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Something Magical

Something magical is happening.

I don’t know why this surprises me because it’s a recurring event every year.

My students are reading.

And enjoying it.

They are selecting books they never thought they would read, and they are finishing them.

These aren’t little books either.

They are two, three, and four hundred pages.

They aren’t middle school books but every bit high school level.

Oh sure, my students started out reading the smaller ones, but it didn’t take long for the allure of the pretty covers, enticing plot descriptions on the back covers, and my book talks to lure them in.

I started a new thing this year.  I’ve begun taking pictures of my kids with the books they finish.

A few have been shy, yet they always comply.

Here are a few from this past week…

These aren’t my Honors babies, y’all.

These are my struggling readers.

They are reading books about very mature topics…drug addiction, brain injuries, and school shootings.

They are reading books that feed their imaginations and challenge their thinking about society.

The young man who read Crank wanted to give up a few times.  I encouraged him to push on.  By the time he started getting tired, he was nearly finished, and I wanted him to experience the joy of finishing something.

On Friday, when he finished, he told me, “I didn’t like the way the book ended.”  We then had a discussion about what he’d said.

Progress, y’all.  He’d invested himself in the book and made connections…enough to form a judgment about the plot.

There are so many tough things about teaching…so many things that cause me angst.

The scale tips, though, when I get to walk alongside my precious charges as they explore new worlds…choose books they never thought they would enjoy…express feelings of shock and joy as characters make choices they agree or disagree with.

One young lady, not pictured above…I’ll grab her picture on Monday…finally moved on from Bluford series books to a new book, Scars.

This girl is one tough cookie…probably among the most challenging that I’m teaching this year…but I recognized early on how much she loves to read, and I often have to ask her to put away her book so she can focus on the whole group lesson I’m facilitating that day.

There’s some real magic happening in my room these days, and I am honored that God is allowing me to be a small part of it.

Are You Ready for Some Football?

What can be better than watching your favorite team play a great game of football?

Well, listening to the band that pumps up that team, I say!

The Mr. might say, “For shame!” Nothing should upstage goal-line stances!

But, being a Drum Line Mom, I think I just might have to beg to differ.

Last Friday night, Rooster’s high school played its first home football game.  The band was in the stands, pumping energizing music into the stadium and encouraging the team to work harder.

Honestly, before last year, I never paid much attention to the band.

In fact, dare I say that the band was a teensy bit annoying at times?

Now, don’t you start throwing drum sticks at me!

I’m just being honest.

I’ve gotta tell you that now, I am mesmerized by the band.

I don’t know if it’s the music or the kids.

I guess it’s a combination of the two.  All I know is that I love watching the looks on the faces of those participating.

The kids are having fun, plain and simple.

I especially enjoy watching my Rooster’s face as he leans over and looks at the other drummers as they are playing.

I have no idea if he’s playing the music correctly.  All I know is that he is having a great time jamming out with the kids he has spent hours upon hours with.

I love watching the drum line as it stands on the track and plays various cadences while the rest of the band files into the stands.

I love watching the kids line up and await their turn to play the much-practiced halftime show.

I especially love, after the game, looking back at the pictures I took, never realizing the concentration it takes to play well.

Rooster’s face said it all (wish I could show you).

And after the game, I love riding home with Rooster and getting his take on the evening.

It reminds me of riding home with Chicky after soccer games.

I’ve learned to ask a few questions but mostly to listen.

So yes.  It’s almost Fall, and, thus, it’s football season.

More importantly, it’s Band Season.

Let the fun begin!

A Flash from the Past

I love Facebook.

Why?

Because it has enabled me to get back in touch with friends from the old days.

Sure, sure.  I know I’m not that old…except to Chicky, who’s only 18 and thinks anyone over the age of 25 is old.  But what does she know?

I was on Facebook on Saturday morning when I noticed that a high school classmate was on vacation here.  I live near the beach, and everyone comes when they have time off from work.

So, I commented, telling her that she should look me up.

Well, another high school friend saw my comment and started a chat session.

Come to find out, she’d been here for two weeks and was leaving the next day.  She invited me to stop by.

Now folks.  I like to think of myself as sociable, but I’m really not.

I’m a hermit.

I admit that.

I don’t know why, but I get really nervous when I venture out to visit with people.

I lack self-confidence, I think.

Anyhoo, I surprised myself by accepting eagerly, jumping up to get showered and dressed.

I had not seen this friend in over 20 years.

Now, I’ve gotta tell you.  High school was not kind to me.  No, not that the friend I was visiting wasn’t kind.  She was.

However, the high school experience, for the most part, was difficult.

I was ugly.

I lacked confidence (some things do not change).

I only made the cheer leading squad as an alternate…two years in a row…while I watched my sister make it year after year.

I played on the basketball team…only leaving the bench when we were too far behind to catch up or too far ahead to lose the game.

Gee, I wonder why I lacked confidence.

Anyhoo, I suspect that the affect of those experiences lingered…hence my itsy bit of trepidation.

However, every bit of it left as soon as “J” answered the door, her children hovering behind her.

Time melted away as we caught up with each other.

She told me how she’d wound up in Birmingham from our small little corner of LA (Lower Alabama), and I explained my journey through Alabama and Florida.

I watched as her young son played with monster trucks and her daughter played on the laptop.

We fixed sandwiches for lunch, and the topic of couponing came up.  She was very interested, and I quickly explained the basics, even helping her set up Google Reader and subscribing her to some of my favorite couponing blogs.

In the wee span of three hours that I was at her beach house, we worked our way from discussing high school memories to parenting issues.

I left with my spirits lifted and bewildered as to why I had worried so much beforehand.

Don’t we all do this, though?  We all doubt ourselves…

Will she like me?  Will she think I’ve gained weight?  Will she notice the white hairs sticking out?  Will I say anything dumb?

Oy!

What I got, instead, was a reminder that much had changed.

We had matured into empathetic adults…mothers…with shared hopes for our children and concerns about work and relationships.

I couldn’t help but think about Chicky – newly graduated from high school.

I pray that she will set herself free from the worries that bound her during her school days and move on, toward newer, deeper friendships and appreciate the old days for what they were…a time of immaturity and a time best left where it exists…the past.

AuburnChick Wields a Microphone

Now, don’t go thinking that NBC has already tired of Jay Leno and has tapped me as his replacement.

I wish my microphone duties were as lucrative as that!

No.  The reason why someone has deemed me worth of wielding a stick that only serves to project my already annoying voice is because of AP exams.

Today, my dear friends, marked the first of ten very long, test-filled days.

It is the time of the year that high schoolers dread…AP Exams.  Pass them, and these classes don’t have to be re-taken in college.

I, along with a couple of other substitute teachers, were tapped to proctor the exams at the high school I do most of my work at.

I consider it an honor to be considered dependable enough to take on such a huge responsibility.

It’s not one I take lightly, as the nerves wove themselves into my dreams last night.

I barely got any sleep.  Of course, that could also have been due to the three-hour nap I took yesterday.

Regardless, I was exhausted this morning.

At least I had not spent the weekend studying for Comparative History, English Literature, and Calculus — exams to be given this week.

There were two exams today.  Another sub had the honor of being the “lead proctor” for the first exam.   I studied her every move because my turn was coming, and I knew I would have a tough act to follow.  This lady is, after all, used to being in front of large groups as the wife of a pastor.

Me, not so much.

I was a nervous wreck, but the administrator in charge of the exams reassured me, showing she had full confidence in my abilities.

And then it was time.

My voice cracked a little as I began, but I persevered, gaining strength the further along in the script I went.

How could I not be strong?  I was standing in front of students I’ve grown to know and love over the last few years…the cream of the crop.

I wanted to do my best for them, because they had given their best all year, choosing, in their ambition, to take on difficult course loads.

At the end of Day 1, I felt relieved.

Two tests done, eleven more to go.

If NBC calls, they’ll know where to find me.

Retiring the Hat

You may remember The Hat.  Last winter, I talked a whole lot of people into modeling it for me.

At first, they laughed…

Until they put it on and discovered that ohhh laaaa laaaa…the hat was warm…

Well, this soccer season, I pulled out the hat again.

The hat traveled with me everywhere.  I dared not put it away in fear that I would leave it behind and, thus, freeze my ears off.

The season began in October.

Chicky’s team began on a rough note, losing its first game to the team that had defeated it during last year’s Regional Semi-Finals.

The team had lost several seniors from the year before, so it was expected that adjustments were in the works.

The team went on to win all of its games during the next several weeks and prepped for a December tournament.

The results were as poor as the weather, with the team losing both of its games.  Nobody could believe it.  This was the team that had won the entire competition the year before.

We went home…spirits low.

However, the girls had other plans.  They picked themselves up and worked hard, winning all of their remaining regular-season games.

Woo Hoo!  The team went to Districts, where it had to beat a team it had previously played (and beaten) two times.  This was a rough team, so we knew it would not be easy.

It was also Chicky’s birthday.

The weather was dismal (why didn’t Chicky play an indoor sport?).  The girls worked hard and WON!  They sang Happy Birthday to Chicky and jokingly told her they had gotten her the trophy for a gift.  She was allowed to take it home for the weekend.

Such a sweet victory.

The work was only beginning.  Regionals loomed on the horizon.

The first game was against a fairly physical team.  I dreaded it, but I shouldn’t have.  The girls won.

Next up was Regional Semi-Finals…against the team it had beaten for Districts.  How could this happen…for the second year in a row?  The media didn’t hesitate to remind viewers that it was a repeat scenario from last year.  We hoped that the outcome would be different.

I was nearly physically sick the night before and day of the game.  The team would play a very physical game, and I didn’t want anyone to get hurt.

As I stood in the stands for the Star Spangled Banner, I shed a few tears.  This could, quite possibly, be Chicky’s last high school game.  It was a bittersweet moment.

The girls stepped up, though, and beat its opponent soundly, sweet redemption from the year before.

We celebrated like nobody’s business.

On to Regional Finals, where the team we were playing was said to be tres excellent.  A couple of Chicky’s travel teammates were on the other team, so we knew the game would be tough.  We were fortunate, though, to be playing at home.

When the other team arrived, I saw one of the moms, who told me that the other teammate would not be there that night.

Whew!  I breathed a small sigh of relief, but I still held my breath.

Strangely, I was calm.  I can only attribute it to God.

The stands were full; our school’s student body attended in full force.

It felt like a regular football game.  Kids were dressed in school spirited attire.  Students had made homemade signs and decorated t-shirts.

When we scored our first goal, the cheer was loud.  The second goal, a header off a corner kick, led to even louder cheers.

And then we scored our third goal.

My mouth dropped open, and I covered it with my hand…shocked.

With every goal, the crowd cheered louder.

Five goals later, the other team still had not answered back.

I turned off my camera to conserve my battery.

That’s when I heard people hollering Chicky’s name.  Coach had moved her from her defensive position to forward.

How had I missed this?

And she had the ball, passed from a teammate, and she was dribbling down the field.

The goalie came out, and Chicky went around her, shooting and scoring!!!!

The crowd went wild.  I stood in shock and joy.

My baby had scored, and I had missed getting it on camera (a teammate’s father got it on video though).

A few minutes later, the game ended.

We had won…6-0.

Nobody expected this…completely anyhow.

We were now going to Final Four…almost unheard of in our part of the state, and a record for our high school.

That was on a Friday night.

The soccer booster club scrambled and called an emergency meeting the next morning.

We determined that we would need $4,000 to cover the cost of a chartered bus, lodging, and meals for the trip.

Oy!

It seemed insurmountable.  I was confident, though, that we could reach our goal.  I had just witnessed 23 ninth graders raise almost $300 in spare change in five days.  They were my inspiration, and God had used them to show me that He will provide.

The others looked doubtful, but my enthusiasm caught on.

We quickly made plans, each person taking on one or two tasks.

What happened over the course of the next four days is, quite simply, a miracle.

We blitzed the media and canvassed businesses, asking for donations.  We had three fundraisers, two at restaurants and one at the school (wear your favorite shirt for $1).  I arranged for a couple of players to be on one of the local morning news shows and drove them there at the wee hour of 6am.  God had provided a cancellation that enabled us to have this airtime.  The producer said it was “weird.”  I told him “it was God.”

By Monday, we had determined that the first estimate was too low.  We needed about $4,700.  Almost $1,000 more than originally stated.

Still, I was confident.

By Wednesday, we had enough money to cover the trip.  I was not altogether surprised because I had known all along that God would provide.

The outpouring from the community, despite the economic conditions, had enabled us to pay the bills.  The girls were going to Tampa debt-free.

We had a huge send-off party with the school’s drum line (in which Rooster is a part) escorting the team around the school playing a beat along the way.  Parents followed, slapping high fives to the students.

And then they were off…parents following behind in their own vehicles.

The weather was expected to be bad.  I prayed, but God chose to allow the rain to arrive.  All high school Final Four games (1A-6A) were being played at the University of Tampa…

The girls played hard against a formidable opponent.

The rain came down…hard and fast…

The score remained tied at 0-0 through regulation time.

Ugh.

Overtime.

It only took a couple of minutes before the other team scored.

Game over.

I did not expect it, and I think the girls were surprised as well.

Chicky was very upset.  She wanted this…had come so close two years in a row.

Fortunately, Guy Friend had skipped his college classes that day to attend the game, and his presence cheered her up.

Everyone went back to the hotel.  We would be staying the night and leaving early the next morning.

I sat in the car a few minutes, tears flowing.  I felt a mixture of gratitude, sadness, and relief, along with a touch of disbelief that Chicky had just played her last high school game.

As I sit here reflecting on the last couple of weeks, I cannot help but be amazed at the way my community came together.  One rival school had a message of good luck on its marquee… UNHEARD of for cross-town schools.  We received a substantial donation from another rival school’s graduating class.  Businesses donated chunks of money, and restaurants donated gift cards (thanks, Beef O’ Brady’s) and proceeds from “share nights.”

Some of the students at school threw five-dollar bills in the girls’ buckets as they collected for t-shirt day.  These kids were still in dress code, wearing school approved t-shirts and polos.  They wanted to contribute to the cause.

Although it’s sad that the team did not make it to the final game, I sit here full of joy and thankfulness.  What an honor to have witnessed 21 girls come together.  What a privilege to work with a fantastic group of parents…a group that stepped up when the need arose.  Nobody complained (except about the horrible bus driver).  Everyone pitched in, helping sort the laundry and tote the players around when the bus driver refused.

I love this sport.  I love these kids.  I love these parents.  I am thankful for the support of students..many of whom had parents drive them down to Tampa or rode the church bus (thank you N and T for arranging this) to cheer on the girls.  The administration pulled out all stops to make this a special experience for all involved.

Stinky shin guards, chili, and portable heaters are the things that helped us bond (along with our girls); memories will keep the ties intact.  We will never be able to hear each others’ names without smiling and remembering how sweet the journey was.

Through it all, God was glorified.  He is amazing, and I will always give credit to the One who made it happen.

Meanwhile, the hat is going into retirement.  I’m sure, like Michael Jordan and Brett Favre, it will “un-retire” to make a visit at a few high school games next year (I can’t totally cut the umbilical cord).

Until then, I plan on catching a few Zzzzzz’s…at least for the next few days…to catch up on some much-needed rest.  This was an exhilarating, exhausting week.  God provided the fuel that kept me going.  Now, I trust He’ll provide the rest that’s needed by all, Chicky, teammates, and parents included.

Senior Soccer Night for Chicky!

Seems like it was only yesterday when Chicky was dressing out for the first time in her high school soccer uniform.

The colors were completely different from the uniform she had worn at her middle school the previous two years.

I remember the first time she wore the new colors. It was an exhibition game with the members of the JV and Varsity teams being mixed up into two different teams. They scrimmaged each other for a little fun.

Chicky had made the Varsity team as a freshman. She was nervous. Especially because she would be playing with older girls, whose talents she had admired in years past.

She came off of the field hard on herself, but we assured her that she had made a good first showing.

That is typical of Chicky, though. She’s very critical of herself. She doesn’t like making mistakes on the field.

Chicky continued to make an impression that first season and the others that followed.

Although she was not a captain her first three years on the squad, she led the team by example…through her hard work, competitive nature, and determination to constantly get better.

This year, her peers recognized her leadership skills by voting her as captain. I realize it’s only a title, but it really means a lot to her. It validates her efforts these last few years.

During halftime of last night’s game, we recognized the seniors on the team…giving each player her time in the spotlight. Parents of the players greeted them after they had walked past the other players on the team…high and low-fiving them as they moved down the line. An announcer (a dad on the team) used a microphone to announce each girl’s college plans.

Each girl received a bag of goodies and a collection of roses and carnations…one rose for each year playing soccer at the school, and one carnation for senior on this year’s squad.

Sigh.

Four years.

It can seem like such a long time but how quickly it flies by.

Another milestone in Chicky’s life. It’s one I’ll tuck away with the others.

Time for Senior Portraits

Today, Chicky had her senior portraits taken.

Gosh, but it seems like only a short time ago when it was me getting those pictures made.

I mean, how is it that 21 years have flown by?

I remember putting on that drape thingy and turning this way and that, hoping for a decent picture.

This is not me, by the way...

Ahhh…one more milestone in what is certain to be a memorable year.

AuburnChick – A Band Mom

As of last night, I am officially a band mom.

Towards the end of last school year, Rooster decided to try out for band.  He made the drum line, being selected to play cymbals.  He was a tad disappointed because this is considered the first rung on the “ladder” of drum line.  Snare drummers are at the top.  He wants to be a snare drummer.  So, he’s gotta work his way up.

Now, I’ve gotta tell you that, while I’m happy for him, I’m fighting this “Band Mom” thing.

I’m a Soccer Mom…hardcore.  I’ve been doing the soccer thing since Chicky was seven years old.

I know I’m a nerd, but doing the “Band Thing” seems oober nerdy.

However, when Rooster brought home is band hat (I have no idea what the proper word for this is), I began to get a little excited…

And then when Rooster came out of his room wearing the rest of the uniform…

Um…I almost shed tears.

He looked so official…

Ok…so the picture looks weird because it’s missing a head.  You know me…ever the protective Mama.

But you get the idea.

He was psyched.

My heart was torn.

Chicky is at Disney World, playing in a tournament.  The Mr. took her.  I LOVE watching her play, but we knew that someone needed to be home with the boy to support his interests as well.

Rooster and I headed to the football stadium earlier than we needed.

Good thing too.

If you’ve been reading my blog over the last year or year and a half, you know that Rooster has a tendency to forget things.

Um, yeah.

We got to the stadium, and I had just entered when my cell phone rang.  I didn’t recognize the number, and the caller hung up before I could answer.

Then, I saw Rooster jogging toward me.

“Mama, you have to go home.”

Uh oh.

“What did you forget?”

“My cape.  It’s in the bag, which I left in my room, I think.”

Poor guy.  Being his first time, he had no idea that he was missing part of his uniform.

Being a good mom, I ran home, found what he needed, and got back to the stadium in record time.  Good thing we live in a small city!

The band warmed up, and I chatted with a friend…the mom of one of the dancers in the band.

I watched the drum line warm up…

Rooster is standing to the left of the hatless cymbal player.

The game finally started, but I was distracted.  Every time the band started playing, I turned my head to watch Rooster.

I wanted to see his reactions.

What a joy it was too.

There were some songs where the cymbal players had to turn around and hold their instruments for the snare drummers to play.  During a couple of the songs, Rooster laughed and bopped to the beat.

There is nothing so special as watching your children enjoy life.

I attempted to film, with my regular camera, the halftime show.

Halfway through, I realized that I had been zooming in on the wrong cymbal player.

Oops.

Oh well.

The game eventually ended with our school winning.  I enjoyed watching the cheerleaders, many of whom had been in my classes this week.  They all hollered their hellos to me, making me feel really good.

I gave an extra special handshake to one of the school’s mascots, who happens to be one of Chicky’s good friends and a special kid.  He and I have a strong bond based on mutual respect.  Teenagers can really be awesome sometimes.

I watched as one of my students from last year got hurt and had to be helped off the field.  I’ll be praying for him and checking on him next week at school.

After the game, the band played a few more songs, and then it was time to head home.

Rooster had a major adrenaline rush.  He talked non-stop and laughed hard when I told him about filming the wrong player.  He said he KNEW I would do this and should have explained where he’d be standing.

I told him that next week I’m painting some of that infrared paint on his uniform so I can put on special goggles to find him.

Oh, and Chicky’s team won its game too.  Icing on the cake for the evening.

Although I don’t envision myself a hardcore, polo-wearing Band Booster, I am definitely more enthusiastic of Rooster’s new adventure.

Back to School for AuburnChick

Today was my first day of subbing for the new school year.

I’ll admit to some trepidation.  I don’t know why because I subbed a lot last year.

I think it was simply the “routine-ness” of it all.  It was a little easier to deny that life had resumed its hectic pace as long as I was staying home, but this getting up at the crack of dawn and having to actually look presentable (and smell nice at the same time)…well, it stank of something called WORK.

Amazingly, I woke up before my alarm.  I think that I was a little concerned about oversleeping.

My clothes needed a re-introduction to something we call an “iron…”

After devotions, which yes, we’ve been getting up to do since the kids started school last week, I asked Chicky to take a picture of me…

Then, knitting bag in hand, off I went, following the kids’ path.

Today I played the part of science teacher.  I had Honors Anatomy and quickly figured out why I didn’t attend medical school…lateral, superior, anterior…”doctory” words that sounded like something from an SAT test.

Then I had a leadership class, which consisted of the SGA and Senior Class officers.  Do you know that this was my rowdiest bunch?

Last period was Honors Biology, where the students were finishing up a Gummy Bear Lab (put a gummy bear in water overnight and see what happens to it the next day).  Interesting stuff…especially watching the kids dare each other to eat the gummy bears after.

I did manage to get in a trip to CVS and Walgreens for sales items.  I had Planning first period, which allowed me to get in and out of the stores before they got busy.

I’ll be subbing for this teacher through Thursday and then will switch gears to an English class on Friday.

It’s gonna be an interesting week!

A Trip Down Memory Lane

My closet-cleaning chore led to an unexpected trip down memory lane when I discovered a VHS tape in one of the boxes.

At first, I gave it a cursory glance and started to close up the box.  However, I decided to take a closer look and discovered writing on the sleeve…”Graduation.”

Ok.  Think now.

VHS tape.

Graduation.

Could we be talking my graduation?  Especially when I was looking at the spines of my high school yearbooks, which were packed in the same box.

I almost ran to the living room, where our VCR is located.

I called the kids in and told them that I thought we were in for a treat.

We were.

It WAS the video from my high school graduation!

Folks…you don’t know how big this was.

You see, just last week, my sister had pulled out a video from when our children were toddlers.  She called me, and we laughed as she told me how twangy her voice was.

We grew up in the Heart of Dixie…LA.  No, not Los Angeles but Lower Alabama where twangy is the only speak you speak, so to speak.

What strange timing that I would find this video shortly after her own last week.

The kids knew that I was Salutatorian of my class…hence Your’s Truly had given a speech.

We sat in anticipation.

The first chuckle came when the kids saw me begin the short walk to the football field.  My hair was almost the same as it is now…a lot blonder (naturally) but just as curly and long.

I watched the camera pan out to my classmates.

Oh gosh…I got a little emotional here.

Chicky commented that it was weird to see me at that age.  I reminded her that I was only six months older, on that tape, than she is now.

Weird.

We skipped to my speech, and that is where the fun began.

Folks, the sound of my voice came as a shock.

Oh sure, nobody likes to hear themselves talk, but this was something else altogether.

My voice sounded like a cross between Scarlett O’Hara and Melanie Wilkes (from the movie Gone With the Wind, if you’re not familiar with these names).  It was higher pitched and syrupy.  My words flowed in the gentle southern drawl that melts like butter.

The kids and I spent a few minutes laughing hysterically.  I actually had to pause the tape.  When I started it again, I sat, mesmerized, by…well…me!  Although I remember giving that speech, it just didn’t seem like me.

The speech seemed to go on forever.  Bet you’re not surprised about that.  Go ahead and laugh.  I know you want to.

Some things never change.

I watched the rest of the graduation.  It didn’t take long because there were only 18 of us. Eleven of my classmates went to school together from first through twelfth grade.  Small schools=small classes.  It’s hard to believe that graduation was the last night we were all together.

We were a close bunch that laughed together and fought together.  We cried together when one of our own shot herself (we like to believe it was an accident) when we were in the eighth grade.  She lived across the street from the school, and we heard the gunshot.  It was a sad memory that was recalled when, during the graduation ceremony, we paid tribute to her.  We were blessed to have her parents attend that night.  Seeing their faces as they accepted a plaque from us really touched my heart today.  I still visit her grave when I’m in town.
As the tape ended, I felt a sense of melancholy.  I wasn’t ready for the reminiscing to end just quite yet.

I began to thumb  through the yearbook from my senior year.  I recalled the heartbreak and joy that were a part of that year.

It was the year I grew in confidence.  I played an active role in many clubs…editor of the yearbook, president of the Pep Club, and Vice President of the Beta Club.  I saw the picture of the girls basketball team.  I was a member of the team benchwarmer.

The Senior Who’s Who was fun…I got Most Studious (no surprise) and Most School Spirit.   I was pleasantly surprised to see myself holding the first place trophy I won during the State Typing Division 2 Tournament.  I won it typing on a dinosaur…an old manual typewriter!  My right arm was strong with the hours I spent throwing that carriage return.

My trip down Memory Lane was wonderful…especially since nobody in my class arranged a 20-year reunion.  It gave me time to reflect on my classmates and the affect they had on my life.  I fought with some, “liked” others (wink), and confided in a few.

These were long-ago memories brought out from the closet of my mind.  It was a welcome respite from my day of work.