Her Campus Logo Her Campus Logo
FSU | Life

My Experience as a Salley Survivor

Olivia Vigliotti Student Contributor, Florida State University
This article is written by a student writer from the Her Campus at FSU chapter and does not reflect the views of Her Campus.

There’s nothing like opening your dorm assignment and immediately facing the disappointment of being assigned to the “worst dorm” on campus.

Over the course of my time at FSU, I’ve heard time and time again that my beloved dorm, Salley Hall, would be torn down. Whether I’ll be having an in memoriam or warning the future generations, I’m not sure. Salley Hall will always hold a tiny, special part of my heart.

Living in a shoe box wasn’t on my college vision board, but maybe that was the first test of my “adult” problem-solving. Making that dorm, with exposed piping and dingy carpet, feel like home was doable. Even if it seemed desolate at the time.

Salley’s reputation

The reputation of Salley Hall wasn’t comforting, especially to a freshman who was romanticizing college. When I heard that I was assigned Salley, I felt like I would never get that idyllic college experience, and honestly, I didn’t. It wasn’t exactly what I pictured for my college dorm, but so is life.

Salley’s reputation has heard glimmers of mold, consistently broken elevators, and shower heads that I was taller than. Location-wise, it feels like Salley is on its very own island. It’s far from all of the main campus and most of the traditional freshman hangout spots. Meaning, unless you’re a frequenter of the biology or psychology buildings, then you’re out of luck.

When you live far from everything, you learn to use every resource the campus has available. I became a frequent user of the campus bus system, needing to make it to my 9:20 a.m. class across campus. Luckily, there’s a dining hall next door, even if it’s not Suwannee, that’s just as good and usually not crowded. Given that Salley is basically alone in its little universe.

The only other piece of Salley I still experience every once in a while is the reaction you get when you tell people where you live or lived. My answer is met with sympathetic ‘ooh’s’ and ‘aahs’ and questions on how I managed, but Salley, truly, wasn’t that bad.

My experience

Even though I still tell scary stories of my time in Sally Hall, it would be mean to my dear dorm to blame everything on the dorm itself. All freshmen have roommate stories, and all freshmen have qualms with the dorms. I truly don’t think my experience would have been significantly better in a different dorm.

Pieces of college that people reflect on are the silly stories that may not have seemed silly at the time. I love getting to regale all the underclassmen I know with the stories of my time in Salley. There’s also so much more to look forward to as a freshman, not including your dorm room.

Looking at all the things I remember feeling “inconvenienced” by when I lived in Sally, it really wasn’t that big of a deal. I feel like I got to know more of the campus I would’ve never gotten to experience. Being an English major means I never go on the STEM side of campus, where Salley is. I’ve had the opportunity to explore all of the beautiful FSU campus and enjoy every part of it.

Dorm life is a very “college” part of college and is an experience I only needed to have for a year. For any freshmen who are dreading being assigned to Salley Hall, try to look on the bright side. Even if it’s not fun in the moment, the memories are what people live in dorms for.

Want to see more HCFSU? Be sure to follow us on Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, and Pinterest!

Olivia Vigliotti is a student at FSU pursuing an Editing, Writing, and Media degree. In her free time, she dabbles in reading KU romance novels, watching anime, and trying new crafts just to feel something. She dreams to one day to move to London, not only for a career, but to travel all over the world for much cheaper than one can find in the US. She is very excited to write for Her Campus at FSU and hopefully make at least a few readers giggle.