Last night I had my 20 year high school reunion. Initially I had zero interest in going. Since the last time I saw anyone from high school I have accomplished nothing. At least, nothing of note worth attending my 20 year reunion. The only reason I did attend was because my sorta-kinda-cousin “bullied” me into it. If she asks, I’m there. Plus, they needed (at minimum) 40 people to attend and they were having a hard time selling the minimum tickets required for the venue. (Out of a class of 200 I should add.) So, I’m very aware that I am not alone when it comes to wanting to skip it.
There were quite a few things I realized while I was there. The primary one being “I’m really an unfriendly person.” I recognized so many faces, even though they had dramatically changed from the last time I had seen them, I just didn’t remember names. It also became very clear that even during high school I didn’t talk to anyone. I knew these people for 4 years and never once took the time to get to know them. Which is really kind of shitty. I had people come up to me and say lovely things to me, but I approached no one but my cousin. In high school, she was the social butterfly. She really had a foot in a bunch of different groups. As Josh and I sat in a corner by ourselves, watching everyone chat, I started to wish I had been like her.
Another thing I realized was how much I have forgotten from my time in high school. What really concerns me up is not knowing if it’s from the grief slowly chipping away at them, or if I was so self absorbed as a kid that I never took the time to see or hear other people’s experiences. Yet that takes me back to the first point that I was just really an unfriendly person. Which is weird because I’m not. I’m just insanely, cripplingly shy. Which most people find strange since I am a huge attention whore.
I had one of these gentleman come up to me and say I looked very familiar but he couldn’t remember why. I said “I did all of the school plays?” He shook his head and replied that that wasn’t it. The only reason I went there first is because I was a huge theatre nerd and participated in this one theatre class that would perform 1 act plays for the English classes at my school each school period, once a month, for 3 years. I was genuinely voted (twice I might add) most likely to be famous. Both times with two different women. One being another theatre friend of mine and the other with this one girl, to this day, I have no idea how she wound up with the win. She had a cute personality but… she never did anything “big” that would have warranted that. She didn’t “perform.” At least not outside of the one math class where she was my table mate. There she mocked our middle eastern teacher’s accent. Which, at the time, I found fucking hilarious. Now it’s super insensitive and ignorant. I feel so much guilt for how ruthless this girl was to this teacher, and I wonder if she continued to teach after or if this racist little girl scared her away.
Another thought I had was how immature I am. Instead of mingling and saying hello to these familiar faces, I hid behind my boyfriend and played pokemon go on my phone. Instead of asking these people how things have been and, I don’t know, getting to know them now. That is one character flaw from high school I still have. I’m not an “adult” by any other means than in my age. I am still cripplingly shy and think that my presence isn’t wanted. Or that I am some sort of burden who needs to shut up.
The final epiphany, one in which I am certain I am not alone in, was how little I’ve accomplished since then. Everyone else seemed corporate or successful in some way. All I’ve done is get married, take care of my dying mother and husband, and finish editing a book. That’s it. I haven’t left this shitty little town or done anything I said I would achieve. I had such big dreams of becoming an actor or a published writer. Instead all I was able to “achieve” wAs perform in some insignificant community theatre and write a blog on the internet. That maybe gets 10 views a month.
I am a firm believer that life isn’t measured in perceived “successes” but in life lived. It is in the relationships we make or in the lives we touch. A “good life” to me is one in which, upon my death, I can look back and go “I’d do it again.”
All-in-all I had fun. Ate entirely too many pretzel bites at the snack buffet, realize how little my life is, and how this is probably the last time I’ll see any of these folks again. (Apart from my sorta-kinda-cousin.)
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If you’re curious as to why I say “sorta-kinda” is because when we went to high school we had zero familial relationship. We just happened to enjoy theatre class. The sorta part comes in when I started dating my husband in my senior year. He saw her name in one of my school play programs and asked me if she was related to so-and-so. At the time I had no idea, but she is in fact related to my husband’s step-mom’s sister’s husband. It’s weird how small this community is and how there are threads that weirdly connect us to people in our community in this roundabout way. My in-laws being a very prominent thread. If you’ve ever heard of the podcast “Notorious Bakersfield” that’s my cousin.