What if you could go back to high school and have just one
day for a do-over. One chance to go back and interact with
those kids in a different way, without all the fear and risk. With more
patience and a healthy sense of compassion. What would that look
like?
Let me tell you about my weekend…
Friday afternoon I grabbed a rental car and drove back to
Maine. I had a quick dinner with family, which was surreal
enough, considering my brother and niece were visiting from British
Columbia. But this post isn’t about my ambivalence regarding
family…
After dinner I checked into my hotel and drove over to
Margarita’s Mexican restaurant for the first of two
gatherings of people from my high school class. Friday night
was essentially a small pre-party before Saturday night’s main
event, which would be the first reunion I’d ever attended.
After wandering around I finally recognized the organizer, Jamu
(names will be altered to protect those who pretend to innocence).
Thankfully, she was someone I knew, so it was nice to chat with her for
a while. She also introduced me to the twenty or so people who had come,
and was kind enough to hang with me while I dipped my toes in the edges
of the proverbial social quagmire.
Over the next couple hours I talked a lot with Dido (a woman
I’d never interacted with at school), and Debo (about yoga), and
twin sisters Mave1 & Mave2. The likely highlight of the evening was
a conversation with Rodi, who seemed reasonably interesting. But I got
put off when I tried to talk to Kelo, the girl (woman) who used to sit
behind me in homeroom.
If you’d known me in high school, you probably would have been
surprised (as I was) to discover that I probably spent 80
percent of my time talking to women, rather than men. I guess
I’ve gotten much more comfortable relating to women on the whole.
It’s not really a huge surprise for the “me” that I am
today, but it’s a pretty dramatic change from the “me”
I was back then.
I did have brief conversations with a couple guys: Tola (our mothers
are friends) and Deki (who has apparently become as rabid a Tolkien fan
as I used to be when I was in high school).
Except for Jamu, I hadn’t known any of these folks in school,
but it was nice to talk with them nonetheless. Apparently the people I
remembered best weren’t showing up until Saturday’s official
gathering. But it still wound up being a nice evening,
and I was (surprisingly) one of the last people out the door at the
end.
Two observations… Passing around the class yearbook, it became
abundantly clear that all of us needed reading glasses,
and none of us had brought them. And even in that small group, two of
the women had recently been through cancer treatment.
That was Friday. After sleeping very poorly, on Saturday morning I
got up early and headed out for a 40-mile bike ride
from Augusta to Manchester, Readfield, Belgrade, and back. Since my
annual charity ride is only two weeks away, I had to find some way to
spend some time in the saddle.
I swung through the old family farmstead, which some
time ago was bought, torn down, and replaced with a state government
office building. I remembered picking wild strawberries in the fields,
my first “hunting” trips in the woods out back, the old
apple tree at the edge of our huge vegetable garden, the stand of pines
out front, and the camp that my grandfather built. They’re all
gone; the only thing that remains from my childhood (and my
father’s) is a horrid-looking willow tree that everyone always
hated. Figures!
The ride also included a lakeside rest stop in Belgrade, riding past
the now-bare former site of Farnham’s (our favorite roadside
farmstand), coming down Sand Hill at speed, and then the long and
difficult workout climbing from the river’s edge up Winthrop
Street to the airport. It was a nice ride, doubly so because it provided
the only moments of and peace and “rest” (if you will) that
I’d have all weekend!
After showering at the hotel, it was back to family-related
activities, which featured sandwiches for lunch and then mini
golf with mother, brother, and niece (yes, I won). I was incubating a
headache, so I was grateful that my brother’s presence
hadn’t drawn any additional family members. Even so, I pled
fatigue and went back to the hotel for a quick nap before freshening up
for the party.
Way too soon, it was time for the main event: the official
high school reunion. I showed up fashionably on time, and did
my best to step into socializing mode.
Again, I talked to more women than men, and there were a lot more
folks that I actually remembered. The inseparable Nihe & Kamcca
agreed with my observation that the inestimable Mr. Ayotte had taught us
as much about life, philosophy, and wisdom as he had French.
To my chagrin Anqui and Diru (one of the few alumni in the Boston
area) both firmly agreed that I was definitely not
attractive in high school, but that I was cuter now. Oof!
Among the guys, I talked to Chrise and Ticho. Both of those could
have been awkward conversations, but went fine, which was cool. Ticho
works in Boston, and has been playing out in a band on and off over the
years.
And I finally got to shake hands with Scojo, one of
my earliest childhood friends, whom I rediscovered a few years ago when
I learned that he too is a cyclist and serious cancer fundraiser, having
survived testicular cancer himself. He’d even ridden the PMC back
in 2008, but we hadn’t been able to connect. So finally seeing him
was certainly one of the evening’s highlights.
Although I had hoped to, I didn’t get much chance to talk again
with Rodi. And I again had difficulty cornering the elusive Kelo. Toward
the end of the evening that was remedied when out of absolutely nowhere
she trotted up to me and tried to pull me out onto the dance
floor! I resisted, but between wanting to connect with her and
hearing someone near me say, “Oh just go on up,” I acceded.
I was flattered that for some reason she had called on me, and it was
definitely a highlight. Even if, as I now believe, she had done it
purely for someone else’s benefit.
Ironically, notable absences included all the people that I
was closest to during high school: the popular Mika, Josa,
Jemu, Jere, Keja, Chila, Meho, and others. That was a bit of a
disappointment.
Another disappointment is that I really didn’t make use
of the occasion to plug my PMC ride. I really should have been
more forward about asking for donations, but it just didn’t seem
to be the right thing to do.
As the night wore on, I started feeling exhausted by the effort of
being social, and took more time to sit back and watch others, which was
pleasant in and of itself. I hadn’t talked to all of the 120
alumni who had come, but I’d certainly done the rounds. Between
the conversation noise, the increasingly loud music, and the sheer
freneticism of bouncing from person to person to person for four or five
hours, on top of visiting family, I was feeling pretty
overstimulated, and—after two days of heavy use—my
voice was as done as I was.
With so many people to talk to, conversations couldn’t get as
involved as they had been in the smaller group on Friday, so in that
sense I preferred the pre-party, although it would have
been cool to have more of my friends in that group, rather than all
strangers.
Overall, the reunion was interesting from a number of angles. Given
the passage of so much time since graduation, most of the cliques that
once separated people have dissolved, so it was nice to be able to
relate to folks from a place free of group identities and social stigma.
Only a couple people were fixated on status and career, and just one
boor had a blatant goal of recruiting others to support his specious
business venture.
Would I consider going to another reunion? Well, overall this one was
good, but I think I’d prefer the opportunity to sit down
and get to know a smaller number of select people in more
detail, rather than have a hundred shallow conversations with lots of
strangers. And I did renew enough connections to reach out to the people
I’m most curious about.
As for future reunions: I might do another large event, but I would
hope that the organizers continue to support smaller adjunct gatherings,
like Friday’s pre-party. Although I did enjoy reestablishing
contact with people that I haven’t seen in decades, I
certainly don’t need to dive back into that big melee anytime
soon!