For my regular visitors, if you find that this blog hasn't been updating much lately, chances are pretty good I've been spending my writing energy on my companion blog. Feel free to pop over to Moving On, and see what else has been going on.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Lessons I Learned in School - On Friendship

As I described in my first Lessons post, the school I started going to was very tiny, with grades K-3 in a single classroom.  The room had chalkboards on 3 walls, with windows in the 4th.  The desks were arranged in 3 groups along the sides, with the middle open and the teacher's desk on the 4th side.  Kindergarten and grade ones faced one chalkboard, the grade twos were across the room with their backs to the windows, and the grade threes faced the chalkboard opposite the teacher's desk.   Her desk had a chalkboard behind it, and we could turn ourselves or our desks to face whatever direction was needed.

Though there were very few students, this meant we were still seated pretty close to each other, and in grade one (I didn't go to kindergarten). I found myself sitting next to a girl my own age.   Like me, she was bused in.  Not from a farm, but from a town even smaller than my own home town.   I remember having the hardest time remembering her name at first.  At recess, we got to playing and talking together and became friends.

Or so I thought.

For the first while, we played and talked and had a grand ole time.  Then something strange happened.

There was another girl in our grade.  She lived in "town" and walked to school.  Her family was pretty wealthy - though that was completely relative.  We didn't have much money at all, so pretty much anyone was wealthy compared to us. *L*  This girl moved in on my new friend, who suddenly wouldn't talk or play with me any more.  I remember one day, during recess, the two of them were walking around the school building together, talking and laughing.  Being thoroughly confused and hurt that I was excluded, I walked around the school, too - alone - not really realizing that I was following them.  After a while, they turned to me an angrily told me to stop following them and to go away.  I, of course, said I wasn't following them and found someplace else to be that wasn't around them.

This is when I discovered that apparently, you could only have one "best friend," and if you had a best friend, that was the only person you hung out with. 

This was the beginning of a very long, painful few years.  For the rest of my time in that school, with on exception I'll write about separately, I had no friends in school.  None of the other kids would talk to me, unless they had to. 

I remember on Valentines Day, every year, we did a lot of Valentine themed stuff that involved all the kids, regardless of grade, which included giving each other cards.  I was usually able to talk my parents into buying 2 or 3 cards I would give out to some of the kids I liked (or, more accurately, wished would like me), but we couldn't afford more than that.  At some point, we all counted how many cards we got, and everyone compared the numbers with each other.  The only cards I ever got where from the couple of kids from families that could afford to buy cards for everyone in the school.  I never got any from the kids I'd given cards to.  Every year, the girl from the wealthiest family in town - the one mentioned above, who "stole" my only friend, would get the most, or almost the most, cards of all.

I always felt so horrible and unwanted on Valentine's Day.  Wow.  It's been 35 years, yet thinking about it long enough to write this brings back some of the hurt and tears I felt.

Birthdays were rather different.  The only person who ever invited me to a birthday party was the same girl who always got the most Valentine's cards - and that was because she had invited every single kid in the school.  I'd actually never been to a kids birthday party before.   Our own birthdays were always celebrated with just family.  The party was at the hotel they owned - a tiny hotel, but huge in my eyes, having never seen the inside of a hotel before.  There was the biggest birthday cake I'd ever seen, and I'd never seen anyone get so many presents before, either!  I don't remember what I brought for her - my mother would have made the purchase on my behalf, and looking back, I knew even then that this was quite a financial sacrifice for my parents to do - but whatever it was, it was unnoticed and unnoticeable under the pile.  While I took part in the various group games along with everyone else, I still wasn't part of any friendship groups, so it wasn't long before I found myself alone and crying over who knows what.  I do remember her mother consoling me with a lollipop.

My own birthday is in the middle of July.  Every year, I would invite kids from school to our farm for my birthday, and every year until Junior High, no one would come.  They wouldn't tell me they weren't coming, though, so every summer at my birthday, I would get all excited about having kids come over, then be thoroughly disappointed.  My family did their best to make up for it, and we always had a cake (home made, of course), but birthdays were another painful and lonely time for me.

After third grade, we got a longer bus ride to the elementary school in the next town.  Here, I got to meet new kids at least.  At one point, a new family even moved into a neighbouring farm.  Our bus picked them up shortly after my own family was picked up.  The youngest was a girl my own age.  Much to my shock, when she got on the bus, she immediately asked if she could sit with me and introduced herself.  It turned out that they'd moved a few times, so she'd learned to make the first move when it came to getting to know people at a new school.  We did remain friends for several years, and even had sleep overs - convenient when we walking distance (only a mile and a quarter) from each other.  By high school, we sort of drifted apart, and eventually, her family moved away to a nearby town big enough to have its own school.  I will always appreciate the fact that she reached out to me.

In fourth grade, I found myself sitting next to a girl who lived just a few blocks away from the school.  She soon became my best friend (I secretly managed to have more than one "best" friend).  This was the first time I got to know someone I could actually pour my heart out to.  We could talk about anything and everything. I was pretty heartbroken when, in Junior High, her family moved our of province.  We managed to keep in touch over the years.  The last time I saw her, I was pregnant with Eldest.  She's completely disappeared since then.  I'd been trying to track her down in the last couple of years, as has another mutual friend.  We've been told she's in a witness protection program!

Through the rest of elementary school, I got to know quite a few kids, but very few I could call friend.  For 7th grade, we moved to a composite high school in the same time - grades 7-12.  There were less than 400 students at the time, and my graduating class had only 47 students.

In 7th grade I met another girl who was to become my other great friend.  She eventually was my maid of honour, if the term can even be used when one elopes. She, like me, was one of the "rejects."  Kids that no one else wanted to be friends with, whether it was because of the colour of our hair, our body sizes, if we had skin conditions, if we were considered ugly, because we weren't townies, or whatever.  There was a small group of us that became friends almost by default.  None of the "popular" kids would have anything to do with us, so we hung out together.

To be honest, I'm glad of it.  By this time in my life, I not only no longer cared what the other kids thought of me, but took pride in many of the things a lot of them held against me.  The town kids may not have wanted to hang out with a farmer, but by then I'd noticed that the being a farmer gave me all sorts of advantages.  While they spent their summers hanging out at the beach, I spent mine working with the cows, helping the the farm chores and, my favorite, throwing bales.  I was not only physically stronger than most of my classmates, but a lot of my teachers, too.  I found I also simply knew more than they did.  I was the only kid in home etc. that already knew how to cook and bake, even though I'd never seen standardized measuring tools before in my life.  I also was rather taken aback by how little the town kids knew about their own parents.  I remember asking one kid - someone I'd thought of as a friend at the time, but who turned out to be a fair weather friend of the first order - what her father did for a living.  She couldn't tell me.  All she knew was the company he worked for.  That didn't mean very much since that company was the areas biggest employer.  Being a farm family, every one of us played a valuable part in keeping things going - if we wanted to be fed or have an income of any kind, we had to grow crops to feed our animals, tend the animals, and plant our garden.  If something broke down, we fixed it.  If something needed to be done, we did it.  As the youngest, I didn't do anywhere near as much work as my older siblings, but I still knew I was a valuable contributor to the family.  It wasn't until may years later, when I read books like Punished by Rewards and The Case Against Adolescence, that I could articulate how important that was.  Back then, I somehow, subconsciously, understood that these things somehow gave me the advantage over many of my agemates.  It became a source of strength and confidence for me.

One of the other things I saw that made me glad to be among the "rejects," was the game playing.  There were very tight cliques in our school.  There were the townies, for example, who had no interest in kids from neighbouring towns and were bused in, and showed outright disdain for the farm kids.  Within the townies, however, there were every smaller groups.  Like the varsity teams (the only way "outside" kids could be part of the "popular" groups).  Gym class was often a pain. Not only was I not very good at sports (I preferred weight lifting), but most of the girls in my class were on the varsity volleyball team.  No matter who else was on the court, they always ended up playing each other, while the rest of us just kinda stood there.  On or off the court, they were their own little group that no one else was quite good enough for.

Then there were the city kids - kids who had lived in the city about an hour away before moving somewhere local.  The city kids looked down on townies and country kids alike.  They held themselves aloof, keeping a "tough guy" air about themselves.

I remember crossing with one of these kids in grade 8 or so.  It was lunch break and a "friend" and I were sitting in our home room class, watching some other kids horsing around.  I thought they were funny, so I turned to my "friend" and told her I thought they were being crazy.  Now, to me, "crazy" was a compliment.  My "friend" however, promptly shouted out to them that I thought they were crazy - and one of them sure didn't think of it as a compliment.  One of these kids was a city kid that often acted tough and aggressive.  She immediately came up to me and said...

... I had no idea what she said.  It sounded like pure gibberish to me.

I only recently came to understand that I have something called Auditory Processing Disorder.  My hearing is fine, but somewhere between my ears and my brain, the signals get scrambled.  Sometimes, I hear completely different words.  Sometimes I hear nothing at all - just gaps of sound in what someone is saying.  Other times, my ears hear what's said, but my eyes saw something that distracted my mind, and whatever was said is completely lost.

Sometimes, I hear gibberish.  Nonsense sounds strung together, completely undecipherable.

That's what I heard from this girls. 

Judging from the tone of her voice and body language, I could understand that she was threatening me, and that she was asking me if I wanted something.  Unable to figure out what she's said, I stared at her a moment, then asked, "why would I want that," hoping my response made sense. 

When she answered me, the only word I made out was "because..." then it all disappeared into gibberish again.  Using her tone and body language again, I knew she was still threatening me, but with what? 

The only thing it, not only could I not understand what she was saying, but I didn't feel the least bit threatened by her.  So I just smiled, chuckled a bit, and made some brush off comment.  She continued to rant for a while, and I was eventually able to decipher that she was threatening to slap me in the face.  Then she stormed away.

Over the next while, I had a surprising number of people come up to me, all excited because apparently I was supposed to get into a fight with this girl.  Most were in my support.  I may have been one of the "rejects," but at least I was local, and not a city kid.

As for me "friend" who's misquote of me started all this?  She came up to me, all scared, saying that she wasn't going to hang around for me for a while because she didn't want to get beat up, too.  She seemed to think I would think this was a good thing.

Nothing ever came of the incident.  The only fight I ever got into at school was several years later, and it was very short lived.  What started out with a locker door being bounced repeatedly off my shoulder escalated to me being pushed almost on top of my friend, who was crouched to the bottom of her own locker.  It ended with me landing a single punch to the jaw.  The poor guy never did live that down.  Even years later, well after he'd transferred to another school, I heard myself being introduced at a social as "the girl who beat up (the guy)." The sad thing was, I had actually had quite the crush on him.  Not enough to let him be an asshole to me, though.


The cliques of school were very strong, and they remained largely unchanged all through our years of Junior and Senior High.  It wasn't until grade 12 that something odd happened.  Suddenly, a lot of the kids who wouldn't give me the time of day in the past, started talking to me like an equal.  Shocked the heck out of me the first time it happened.  I'm not sure what happened, but for that last year, the social scene at school was almost pleasant.

Few of the lessons I learned in school about friendship were positive.  I learned that you weren't supposed to have more than one "best" friend.  You could only be friends within some arbitrary social group, and if you weren't part of that group, you weren't worthy of notice.  I learned that some people might be friends to your face, but would abandon you at the first sign of trouble.  I learned to take pride, not in being part of the popular crowd, but in what made me different from the popular crowed - and that I wasn't willing to change who I was to be accepted by others.  I learned that no matter how much people blustered and blowed, they couldn't intimidate me, and that sometimes, that intimidated them.

I learned that girls were supposed to be friends with girls, and boys were supposed to be friends with boys; that even though I couldn't understand girls much at all and had more in common with boys, cross gender friendships just weren't acceptable.  You couldn't be friends with the opposite sex, only boyfriend or girlfriend.  If you did manage to be friends with someone of the opposite sex, everyone else would still think you were actually a couple.

Which is funny when you consider that my best male friend from school is now my husband of 22 years.

I also learned that, outside their cliques, people who wouldn't normally talk to me could actually be really nice people, and that they often behaved the way they did because that's how they thought they should, not because that's what they were really like.  I learned that I didn't want to play those games, and that I would be who I was, no matter who I talked to.  If they didn't like that, it was their loss, not mine. 

For most of my life, I haven't been able to get along very well with my own gender.  I simply didn't have much in common with other girls, and wouldn't play the games I saw so many of them playing.  Since friendships with males were often misinterpreted, that meant I didn't have many friends of either gender.  It wasn't until many years and many moves that I started to get to know women I could actually connect with.  Even so, though I have more friends now than I've ever had in all my life, I have never had another friend as close as the one who's disappeared, or the one who was my maid of honor.  Today, some of my closest friends - friends I can talk to about things I can't talk about with anyone else - are actually online friends I've known for years, but have never actually met in person.  *waves in the direction of Illinois*  Thanks to facebook, I've got back in touch with quite a few people I've know in the past.  We've all grown, changed and matured.  The cliques no longer exist, though some still seem to be living that surface life of status and manipulation. 

It doesn't seem to have got them any farther than anyone else.




note:  It's almost 4:30 am as I finish writing this, so I'm not going to be going over the whole thing again.  If there are any weird typos or strangely constructed sentences, I apologize now! *L*

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