When I first started walking around campus with a speaker in my backpack, I got a lot of stares and a lot of hate for it, but as a Black man on campus, I already felt those stares every time I stepped into a classroom. I figured if people were going to know me, I wanted to be known for something more. My intentions behind the speaker in my backpack started as selfish. It was a way for me to feel like I was somebody, and then I had a conversation with Ms. Harriett in the Pit.

I figured if people were going to know me, I wanted to be known for something more.


Ms. Harriett works at the salad and fruit stand in the middle of the Pit. She and the other Pit and Benson workers have allowed me to feel that sense of community that I was so desperately starving for. Away from home and isolated from others, the workers in the Pit were a form of constant connection for me, and they loved the speaker. Most of the workers being Black and old school, it felt like I was home at a cookout every time I went into the Pit. I remember walking in one day playing “Candy” by Cameo and Ms. Sonny at the front started dancing, so naturally I joined her. This connection that I was longing for, I had started to find it most unconventionally.


To be surrounded by music and people who loved music has always brought me peace, so I joined Momentum Crew, a hip-hop dance group at Wake and I joined the Spirit of the Old Gold and Black, the marching band at Wake, and I found my people. I started to find my people all over Wake. I found them at the WakerSpace. I found them in my scholarship groups. I found them in the middle of the quad while I was playing “Lovely Day” by Bill Withers.


In the past few years, I have wrestled with one question a lot, “What do we owe other people?”. That person who sits next to me at 9 am every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday has stopped attending class. One of my club members has not been to a single practice all month. A stranger is walking down the same grocery aisle, and they drop their wallet. Okay so in some cases what we owe people is a little clearer than others, but I think ultimately all we owe anyone including ourselves is to show up with kindness and a desire to understand.

We all struggle. You never know what is going on in someone’s life, so why not extend just a bit of kindness?


We all struggle. You never know what is going on in someone’s life, so why not extend just a bit of kindness? It takes minimal effort to check in on someone. It takes minimal effort to meet someone wherever they are in their feelings. And it takes minimal effort to be an ear or a shoulder for someone. My general rule of thumb is that if my music makes one person feel a little less alone on this campus, then I will keep doing it. We all just want to feel like we belong.


As humans, we desire to feel connected. Connected to our environment. Connected to those around us. Connected to something larger than ourselves. We desire to be seen and heard, and ultimately, we wish to be understood. Most people spend their lives hoping that they will not just be tolerated but truly accepted by those around them. Connection was something I craved, but in most places I looked, I found nothing. In most places, I felt like I would never truly belong. But I found a sense of belonging here.


2024 Senior Colloquium Runners-Up & Honorable Mentions