This weekend I'm attending my 40th reunion at Wellesley College. That one has always been a landmark because the college development/fundraising office figured that by then we'd have made our fortunes and be ready to come up with a Really Big Gift.
Well,
not so much. Through no fault of the
college's I've wandered through five careers.
Or maybe that was partly the
college's fault, because they convinced us all that we could be whatever we
wanted to be. I guess my problem was
that I was never quite sure what I wanted to be, so I tried a lot of different
things, like art historian, investment banker, and professional genealogist. In any case, no fortune to donate, save for
gratitude.
I
avoided my first few reunions, in part because I lived on the opposite coast
and couldn't afford the airfare, and also because I didn't think I had anything
to say. I think the first one I attended
was my 20th reunion. It's
always both fun and depressing to go back and see many classmates all at once,
and try to fit the faces in front of you with the shiny-bright 22-year-old
faces you remember. Yes, we all got
older—except in our memories.
One
thing that has always saddened me about these reunions is the people who are not there. That's the downside of
attending a prestigious and renowned college:
people have expectations of you.
Your parents, your professors, even you yourself, expect you to go out
and conquer the world.
You
have to remember I attended college during one of those optimistic feminist
waves. If I recall accurately, about 3%
of female college graduates nationwide attended a professional school (law,
medicine) after graduation. Now it's
more like 50%, so I guess there have been some positive changes. But I daresay
that Wellesley's average was higher, and I do remember the fierce competitiveness
among biology majors fighting for those few slots in medical schools (which has
something to do with why I changed my major from biology to art history).
But
I have heard too often that the graduates who choose not to attend reunions
stay home because they feel they simply aren't successful enough. They aren't CEOs of Fortune 500 companies;
they don't run government agencies; they haven't saved any small countries
lately. They have merely lived simple productive
lives: married (we did that in those
days), raised a family, held a job, volunteered for community organizations, taken
care of ageing parents, often all at the same time. And still they feel that they don't measure
up against their college peers. That saddens me.
I
feel extraordinarily lucky to be where I am today: a published writer. Maybe I heard the college message, that if you
want it enough, and work hard enough, you can succeed—but I know that doesn't hold
true for a lot of people. I can now look back on my varied careers and
say, all of it goes into my writing. I've
learned from everything I've ever done. I choose to count that as success.
Which
still doesn't mean that I can catch up with the sister graduates, such as
Katherine Hall Page and Diane Mott Davidson.
Maybe by my 45th reunion?
P.S. Recently our class reunion
coordinator put out a call, saying, "We want to invite each of you to
share something special about yourselves in the form of a picture or item that
we can display." What would you
choose that summarizes your past five years, or where you are now in your life?
Not an easy choice!
3 comments:
My published books are the symbols of my last few years. My first book was published in spring of 2006, and until then I never felt any sense of accomplishment in life. Sad, but true.
My published books, my Outrageous Older Woman CD, and my granddaughters (or at least a video of them demonstrating that they inherited my performer gene). But I've gone to reunions even at points at which I've had to start over or reinvent myself. The trick is to say, "I'm in transition, and it's so exciting!" People tend to accept what we say about ourselves at face value, so we might as well value ourselves, no matter what is going on in our lives.
I agree completely.
Reunion Loding
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