I went to a private Christian school from kindergarten through 8th grade when my parents pulled my sister and I out the summer before freshman year. We homeschooled, and then after one year I begged to be put in public school. My friends were in public school now, and I wanted to be with them but really I needed out of my house. I was completely suffocating having nowhere to go other than church and it didn’t help that we lived 20 minutes outside of town. I ended up going to public school, but not the one I wanted. The one I went to my parents suggested because it had a legendary drama program and I really loved acting. I had no idea how much that decision would impact the rest of my life.
High school was so hard, but that’s normal right? Adolescence is rarely easy, however I was navigating this extra added layer of the culture shock of coming from one unique world and suddenly being thrust into this brand new one where everyone else was familiar with the lingo and each other and how things worked. As if being the new kid in a terrifying new place wasn’t enough, home life was really difficult, church was borderline abusive yet to me it was my safe place, and then I was being abused by my former youth pastor and adults didn’t believe me. I think back on high school with a different view than I used to. Before thirty, there was a lot of guilt and shame attached with it. There wasn’t necessarily regret; moreso I wished I could have been better. I put the blame squarely on my own shoulders, thinking that I just wasn’t enough somehow to be everything I wished I could have been. In spite of all of that, I managed to accomplish much, all things considered and deciding to go to public schools remains one of the best decisions I ever made, even with it being absolutely terrifying.
I joined theatre, and as such joined speech and debate. I wasn’t very good but I believe a lot of that was because I didn’t really try. Of course then I wouldn’t have said that, but with this 20/20 view of hindsight mixed with heavy doses of therapy I can now see how I actually was smart and capable, but the overwhelm of everything else going on was so overwhelming it consumed all of my spare energy that I normally would have dedicated towards actually trying. It wasn’t until I enrolled in college this summer that I realized I am smart and ironically have also been given a chance to redeem myself with speech and debate as well, having been recruited for the speech team after my public speaking class this summer. My teacher could tell from my first 2 minute speech in class that I was trained by my high school speech teacher, Charlotte Brown, and convinced me to join the speech team. It felt oddly full circle and at the same time I fought so many different thoughts and emotions I didn’t necessarily expect. I was such a different person 20 years ago, yet so much of me remains the same; the good bits, I’d hope.
Today was the celebration of life for Ms. Brown, who died in August of this year. I don’t think it really hit me until today, I could have sworn she was immortal. I was especially bummed that I never got to tell her about joining the college speech team as no sooner I joined we learned her health was starting to decline. I’d like to hope I know what she’d say to me about it. It helps, too, that my college speech teacher was also trained by and did her student teaching with Ms. Brown. She gets it.
It’s because of her I had the guts to go today. I knew I wanted to go, but my anxiety was spiking, in part knowing I’d see people I hadn’t seen in 20 years. I was never bullied in high school or anything like that. The other kids on my squad were nothing but wonderful, even if some were more wily than others. We were all high schoolers, going through our respective teenage experiences, coping the best we knew. However, despite all the horrors I was told in certain religious circles that I would experience in a public school, I found nothing but support there while the bullying came at the hands of my fellow church youth group members. I wasn’t necessarily expecting to be shunned or anything by who I’d see there, more just uncertain of how I would feel.
Many of these people were people I looked up to back then. I was drowning, struggling to keep my head above water with everything life was throwing me, but I didn’t even know it. I thought this was normal—privileged, even. In my efforts to tread water, I looked to those I respected, and many of them responded in kind even though I can’t imagine it was necessarily easy to deal with me. I know that when I’m in places like this, especially haven’t been there in decades and now adding in being surrounded by people who were also surrounding me 20 years ago, I tend to go right back into feeling like I’m 15, 16, 17 years old again. It wasn’t as extreme as I expected, thankfully, but it was jarring. What do I even say to these people? They, for the most part, grew up together, at least to an extent. They have remained main characters in each other’s lives, while I was and remain a sort of background extra. Of course, I’m over thinking everything I said, as one does. And I can’t help but wonder; do they know I’m the me I am now? Can they tell? Could they back then? Surely we’re all different simply because we’re older, right? But I was different different, even though bits of me have carried through. Did they still see me as that little lost kid? Will I always be a little bit of her, no matter how much time passes?
What I do know is I was met by each of them in kind. They hugged me, said it was good to see me, some even invited me out to whatever plans they had afterwards. I might have gone had I not been needed back at the studio. Part of me really wishes I could have gone because maybe then they would see who I am now.
I know I don’t have anything to prove. Most of these people I’ll probably never see again, which is a weird feeling in and of itself. And I know I’m a background character to their high school experiences, but do they know that in each of their subtle ways, they helped shape the person I have become? Do they know that I learned from their kindness and patience and show it to others? Do they know they were the first person to foster my love and dream of dancing, which became a major player in my life? Do they know I still occasionally quote bits of their HI’s even though no one has any clue what I’m saying or why? Do they know that when I look back on my life before 30, I don’t remember much of it, but there’s patches that stand out and even though high school was extremely difficult, and my senior year with Ms. Brown amongst the most difficult, that they stand out as bits that I can’t forget? Do they know they aren’t in the part my brain has hidden to protect me from the pain of my past?
Do they know the gift that is?
Probably not, and I don’t know if they ever will, and that’s okay.
It’s extra weird to process all of this while still living on the land I returned to every day after school. I may be different, but my surroundings are much the same. I’m still in this town surrounded by people who I hope to avoid most days.
And yet, here we all were again on this day, and I’m reminded of the good that can be even and especially when days seem most dark.
