Black, politics undergraduate and new MP for Paisley and Renfrewshire South, will visit the House of Commons for the second time tomorrow.
Her first visit happened during a family trip to London as a teenager.
Black - along with a record number of 55 other Scottish National Party MPs - will be here tomorrow to begin her life as a parliamentarian.
"It'll be a bit different this time," she told the Guardian newspaper after her victory in the May 7 polls, defeating shadow foreign secretary Douglas Alexander.
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But as the campaign wore on, that changed: "I thought 'this could happen', because people are really angry at the Labour party and they wanted change."
Asked whether that realisation scare her, she said, "No". "It was real excitement, that we could actually change things."
The daughter of a local businessman and a teacher, Black, who has an elder brother, grew up in Paisley. She only became actively involved herself during the independence referendum campaign, joining the SNP after last September's no vote.
When she is officially sworn in on May 18, she will become the youngest member of parliament since at least the 19th century.
Black, now in her third year of a politics and public policy degree at Glasgow University, says she has been lucky that this last semester has mainly required coursework.