COMMENTS
BY THE WEBMASTER:
Linda Brown Taylor sent me this
article she wrote for the Southlake Times.
Southlake is very close to Grapevine out by the
Bob Rowland
Dear Bob(by).
About
once a month, or whenever the notion strikes me, I do a column called Taylored Tales. This week, I did one about the reunion. I
have enclosed it for you to read. If you want, feel free to put it on the SHS-66
web site. It can also be found at www.southlaketimes.com under By
Linda Taylor. Thanks again for all the work you and the others did in making
the reunion so special for everyone. You did a fantastic job and deserve lots
of pats on the back. Thanks, Linda Brown
By
Linda Taylor
Staff
Writer
This
past weekend, I took a step back in time…sort of. After procrastinating for
many, many years, I bit the bullet and decided to attend a high school reunion.
My 40th high school reunion to be exact.
When I made the decision to go back in May, I had a whole list of things I
wanted to do before that fateful weekend rolled around. I was going to lose 20
pounds, get a facelift, color my hair, check into plastic surgery and have my
nails done.
Somehow,
those eight weeks just zipped right by and I did none of the above. Except have
my nails done, and that doesn’t really count, because
I do that on a regular basis anyway.
So,
last Friday I headed out for
Friday
night’s activity was a two hour mixer, designed to break the ice and get the
early bird arrivals together before the hard core partying began on Saturday.
As I pulled into one of the few available parking spaces, I spotted a couple
getting out of a car nearby. My spirits lifted as I thought to myself, wow, if
they graduated with me, then I don’t look so bad after all. I mean, this couple
clearly looked several years older than I did. A few minutes later I crashed
back into the real world. The couple I had mistaken for classmates were
actually the former football coach and his wife. They should have looked much
older than I did because they were.
Inside,
I quickly learned that it was easier to simply look at the name tags
thoughtfully provided by the reunion committee than to
try to put the faces with names I remembered. Less
embarrassing and definitely less time consuming, too. Besides, it’s what
everyone else was doing, so why should I be different?
After
making contact with several of my old friends, some of whom I had known since
first grade but hadn’t seen in 40 years, I suddenly realized I was really
having fun. I was finding old friends and new friends all in the same bodies.
Not only was I sharing memories of the past, I was also getting to know an
entire group of people for the first time, for these were men and women who
grew up to do any number of interesting things, had exciting lives (especially
Becky, who lived for a while in a “naturalist camp”), were fun to talk to and
had so much to offer. What an experience.
Saturday’s
activities started with a tour of our old alma mater, which is now a middle
school. Because it is summer and no students are in the building, there was no
air conditioning. A half hour tour had most of us huffing and puffing and
drenched in sweat. We all did some good natured grumbling about the fact the
school is air conditioned now, at least when classes are in session. Another
amenity we found a bit over the top was the existence of two elevators in the
school. What’s the matter with today’s youth anyway? Too soft
for a flight of stairs? What is the world coming to.
After
a stop at the ex-students’ museum, it was time for lunch. Several of us made
our way to downtown, which, like most small town downtown areas, looks nothing
like it did 40 years ago. The J.C. Penney store where my mother took her brood
every September for winter clothes, shoes and school items, is a thing of the
far distant past. Instead, it has been turned into an antique mall with a
series of shops and small restaurants that serve sandwiches, smoothies and
designer coffees and teas.
Over
lunch we reminisced about how the town used to look and lamented the fact that
we couldn’t find our way around without a Mapsco or a
GPS. I used mine several times during the weekend.
The
crowning touch of the weekend was a dance at the Municipal Ballroom, recently
refurbished to look just about the same as it did when we were attending Junior
Cotillion Dances and Camp Fire Banquets. I was surprised to see two
As
the evening drew to a close, I was more than happy I was there. Looking back
was a lot of fun; looking forward was even better. I left with promises to keep
in touch, at least more often than once every 40 years. And I will, too,
because the friends I had in high school were great, but the people they grew
into are awesome.
Contact
staff writer Linda Taylor at 972-538-2116 or linda.taylor@scntx.com