What crowd did you hang out with at school ?

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...specifically secondary school, high school or whatever your local equivalent is. Were you a popular kid ? Why ? Who was the popular crowd at your school and what was your relationship to them ?

Patrick, Thursday, 28 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Crowd? That would have been assuming that I had *friends* at high school. I didn't. The only kids who would hang with me were the bad girls from BOCES, once I got into punk rock.

masonic boom, Thursday, 28 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Ach. I had no friends at school. No friends whatsoever. I looked awful, like a too-tall, too-skinny geek. Then I reached college, Jarvis Cocker became popular, and everyone loved me.

The popular crowd was all sporty, as I remember. I still can't throw a ball with any success...

Paul Strange, Thursday, 28 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I had no friends until the 6 form. People sort of bullied me but I entered the school at 6'1" and stayed that way pretty much the whole way through. In the six form it was 1x muso, to go to gigs with, 1x gay chior boy, a few climbers and a few computer geeks.

masonic is all you do watch this forum?

at least i tried, and failed to go to a performance art thang this evening. Trekked all the way to the delle alpi and it was sold out. Crazy. the place was like the size of Olympia and it was performance art from barcellona.

Ed, Thursday, 28 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

the massive crew of 3 friends for the 4 years of high school. but if i was popular i could have gone on dates and to high school events..bah

kevin enas, Thursday, 28 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I guess I was a popular kid. I mean, I never really thought I was, but thinking back on it I did have a bunch of good friends of all different types of people. There are three guys I'd consider "best friends" from those days, and a wider circle of about1 15 people that I try to keep in some type of contact with.

I was never on the homecoming court or anything. That was my oldest brother's thing (in 1981, no less!).

Dan Perry, Thursday, 28 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Hung out with the smoking patio crowd freshman year because I was desperate to take every drug known to man. Also I thought they'd be a little more open-minded then the rest of my classmates. Boy, was I wrong. Later I gravitated towards the more bohemian brains and the budding fag hags in the theatre crowd, the ones who didn't really get punk but were into going to Rocky Horror on a Friday night. This was the Seventies, mind you. Only had one punk friend at my high school and he was more of a Zappa fan. I was not popular, I was a weirdo. But I had a super popular football player brother, which kept me from being beat up too much. The popular crowd: Athletes, cheerleaders, and the student politician types who loved them. I remember befriending an English exchange student because I thought he'd have all the dirt on my glam rock favorites, but the only one he really knew anything about was Slade. Which was OK, but, you know...

Arthur, Thursday, 28 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Mid to late eighties high school era -- I was surprisingly on good terms with just about everybody. It didn't hurt that in my school the chief jocks *and* the chief brains actually intersected throughout, male and female, with only one or two exceptions aside either way (I was clearly on the not-jock side). Hung around with the nerd/AV geek crew at lunch, on good terms with the arty alt. wing, got along well with all the teachers and was friends with just about everybody, or at least had nothing bad to say about them. I don't think I was a 'popular' kid per se, but I had my place and people knew who I was. Still, though I enjoyed seeing folks again at my reunion three years back and all, I'm not really surprised that nobody there became a long-term friend outside of one girl a year ahead of me, who alas I've since lost touch with, much to my annoyance.

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 28 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

i was popular...among the losers. no, i loved my friends, but we were most definately not "cool". i hung out with the artists, the bandos, the choir nerds, the thespians, the "honors" class peeps... also i hung with a crowd we used to call the "park rats" oh, we thought we were so cool...little punk kids who just hung out in our town park all day long and smoked cigarettes and played guitar. i also hung out with the good old star-wars-worshipping, role-playing, fantasy-novel-reading crowd...theyre the ones im in touch with still from high school. the popular kids went from torturing me mercilessly in middle school to totally ignoring me in high school, which i was fine with. now they try to be my friend when i see them around town...because they have most definately have never left my home town.

amy, Thursday, 28 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Never got the chance ...

Robin Carmody, Thursday, 28 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

The geeks, until GCSE year when they got on my nerves and I dumped them. Then it was the indie kids, who worshipped me and my friend CR cos we were in a band. Ah, that last year of secondary school made the other 4 worthwhile...

DG, Thursday, 28 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Hung out with a little of everyone. I really had no core group of friends, being that up until high school I was basically a friendless nerd/geek/bookworm and had no idea how to go about making a friend. Truth is, I was fine without any. So I moved from group to group and was pretty much accepted by all of them, but belonged to none.

michele, Thursday, 28 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I'd say I was pretty popular. I hung out with everyone. Then again at my school the theatre crowd WAS the popular/well-known crowd, so there you go.

Ally, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

early 90s, high school faked it so real i was beyond fake - many aquantances, hardly anyone I'd call close friends - fucking hated the shithole school i went to in the shithole town, with its shithole religion and shithole homophobes, and hardly any of the guys had nice dicks...bah.

Geoff, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I was an out fag at a mostly mormon high school.
I hung out with the 3 atheists and the lone jew
in fact when i write my memoir i am going to call it the arts phag, the atheists and the lone jew

anthony, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I had no friends. I still have no friends. Hold me!

Melissa W, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

No, seriously, I went to a very small, very cliquey, religious, private boarding school type place. Although the school was too damned small to actually have a "popular crowd" in the usual jocks and cheerleaders type way, it did revolve around a couple of cliques. There was the posh girls and their attentive soccer-playing boyfriends- I didn't interest them and they didn't interest me.

There was the "artsy" crowd who all worked on the school newspaper, acted in the school dramas, listened to indie music and hung out in the art studio. I desperately wanted to be part of this clique, but they branded me "too weird" and wanted nothing to do with me. (Much later, I found out that they were jealous of my English accent, my trans-European childhood, and the fact that my standardised test scores were all hundreds of points above theirs. Everything the "psuedo-intellectuals" were pretending to be, I'd actually done, and that threatened them. The knowledge of this, at the age of 30, doesn't help your inner 13 year old.)

Then there was the stoner, smoking lounge, bad kids crowd. At some point, I don't remember exactly how- I think I helped one of the girls pass a Spanish test or something- they discovered that I was the perfect "trip toy" because I had an endless useless repository of "wow..." type knowledge, I knew the collected lyrics of every comedy song ever, and subsequently adopted me, almost as their mascott, despite the fact that I was totally straight edge and didn't even at that point. My grades went to hell in a handbag, but I was having fun and feeling accepted for the first time in my life.

masonic boom, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

As school genius, short arse and resident psycho I had a mixed batch of friends, people who wanted to be my friends because I might help them with their homework and people who were wary of me in case I hit them with a chair (your honour - I never did it unprovoked). Popular might not be the right word, but unpopular isn't too. How about aloof.

Chicks thought I was sweet.

Pete, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

My time in high school was so very Welcome to the Dollhouse-esque. I ended up dropping out (okay, flunking out) after some idiot boys who were much older than I decided it would be really funny if they told everyone I was sexually harassing them. When all these rumors got to 2 perfectly nice boys (who inadvertently ruined my life), they decided to tell a teacher they were "concerned" which kind of spiraled into a horrible game of telephone until it got to my guidance counselor, and I was basically chastised for being a wannabe slut offering myself to older boys and coming on to them. Which couldn't have been further from the truth. I was so terribly depressed that I went and gained 60 lbs. by the next year and started flunking all of my classes.
Needless to say, I have no fond memories of high school. And I only spent a year and a half there.

Melissa W, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

What, you're all geeks apart from Ned?! I didn't expect that. I'm thinking of leaving this bastard board, you loner freaks. I've got 104 friends.

Greg, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I was popular enough (I think). Although like Michele, I was kind of on the fringes of things. There was no 'Heathers' type uber-popularity contest going on at my school. It was pretty good like that.

Nick, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I don't have any contact with anyone from school anymore (or university for that matter) but I'm kind of intrigued about what they are up to. We don't really do class reunions over here, so it was quite exciting to find one of those websites where you can catch up with old schoolfriends that actually has a lot of people on it for the UK. About 10 in my year. Really weird seeing those names again. It's called, rather ickily, Friends Reunited

Nick, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Yeah, I was curious enough to register with schoolmates.com or whatever it's called, but not curious enough to actually write to any of them. They don't invite me to reunions because I never graduated. My life sure looks exciting on paper. The only person who bothered filling in their stats and everything was the cunting dumbfuck psuedo intellectual who wrote the article about not being a psuedo intellectual. Sigh. I'm a rock star. He works for the government. Mwah hah hah hah hah! You're so subversive you're a civil servant now.

masonic boom, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I refused to go to my reunion. But I did read the little packet that came beforehand and listed what everyone's occupation is. So many of them said "owner of blah blah" or "CEO of blah blah company," and my friend who did go to the reunion said all of them are full of shit. They run their own mostly failing businesses out of their home. Nobody tells the truth anymore. So when I got a letter asking for a personal update for the alumni newsletter, I wrote:"married and divorced 4 times, mother of 16, living in a trailer with two rooms but 5 tvs. Haven't worked in 6 years as I prefer living off welfare or the money I make giving head to CEO's of failing home businesses." They never printed it.

michele, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Kate, I would have thought working for the civil service gives him rather more of a chance to be subversive than playing in an indie band, doesn't it? Sorry, don't want to make this a rerun of the People Who Work In Offices: CLASSIC or DUD thread

Nick, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Sigh. I understand your argument, Nick, but you do not know this man. He was one of those "I am an anarchist" types in high school. His little blurb on the reuinion site made it perfectly CLEAR that he was actually quite proud that he was working for the government- (I mean, he compared himself to James Bond, for fucks sake) it was not a "I am subverting it from the inside" thing at all.

masonic boom, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

James Bond? Kewl! It's OK, I'd be consumed with envy too.

Nick, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Burnouts. Drunks. Not much else to rural living, I'm afraid.

tarden, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Wait, they don't invite you to reunions if you drop out?!?! FUCK. If I knew that I would've finished. This has completely ruined my day and it's not even 9:30 yet. Goddamnit.

Was my school the only school where the theatre/arts crowd WAS The In Crowd?? I'm curious, I mean even jocks had things to do with the theatre program at my school. That was where it was at. Did I go to a weird school? Granted, I only went to junior high so maybe if I went to high school it would've been different.

Ally, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Are we all dropouts?
The drama crowd were just one sector of cool. But mostly it was the pastel-clad golden highlights crowd that was cool. And they were all very rich.

Melissa W, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Hey, I had a reason to drop out! And the fact that I had nervous breakdown requiring hospitalisation every few months for my last 2 years of school. Finally, about a month before I turned 16, I got a horrible bout of Mono which kept me in the hospital for a few weeks, then in bed for a few months. When I finally recovered from said Mono, I was old enough to breeze my way though the GED (I didn't study, stayed up all night drinking the night before, and still managed to come home with a 95) and skipped my way to being the youngest student at the local art college. Hooray!

masonic boom, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Illinois law states that I still can't take my GED. They're trying to deter dropouts, I guess. How evil. I could breeze through that test without a second thought, but instead I have to wait yet another year. When I finally do take it I'll be off to Boston and Emerson College. And by the time I do that, I'll be OLDER than everyone in their first year. Just so so so evil. You know, I'm really thinking I might be the youngest person on ILM/ILE...

Melissa W, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I attempted to drop out during a bout of drug and alcohol induced apathy. My parents wouldn't hear of it. They had already fed thousands of dollars into the catholic propaganda machine that was my high school, and damn if I wasn't going to get a diploma out of it. I spent my remaining high school time pretending I was interested in the theater department, where the resident art crowd adopted me and let me hang out by the back stairwell with them.

michele, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I wish I could say I dropped out in a drug haze...it would add interest. But no, I was just so severely depressed that even MAKING it to school was a triumph. Doing schoolwork, of course, was out of the question.

Melissa W, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I dropped out cos I was bored. I mean, I have nothing more glamorous than that. I mean, my mental state at the time is pretty well documented I guess because I don't hide it, I don't see a reason to, but really it all came down to the fact that I was fuck all bored. It was too easy. I could cry at the thought of going to school and sitting there rotting out my head with mindless garbage. I wanted to die every time I sat in class listening to aimless bullshit from teachers who, if they were actually knowledgable, would be doing something besides teaching in a state with one of the worst education records in the country. I do believe the last straw was when my science teacher told a girl in class that buttermilk was "basically like regular milk and you dissolve a stick of butter in it, so it's really horrible for you" - I mean, literally, I think that was the catalyst for me dropping out, I just went off, "Fucking hell, that's ridiculous, you fuckwit. Everyone knows that buttermilk is the butter left over from making, funnily, BUTTER, like when you churn it you get left over liquid and THAT'S buttermilk and it has very little fat in it because it's all in the fucking butter!" I was asked to go sit outside, so I just left the school. It was just one of those things, you just hear so much bullshit and you just can't take one more second of it. My boyfriend at the time was like, was that really a wise idea? I said yes, and I still think yes.

My mom didn't think yes though and signed me up for college. Sign #2 (besides that whole milk debacle) that the AZ education system is crap: I WAS ALLOWED TO SIGN UP. I never took a GED (indeed I didn't until a few years later). I didn't have anything to say I graduated high school, and I didn't lie and said I did. I didn't lie about my age either, 15. They just didn't care! It was fantastic.

Not that I finished college either. It was even more bullshit than high school, just expensive instead of free. I didn't need it in the end anyhow.

Ally, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

That's what I'm doing right now. Community college. But it's worse than the high school so I've made it through literally 2 classes. I was allowed to sign up at 16 with no GED on the basis of some very old SAT scores (from 6th grade).
So what kind of job (if any) do you have now?

Melissa W, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Ah, fucking high school. Do you have a minute? Are you sitting down?

My story probably mirrors MelissaW's the closest (but without the traumatizing / interesting bits). There was a bit of social miscegenation between cliques (the theatre / jock / smart crowd; the jock / shop / smoker crowd). I didn't really belong to any of them, though. Once upon a time, I was exceedingly smart to the point that I'd go to higher grade-level classes in elementary school to take math courses - out of place in both my age peer group and my intellectual peer group. Set a bad precedent. Being pudgy and introverted helped tons, too. And you can throw a broken-home-all- alone cherry on top of that, too. (Broken-home in the upper middle class sense, mind you.)

The odd thing is that I'm friends with the same 4 or 5 people that I was in school with for about 14 years - Grades 1 through 12, and even a couple of years of college (before apathy and mild depression kicked in & I got myself booted from campus). We all live about 15 minutes from each other (just by happenstance). It's nice, but I am hoping to get out of this state in the next couple of years. (Hey! There's a Life Goal for me!)

But, yeah - hung mostly with the brainy crowd (though I brought up the rear in terms of actual brainy results), then tried oh-so- desperately (in a lazy way) to get in with the "cooler" kids. Oh, lord. Never really a comfortable member of any clique (though I desperately wanted to belong). Then, lost interest in EVERYTHING (excepting comic books & sleeping & feeling sorry for myself) to the point that I'd be half-way down my street, see the bus stop at the end, and turn around & walk back home. Came very close to not graduating high school because of my attendance record.

My 10 year reunion is in 2003. The 5 year was interesting, in that the cliques that were represented at the reunion slid into place as people arrived. And, when the "cool kids" got drunk, they started chatting up the "nerds" (my posse), reminiscing about this & that, apologizing for this & that, getting all buddy-buddy. It would've been funny if it weren't so pathetic.

David Raposa, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Pudgy, introverted, smart kid...yup, that's me. I was the one off reading Slaughterhouse-Five in 5th grade instead of hanging out on the playground. Also did "fast-paced math" which involved going to a different SCHOOL in the morning in junior high. School was always pretty much a miserable, boring, tedious experience for me. Add to being a sickly kid with poor attendance, and you just have a recipe for disaster.

Melissa W, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

High school was really boring, at least as far as the classes went. I really lived for the extra-curriculars; if I hadn't done extra-curriculars, I would have probably cut my losses and tried to go straight to college. (I've got a couple of friends who did do that, actually, and none of them are sorry. Ah, hindsight...)

Dan Perry, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Our only extracurriculars were sports or National Honor Society charity type deals, in which all the rich kids would make themselves feel better by "helping out society". Except really you just couldn't be on the honor roll if you didn't have enough service hours. It was all very twisted.

Melissa W, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Being overly intelligent is probably the worst thing that can happen to a child in standardised schools. There should always be a GED escape clause for those stranded with their age group.

I'm also curious to see how many of you had these horrendous experiences at state schools, religious schools or private schools? Going to private school was supposed to spare me all the horror of being accademically advanced (I started school a year early because school in the UK starts earlier, then proceeded to skip a grade once I got to the US) but it only introduced me to a brave new world of snobbery.

masonic boom, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Oh we had that too with NJHS (the "J" because as I said I never really made it much past jr. high). It was asinine. My mom forced me to join - I was literally in tears, I didn't want to do it. So I join up and they're like, you have to give us money and do community service. I was like, wtf is this, jail? So I got kicked out. I got a lovely letter at the end of the year about what a horrible person I was for not paying dues and not doing service ever, I framed it and put it on my wall until my parents yelled at me.

Ally, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Yeah, sadly, the way Illinois law goes, I'm gonna be fucking TWENTY by the time I START college. Which is just so depressing, to think of those two lost years. Especially since I was supposedly so smart, y'know...everyone thought I'd end up at Harvard. But instead I'm a high school dropout who's going to be starting at some subpar college two years late. I wish there had been a better escape hatch. But I couldn't have finished high school. I would have killed myself before I got to the end.

Melissa W, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

My parents pulled me out of the public junior high school at the end of 8th grade to send me off to Catholic school. They though I would get a better education, be challenged more, be more disciplined, make better friends, etc. The education was none the better. I was still incredibly bored. I did not make better friends. And, to top it all off, there were more drugs in the school than I ever saw at the public school. The burn outs outnumbered the jocks and geeks by at least 2-1. And how was I supposed to make friends in a class of over 400 kids when I was overwhelmed when there were only 100 people in my class at the public school? Honestly, parents have their heads up their asses sometimes. And I say this as a parent who is trying very hard to keep my head out of my ass and spare my children from the horrors of adolesence.

michele, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Kate - yeah, big private school trauma here. Public school would probably have sucked as well, but I'm sure it would have sucked LESS. I'll talk about it more later.

Patrick, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I hate to disappoint Greg, I was and am fairly geeky, it's just that I'm a friendly sort. :-) I'm even more comfortable with people now, I seem to have this schizoid balance between my mom's privateness and my dad's gregariousness, about which more below.

Anyway -- Jesus fucking Christ, did all you people go to school in specially delineated _Lord of the Flies_-meets-_1984_ zones or something? I'm not trying to be insulting, I'm mostly just horrified! I experienced nothing like the personal levels of hell a fair amount of you seemed to go through. Frightening. I agree with Ally that school was tres boring -- final year, I was doing nothing but reading novels all the time in all my classes, pretty much -- but there were enough good experiences to offset that, including stints with the drama crew (acting roles in _The Skin Of Our Teeth_ and _The Music Man_ -- and I have the latter on tape! ack!), Academic Decathlon fun (*very* geeky, but very fun -- we won the San Diego city championship, yow!) and some very sly, smart teachers, especially in English lit.

I guess for me everything schoolwise just sort of came naturally, to do good work and all, due to family upbringing and all that. I really am a perfect fusion of my parents in ways -- both dedicated to education and bringing critical thinking to bear, though my dad's a more straight arrow guy (a career Navy officer, a deeply but not oppressively religious man) and my mom's a brilliantly witty cynic, an open atheist who thinks American society is essentially comprised of bigoted fools. This explains why I'm an Eagle Scout but loathe the Scouting Association, for fairly obvious reasons these days, I should hope.

Ned Raggett, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

A strange thing is: being one way at school (unpopular, or whatever) - and then being something different as an adult.

(This has obviously happened to Nick Dastoor. He was popular at school.)

the pinefox, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

It's not the academics of school I didn't like, it was the social aspects. I actually did quite well in college. I went on my own terms (4 years after high school) and totally enjoyed the experience of college life without all the peripheral stuff. My parents encouraged us to be good students, but they also wanted us to be social butterflies who belonged to all kinds of organizations. It was a lot of pressure to live up to, and I think most of my apathy towards school was a backlash at my parents for expecting me to be like they wanted me to, not like I thought I should be. THey wanted A students with stellar extracurricular activities, regardless of our ability to do such a thing, or be happy about it. But you learn what you live, and my motto with my own children is I'd rather have a C student who is emotionally happy than an A student who is going to end up taking an uzi to his co workers someday.

michele, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

I'm a bit concerned. Why is the pinefox suggesting that no one likes me? Have people been talking about me behind my back?

Nick, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

Yeah, Ned's high school experiences are very close to my own. For all I bitch about the alarming number of stupid peple in my home town, there was also an alarming number of really cool people. Also, we were known for having one of the least "cliquey" high schools in the Twin Cities metro area. (Several good friends were kids who had transferred to my high school expressly for that reason. And the music program.)

Melissa, Emerson has probably the best communications/journalism/theater departments in Boston. If you've got a passing interest in any of those fields, you're SO in the right place. Plus, they own a castle in the Netherlands where the send kids to study abroad. Don't knock it 'til you get there!

Dan Perry, Friday, 29 June 2001 00:00 (twenty-four years ago)

i have to go to my reunion. i'm scared. i loved those people but i was terrified of them as well.

should be intersting!

i hung out with some preps, some stoners, some dweebs. i hung out with teachers even.

Surmounter, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 02:16 (eighteen years ago)

Oh, it will be fun. No one cares. Most people, I would imagine, will be bent upon getting drunk and just having a "good time"...so just enjoy!

dell, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 02:18 (eighteen years ago)

omgosh i'll b so fucking excitd actually. wow.

Surmounter, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 02:19 (eighteen years ago)

I thought mine would be full of public-school knobs trying to outdo each other. Fortunately only 5% of the reunion formed a oneupmanship corner and spent the night snobbing off the other 95%, who were content to be pleasant to each other and just have a really good night.

Autumn Almanac, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 02:23 (eighteen years ago)

i don't think i'd even recognise anyone i went to school with.

i hung out with nerds. if only i'd taken up the guitar five years earlier things could have been very different

electricsound, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 02:49 (eighteen years ago)

nerds r alwayz good

Surmounter, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 02:52 (eighteen years ago)

I went to a tiny private high school (50 people total) and didn't get along with most of those 50. I got along best with people in the grade ahead of me, and I ended up skipping my junior year and graduating with them. Popularity in that school was determined by how much the principal liked you, and she didn't like me much- constantly calling my parents in because the "popular" kids liked to tell her that I was on drugs (I wasn't.) She wouldn't let me be valedictorian of the class I skipped into, even though I had the highest grades, because one of her pets was apparently slated to be valedictorian. It was a seriously screwed up place and only got more screwed up after I left. Thank goodness I got out when I did. Last year was supposed to be my 10 year reunion, but we didn't have one.

miryam, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:03 (eighteen years ago)

intense!

Surmounter, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:04 (eighteen years ago)

weird.

W4LTER, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:04 (eighteen years ago)

I got called down to "the office" on more than one occasion on the suspicion that I was "on drugs", which I never was at the time.

dell, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:07 (eighteen years ago)

i got called down to the office for that reason as well.

Surmounter, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:07 (eighteen years ago)

the dean, she grew to like me quite a bit!

Surmounter, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:08 (eighteen years ago)

band fags and D&D/board game nerds. these were generally the same people most of the time, slight overlap with some girls who were also in band, and theater dorks from time to time during my last two years. In a school pop of 2000+ it wasn't too difficult to find a sizable clique and stick to it without catching abuse from anyone else

El Tomboto, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:10 (eighteen years ago)

I remember at one point, we were talking about the transcendentalists in philosophy class, and the principal was sitting in on the class. She added to the discussion that sometimes they did drugs, and "I'd know about that, right?" I wish my high school life were as interesting as the kids in my school told her it was. I was apparently out late at night, smoking, drinking, doing drugs, and stealing stuff. In reality, I was at home on IRC.

miryam, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:11 (eighteen years ago)

When I was at school we had to rely on bulletin boards whilst waiting for the web to come out.

Autumn Almanac, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:13 (eighteen years ago)

what a fucking bitch. if someone told me that in class i'd bitch her out and get my parents involved. damn.

Surmounter, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:13 (eighteen years ago)

xp

Surmounter, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:13 (eighteen years ago)

wau, these stories are funny.

In my senior year of high school I largely isolated myself from others, with the comfort of mind that most of my friends attended other schools in the area. I ended up hanging out with people who were of some loose ex-skateboarder/punkrock general smart-ass contingent. To this day I maintain that those guys were funny as hell...but I'm not in touch with any of them anymore.

One of the weirdest compliments(?) that I hold close to me in some werid way is when a friend from that odd assortment of kids remarked to me how he admired that through the years I was the sole exception to any of those dudes in terms of having some "punk rock" or "skater" haircut or whatever passed for such at the time, or even dressing along such lines. Obv., on the occasion of my twenty-year reunion I will show up with sides shaved and bangs running down to my chin, and approximating whatever is the reigning alt. sartorial choice of the moment.

dell, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:27 (eighteen years ago)

omartm

mookieproof, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:33 (eighteen years ago)

My school was the largest in our area, but it was still out in the boondocks, so we were all kind of in it together. I played football and track but was somehow still down with drama people and farm kids and academic nerds and Mormon preps and band peoples. (HAI TOM I PLAYED TROMBONZ TOO.) There were a few tough guys who hated my guts because they thought I was an asshole, but they had mostly graduated/dropped out by junior year, so I didn't even have to avoid Lower B hall anymore. (Still can't believe I only had one fight in high school. Didn't do very well.) My best friends were mostly the most sarcastic braniacs from whatever cliques they were forced into.

Dimension 5ive, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:39 (eighteen years ago)

xpost

i never even took any elective art classes, though. these were just the guys that i ate lunch with. cue much snorting out of chocolate milk or whatever b/c the company and the disruptions caused by them were infinitely more entertaining then the food

dell, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:41 (eighteen years ago)

am i the only one who like didn't really hang out with typical jock/nerd/stoner groups? not like "we were different that you can't put a label on us lol" but like we listened to the strokes and sometimes played basketball and sometimes smoked weed on the weekends

idk

J0rdan S., Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:44 (eighteen years ago)

weren't really all that cool but weren't "loosers"

i had a pretty great time in hs, i feel genuinely bad for ppl who didn't since i actually enjoyed hs more than i do college

J0rdan S., Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:44 (eighteen years ago)

er losers

J0rdan S., Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:45 (eighteen years ago)

In a school pop of 2000+ it wasn't too difficult to find a sizable clique and stick to it without catching abuse from anyone else

-- El Tomboto, Wednesday, January 30, 2008 3:10 AM

same here. hung out with the public speaking/debate group & the newspaper staff. they were good times, though i probably won't go to any reunions only because i'm still in touch with everyone i want to keep contact with, and no one i knew is gonna go anyway.

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:46 (eighteen years ago)

In a school pop of 2000+ it wasn't too difficult to find a sizable clique and stick to it without catching abuse from anyone else

-- El Tomboto, Wednesday, January 30, 2008 3:10 AM

^^i missed this but applies to me too, except in a school w/ a pop of 3500 it was even an easier

J0rdan S., Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:48 (eighteen years ago)

am i the only one who like didn't really hang out with typical jock/nerd/stoner groups? not like "we were different that you can't put a label on us lol" but like we listened to the strokes and sometimes played basketball and sometimes smoked weed on the weekends

idk

-- J0rdan S., Wednesday, 30 January 2008 14:44 (7 minutes ago) Bookmark Link

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

weren't really all that cool but weren't "loosers"

i had a pretty great time in hs, i feel genuinely bad for ppl who didn't since i actually enjoyed hs more than i do college

-- J0rdan S., Wednesday, 30 January 2008 14:44 (6 minutes ago) Bookmark Link

I kind of know what you mean, except we didn't play basketball (played rugby tho, but everyone did at my school) and there was no Strokes. And we didn't abbreviate words as much.

W4LTER, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:52 (eighteen years ago)

And we didn't abbreviate words as much.

-- W4LTER, Tuesday, January 29, 2008 9:52 PM (1 second ago) Bookmark Link

must not have communicated much through instant messenger than either

J0rdan S., Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:53 (eighteen years ago)

eh, the people I'm talking about, like, we would play basketball a lot of days after school, and ppl would get stoned and stuff. they were some unclassifiable bunch, ultimately. at least one guy was on the football team at some point, while some of us were heavily invested in punk rock goings-on, while still others skateboarded on a casual level but really seemed ultimately invested in recalling lines from random a-team episodes or something. so maybe there was a common stoner/drug bond, or something, but mostly i think it was a fairly motley crew. but seriously, it was just a bunch of random weirdoes. the most common bond was probably based on some attitude of making fun of everything, w/o exception, which, granted, sounds much like yr typical lol hs experience...but, these guys stood out somehow, i dunno...

also, these guys were omnipresent at whatever big parties were going down on the wknds, so i guess that would disqualify them from "nerd" status...

dell, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:55 (eighteen years ago)

ha! no

xp

W4LTER, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 03:57 (eighteen years ago)

lol 2 of the three guys I mentioned upthread now post to ILX

HI DERE, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 04:36 (eighteen years ago)

I hung out with Dan and the three friends he mentions; also pretty much anyone else in the theater department. My closest friends were not in my graduating class.

The "popular clique" at school was civil to me because my little sister was part of it (uh, with the exception of one particular girl). I suspect that I was viewed as hopelessly nerdy and fixated on books.

Sara R-C, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 04:56 (eighteen years ago)

high school was, and i felt this at the time but wldn't have articulated it in this way, like going to a job i didn't really like but needed and hey it was good experience for the future right? uh. and wld be over soon enough though it was sometimes stressful but not the centre of my life. in that way everyone was just one big crowd and in it were some friends and a lot of aquaintances and a bunch of people i just never had a chance to talk to for whatever reason. i don't even think we had a 'popular crowd.' i don't even know if we had crowds/cliques. it was a big school though, so i guess we did. i mostly just did my job.

god i don't know, by the time i was 16, i think i just read a lot of books, watched a lot of tv, did family stuff like swimming or shopping or whatever, did some school/community theatre and volunteer things, did a lot of late-night last-minute studying, poetry writing, and had sex with my boyfriend and listened to college radio. sometimes hung out with a few other people and smoked weed and/or went to movies or shows or walked around downtown/parks. i mean, wtf do you really do in highschool?

rrrobyn, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 05:40 (eighteen years ago)

oh and sports stuff
how i watched SO MUCH TV SO MUCH i have no idea

rrrobyn, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 05:52 (eighteen years ago)

wtf do you really do in highschool

My strategy was sign up for whatever activities would keep me out of the house and away from my parents. "Sure I'll stage manage/build a set for/prompt the actors in/whatever else you want me to do for your play, as long as I can be at school until 10 p.m. every night..."

Sara R-C, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 05:55 (eighteen years ago)

(Not that my parents are soooooo bad, I just didn't exactly fit in with my family and felt that very acutely.)

Sara R-C, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 05:56 (eighteen years ago)

my 10 year reunion is this year, shit. also my high school best friend is making me go. i also watched so much tv (exp jerry springer) and ate lots of nachos and dunkin donuts.

bell_labs, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 05:56 (eighteen years ago)

i ate so many nachos!

rrrobyn, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 05:58 (eighteen years ago)

(there was a costco near our house in gr 11 & 12 - hueg cheese, huge bags of chips)

rrrobyn, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 05:59 (eighteen years ago)

i didn't go to my 10-yr reunion b/c it was way out there and i was way out here and yknow maybe i'm mean but lame parties are lame

rrrobyn, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 06:01 (eighteen years ago)

yes
NACHOS + TV
those were the days

bell_labs, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 06:02 (eighteen years ago)

haha oh how times they have changed lol

rrrobyn, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 06:05 (eighteen years ago)

batcavers

jergïns, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 06:07 (eighteen years ago)

for my english class i got to perform tom's "light fantastic" speech from "the glass menagerie," that shit was fun.

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 06:08 (eighteen years ago)

hey robyn, oven-baked fancyass chips and old chedder still = nachos!
tv on internet still = tv!
xpost to self

rrrobyn, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 06:09 (eighteen years ago)

i think i need to make some drastic life changes

rrrobyn, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 06:12 (eighteen years ago)

lol @ BIG HOOS reminiscing about LIL HOOS

that was like 3 years ago for you right?

deej, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 06:22 (eighteen years ago)

my life was basically music - i played trumpet like 3 hrs a day - swim team and studying :-/
my family had like no money and i was all worried about not being able to pay for college w/out grades and shit. shouldnt have worried so much

i wasnt really in a clique or whatever, ended up w/ friends from lots of different groups of people

deej, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 06:24 (eighteen years ago)

my school was also weird cuz its only like 40% white so the normal 'jocks rule the school' thing was thrown off by racial/economic polarity + disparity. lots of the kids who were jocks were also pretty academically ambitious

deej, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 06:25 (eighteen years ago)

I lived in a co-ed boarding house and went to a girls' high school.

Boarding house: fun for dances and barbecues, staying out past curfew, sleeping on the beach, no parents, living with great friends, some of whom were in college and let us younger ones hang out with them sometimes. My boarding-housemates were the people I was closest to and hung out with at the time, not so much my actual high school friends.

High school: Mostly boring and/or bitchy. I was on the dance team, and had lots of friends but wasn't particularly close to any one group. I guess some people saw me as a nerd cause I was on scholarship but it wasn't a big deal. Other than that, it was kind of a blur.

Roz, Wednesday, 30 January 2008 06:30 (eighteen years ago)


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