I was a teenage wallflower…not that it matters now, of course.
My 30th high school reunion will take place next summer and, aside from the panic about what I will wear and how tragically I may or may not have aged, I already know what to expect. I’ve been to two other reunions of my high school class as well as four of my husband’s. His class has them every five years and such a spacing is rather like watching a time-lapsed photograph of people who are gradually getting older, but in ways that aren’t always obvious until you compare their THEN and NOW faces. That is, if you don’t count the guy who wrote on his “What I’ve Been Up To” profile that he had been recently “abducted by Jesus”.
In the years since graduation, some people will have done extraordinary things with their time and others will have done nothing of the sort. Some will be a walking advertisement for aging gracefully and others will have let themselves go completely. Most will have have broadened their horizons with college degrees and the intellectual, emotional and experiential moments that those accomplishments bring will have defined their careers and their lives in a way that will distinguish them from the others. Despite all of that, some will be happy and fulfilled and some will be miserable or simply underwhelmed with life and what it has to offer.
It sometimes takes 20 or so years before time, the great equalizer, begins to bring together the worlds of the socials, jocks, freaks, intellectuals, spazmoids and wallflowers together in one big room before you attain the one gift you’ve needed your entire life--perspective. And that’s what my husband and I try –and fail–to bring to our sons: PERSPECTIVE. We attempt to share with them the long view of life…as seen from the vantage point of thirty years down the road. Guess what I found out? My life map is an old map that is only useful for one person. Me.
My past reality isn’t any more of a litmus for my kids’ lives than my parents’ reality was a pattern for me, and not because I’m a female and my sons are…well…NOT. It’s because things change. The culture changes. If you don’t stay on top of it, you won’t be able to walk around in anyone else’s shoes long enough to give them a crumb of advice. Sure, some things don’t change. Hard work is still a good idea and compassion and ethics are some of the best tools with which to arm yourself. Do unto others, finish your homework, study hard…yadda, yadda, yadda. Those are true now and have always been so.
None of that tells me how to advise my kids when it comes to putting high school into perspective after they come home from a particularly brutal day. It’s tempting to just tell them that, in the long run, high school is really nothing. It’s the equivalent a bunch of emotional embryos sharing the same air space for four years. Sure, you go back for reunions and everyone cracks a cold one in honor of nostalgia. You retell the old stories for the laughs they bring and you experience that temporary rush of familiarity and camaraderie, but it’s far from the end of the story. If you’re lucky, you get to redefine yourself again and again over the years…despite the fact that you didn’t attend your own prom nor a single dance your entire four years of high school. See? I did it and I’m not bitter. Not one bit…
Yet, how do you share this tidbit of homespun philosophy with your kids without completely invalidating the good experiences they’re having at this particular moment in time? I want to lavish praise on my kids’ accomplishments, most of which are far beyond anything I ever did during my first 18 years of living and such praise infers that these particular honors that have been bestowed upon them MEAN EVERYTHING. Still, my boys struggle sometimes and I (we) want to help them. How does one encourage kids to embrace their current place in life and to reach for the stars and then, when they fall short (socially or academically), to put it all into a ‘big picture’ perspective where they begin to realize that this era is just one in a series of eras? If perspective teaches us that high school cliques can’t rule the rest of our lives and being a wallflower who was bad in math doesn’t necessarily determine what happens to us after that, what’s the point of trying in that moment? Or even caring? Why not just give up and wait for college and the real life to start? How can something be the “best time of your life” ( I truly challenge that statement) and “the lowest level of misery” (Now you’re thinking!)…all at the same time?
How do you maximize a kid’s triumphs without blowing the whole thing out of proportion or philosophize their failures without making them feel that the experiences between one’s freshman and senior years are worthless? In other words, there has to be a way to encourage your kid to make their adolescent years count for something and then use the same voice to downplay the outcome when it’s less than satisfactory…at least until they can pick their self-esteem out of the dust and try again.
Oh, wait. Did you think I had the answer to this question? Not on your life. I’m still trying to figure it out for myself. Besides, I’ve got that reunion coming up and I’ve got to develop a “game face” that will allow me to function that night whilst pretending not to care. Operators are standing by to take your calls and advice.
Tags: high-school, Parenting, reunions |
6 Responses to “I was a teenage wallflower…not that it matters now, of course.”
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Posted
September 18, 2006 at
12:07 am by







1. Amy said:
September 18, 2006 @ 8:38 am
I try very hard to live in the present and that helps me PRESENT things to my kids that way. I remember well that looking at the big picture is something most kids cannot do - so while I offer my sage and eyes-rolled-at advice, I know that a little is seeping in, and that is probably enough for now. Of course you want your kids to benefit from your mistakes and your lessons, and they definitely will, while traversing it on their own as well. Reunions! My 25th is in 2007.
2. Ortizzle said:
September 18, 2006 @ 6:21 pm
I agree that high school is a lot more complex nowadays, and kids are dealing with a whole new set of variables, so it is hard to give them much perspective. But I think we can give them good old-fashioned advice and support for sure. High school has got some mean wolves out in the woods.
The whole concept of re-inventing themselves as they go through life is one I suppose they just have to live, and when you’re 17, you’re still working on Exhibit A. The Internet and blogs have given kids ways to exhibit Exhibit A so that they can have a larger audience that we every hoped to have. But I still think, in spite of the media savvy they have that we didn’t, that they are going to take just as long to get rid of the training wheels.
Have fun at your 30th! (I never went to a high school reunion, but if I did, I would probably wear a Dracula mask and drink a LOT of margaritas.
3. Ortizzle said:
September 18, 2006 @ 6:27 pm
Me again. Excuse all the typos above. It should read “…so that they can have a larger audience *than* we *ever* hoped to have.” I wouldn’t bother, but I hate it when typos are real, legitimate words spelled correctly, just not the ones you wanted to type :-))
4. Jessica said:
September 18, 2006 @ 7:01 pm
How about offering this to your kids, “Sometimes life is great and sometimes it just blows.”?
No, but seriously, I do think we have to allow our kids their failures and accomplishments because that is the ultimate life lesson. It’s easy to say, hard in practise. I know my heart breaks with every disappointment or cruel lesson my sons learns along the way and part of me wants to circumvent those hard lessons. We expect our children to accept our weaknesses without question, yet we refuse to accept theirs. Every parent wants their child to excel and rationalize thoughts, but that comes with confidence and successes and failures, I think.
I always appreciated the stories my mother told me. She had such a good memory or at least, she had a great imagination and she always had a relate-able story for every situation. I think that is so important.
I know I tend to be overly-realistic with my kids and they’re still young. For example, I might tell my son who just got a C on his spelling test that failing spelling tests will assure him that he will be a broccoli tester for the rest of his life instead of having a playstation in every room when he grows up. Probably not the best form of encouragement, but then again, I don’t know what the hell I’m doing.
5. TB said:
September 19, 2006 @ 6:57 am
You will be the envy of all at the reunion. And I know your boys will learn by your example.
6. Jenny said:
September 19, 2006 @ 10:26 am
“My life map is an old map that is useful only to me.”
So perfectly said.