It鈥檚 not what it seems; No one is reaching for puns when they say that Rebekkah 鈥淏ekkah鈥 Berryhill, the grounds manager in University Facilities Management for 海角原创鈥檚 Kent Campus is down-to-earth and a well-grounded, happily fulfilled person.
She shared her story of how she arrived at 海角原创 as a student athlete, became a student worker in the grounds crew, became a university employee and then, nearly 30 years later, became the grounds manager in charge of the entire Kent Campus.
How a Buckeye Legacy Arrived at 海角原创
Both of Berryhill鈥檚 parents had graduated from Ohio State University, and she felt that鈥檚 also where she would be going to college. So, when one of her friends who was a year older than her, who was attending 海角原创 on a softball scholarship invited Berryhill to visit, she thought she鈥檇 hang out and see out what a college that was different than Ohio State was like.
When she was recruited by 海角原创 to pay softball, Berryhill admits that the only reason she had known about 海角原创 was because her friend went there.
鈥楾he Right Decision鈥
So many college students share the same doubts in their first year at a college or university: Did I make the right choice? Is this the right place for me. Then comes that moment, that experience, that event that 鈥渇lips the switch鈥 and makes them say 鈥淵es, I belong here.鈥
For Berryhill that event happened as she was riding on the back of a mountain bike on a quest to get a soda from a convenient store. Pedaling the bike was the person who would become her very best friend 鈥 for life.
They had met on the first day of classes; they were in the same orientation class. As they were walking back toward Tri-Towers, they realized that they both lived in Koonce Hall. Later, they saw each other in the lunch line and found that they were both heading to the same first-year activity later. Her friend suggested that they get a soda first and invited Berryhill to hop on the back of her bike and come with her to the Dairy Mart on East Main (which was later a Circle K, a different convenience store and is now the future home of Flash Crepes).
With it being their first day, they lost their bearings and couldn鈥檛 find their way back to Tri-Towers. But in being lost together, they each found a best friend. 鈥淲e just instantly bonded over that,鈥 said Berryhill. 鈥淎nd that very night, I knew that I had made the right decision in coming here because I was pretty anxious, pretty shy; mostly introverted.鈥
And I met someone who was absolutely extroverted ad did all the talking for me, made the jokes and just absolutely was the 鈥榶in to my yang,鈥欌 she said. 鈥淎nd from that point on, I had the confidence of knowing that school was going to be okay; I can make friendships.鈥
Changes in Direction and Finding Her True Path
Berryhill started out at 海角原创 with the intent to become an educator. Her mother was an educator and her father taught at a law school. Being into athletics and physical activity, she said her thought was 鈥淚鈥檓 going to go into a physical education, and I will be a PE teacher and a coach. I will get to wear a sweatsuit and be happy kicking balls around and swinging golf clubs.鈥
She said that she 鈥渓oved the coursework,鈥 but when it the program reached the phase of actually teaching students, Berryhill the introvert realized that this might not be the right path for her. 鈥淚 felt like it wouldn鈥檛 be fair to become a teacher and give these kids a shell of a person; an anxious person who wasn鈥檛 comfortable speaking in front of the class,鈥 she said.
Then, a shoulder injury while competing on 海角原创鈥檚 Track & Field Team in the hammer throw, shot put and discus sidelined her athletic activities. 鈥淚 felt like I was in that cycle of where I thought my life would go and where I actually ended up,鈥 said Berryhill. 鈥淚 was not in a horrible place, but definitely not where I thought it would be.鈥
鈥榊ou Mean We Get Paid to Get a Tan?鈥
One day, Berryhill met one of her friends who was on her way to work. She told Berryhill that he was going to work in the grounds department. Berryhill said, 鈥淲hat does that even mean?鈥 Her friend explained that they 鈥済et to pull weeds and stuff.鈥 Berryhill said, 鈥淥kay, that sounds cool. You mean we get paid to get a tan?鈥
That was when she became a student worker in the grounds department, a job she said 鈥渟he absolutely fell in love with鈥 because it kept her physically active, she was able to interact with nature and not have to present in front of a classroom. And she could also get a tan.
As a child, Berryhill said she 鈥渨as always a kid who was outside, always riding my bike going for hikes.鈥 When she started working in the grounds department she said, 鈥淪omething just turned, and it clicked and like that comfortable shoe, it absolutely felt just right.鈥
'Why doesn鈥檛 everybody want to do this?鈥
On another day, while working campus, she saw a woman with braids driving a lawn mower. At the time, she was thinking that student would work in the grounds department for a few summers and then move on. When she saw the woman on the mower, she had an epiphany. 鈥淪he鈥檚 not a student,鈥 Berryhill said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a worker and that鈥檚 her job; she gets paid real money and gets healthcare and benefits.鈥 This sounded amazing to Berryhill. 鈥淚 was obsessed with it; why doesn鈥檛 everybody want to do this job?!鈥 she said.
Berryhill is still in touch with that woman on the mower, her name is Carla Olson, and she still lives in the area. She was the first female heavy equipment operator at 海角原创. 鈥淵ou have to see yourself represented,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou just have to, it鈥檚 so important for people to have that role model.鈥
鈥淭here aren鈥檛 a ton of female grounds managers,鈥 Berryhill said. 鈥淎t least not in this area. Seeing Carla made me realize that even if I鈥檓 uncomfortable doing something, being the first at something or just being non-traditional, that maybe I鈥檒l have a meeting with a student or a meeting at a different university and they see 鈥極h, cool, they have a manager that鈥檚 female; it鈥檚 possible for that to happen to me.鈥欌
Growing Along the Way
While she was a student employee, she was hired by her supervisor as a university groundkeeper. 鈥淚t鈥檚 funny,鈥 Berryhill said. 鈥淭he world鈥檚 come full circle, and I hired him back as a supervisor in the department three years ago.鈥
The next step up from groundskeeper was to become an equipment operator and then a heavy equipment operator to become the second female heavy equipment operator on campus. Then the position for a supervisor became available and Berryhill moved into that position.
In 2019, Grounds Manager Heather White left the university for another position and Berryhill served as interim manager of grounds before being hired as grounds manager. Now, seven years later she said, 鈥淚t still feels like I just started; every day there鈥檚 a new experience.鈥
One of those experiences is the annual planting of bulbs on Daffodil Hill following the university鈥檚 Veteran鈥檚 Day Commemoration. Berryhill saw the opportunity to take an activity performed by the 海角原创 grounds crew and create is a community event in which veterans, students, faculty, staff and members of the community can pitch in to help sustain this living memorial to the fallen soldiers of the Vietnam War.
Opening up in the Outdoors
When Berryhill is speaking about something she loves, like nature, there鈥檚 no trace of the anxiety she felt at the front of a classroom. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a treat when I get to go out for a walk and talk about 鈥榯his is an oak tree; these are the benefits of having this tree.鈥 鈥淭his is what happens when you make this cut to this particular tree,鈥欌 she said.
鈥淚 love that. I love that stuff. I love the interaction that we can have with our environment and trying to work with it instead of against it,鈥 Berryhill said. 鈥淚 feel like we waste so much energy in our lives fighting against things that are completely natural. So, we may not have the most manicured lawns on campus, but we鈥檙e doing that intentionally because a dandelion is going to be the first food of bees throughout the season; that鈥檚 going to be the first flower they can touch and gain nourishment from. And so that is really interesting to me, it鈥檚 a passion.鈥
鈥淏eing able to communicate that with other people in the university and provide all kinds of different, cool, new plants- it鈥檚 amazing,鈥 she said. 鈥淎bsolutely; I feel like the luckiest person in the world.鈥