Johnny Was In 9th Grade Once; Then He Grew Up

“I am so glad to see you,” a smiling, tall, thin-haired man said to me holding out his hand in greeting. Beside him stood an attractive woman with a similar, warm smile. “You were our 8th grade American History teacher,” she said. “We saw your name on the guest list and had to talk with you.” The grade and the subject narrowed my memory to several hundred names. However, when she said their names and that they were married, I whispered “1971, fifth period. You sat in the second desk in the row nearest the door and you sat halfway back in the middle row.” They smiled and nodded. “How is your twin brother?” I asked him. “Your smile still lights up the room,” I told her. “Married,” I commented, “Everyone at school knew you would be one day, even when you were in 8th grade.” And we moved to a corner of the room and talked about their lives since junior high school.

There is a moment in the movie Dead Poets Society when actor Robin Williams walks his class down the hall to look at pictures of past students. Behind the showcase windows are class pictures of students from 10, 20 and 30 years ago. Some are pictures individual actors and athletes posed and in action. Some are photos of students in science labs and art and music studios. “Who are these people? What dreams of life did they hope for? What became of them?”

These two former students instantly morphed from photos from the 70s to flesh and blood people today. She is a retired elementary teacher in a neighboring school district. He is a retired, decorated police officer. How wonderful! And how exceptional is this occurrence.

They grow up but our memories do not.

Teachers and their students share moments in time. For the span of a school year, sometimes two or three years, they share the space together, a classroom or a gym or a stage or a playing field. Teachers teach and students learn. Lessons are planed and acted out in class with these students in mind. Each student’s “school personality” is exposed to the teacher incrementally over 180 school days: likewise, the teacher’s school persona is exposed to students. School personalities are curated for school purposes and seldom show the person’s real characteristics. So, we take them for what they are.

Some students and some teachers are so guarded about their personalities that they present one dimensional, flat image of themselves. They could be cardboard sitting in desks and propped behind a desk. Their school life and non-school life never intersect. Others are highly animated, and, like a glaring headlight, it is difficult to get out of their beam. We know what they did Saturday night though we would just as soon not know. For most, however, their school personality is exactly who they are at this stage of their adolescent and adult life.

I have a scrapbook of class photos and a collection of yearbooks spanning five decades. I can name many of the faces with immediate recall of incidents from the school year(s) we shared. Some faces require a glance at the cut line below the photo to attach a name. With that clue, a memory may return. For too many faces, not even reading the name retrieves a clue about that person. The “Dead Poets” students and I share this perspective – we see faces captured in time, faces of one-time students who graduated and lived lives beyond their brief time in school. And we do not know anything about those lives.

At class reunions, I play a game with fellow Class of 66 mates. “Can you name every one of your K-12 teachers?” I can all my teachers and most classmates name about 80% of theirs. This is not unusual, I think. Teachers are memorable. A different question is, “How many teachers did you stay in touch with after graduation?” For most classmates, the answer is “zero.” With a smile, I explain, “I taught with several of our teachers and several others were on the faculty in schools where I was their principal.” Unusual, and my stories about these career intersections stay very professional.

Teachers and students grow their degrees of separation

There are many reasons that explain the transitory nature of teacher and student acquaintanceship. For one, it is how the “conveyor belt” structure of school runs. Students move annually through a schoolhouse spending one year in each grade level and one school year in a teacher’s assignment of children to teach. There is no stopping the conveyor belt. A second reason is the professional distance kept between teachers and children. Knowing a child as a student is to know their educational likes and dislikes just enough to be able to engage the child in learning. Professionally, a teacher wants to know the intellectual, socio-emotional, and psycho-motor characteristics of a child that will help the child/student to be a successful student without knowing any of the personal intimacies of the child. It is a proper balancing and distancing that works both ways.

Mobility also causes separation. Just as students move through K-12 education from school to school, teachers change teaching assignments, schools, and school districts. Since teaching my former 8th grade students, I changed from teacher to principal to superintendent to school board member and served in three other school districts in three different states.

Staying in touch

A best friend and fellow teacher from the 70s is the opposite of me. He lives in the city where he taught, moved from the feeder junior high school to the high school where students matriculated and knew many children/students for six years of their school lives. And they knew him. He was a teacher/coach who relished his relationships with classroom students and football players and can, at the drop of a hat, retell their exploits 50 years later. My friend, now in his 80s and a few of his former student/players, now in their 70s, see, phone, and text each other just to “stay in touch.” They relive stories as well as update each other.

Several of his former students are now teachers in their own classrooms. My friend is their career-long mentor. Although his real-time classroom experience ended with retirement in the early 2000s, they value his insights and instincts about good teaching.

The Big Duh!

The iconic “Johnny” of school stories grows up. Years ago, Johnny was a student in our classroom and a team or club or cast member under our tutelage. For a brief period, we were engaged, teacher and student, in teaching and learning. We shared our “school personalities” to optimize student learning and in those learning activities created memories, many that last over time. However, Johnny does grow up and life after our classroom is what Johnny’s life is about; not the memories of our class-time together.

At the same time, Johnny’s teacher also evolves within professional experiences. Hundreds, if not thousands, of Johnny faces become part of a teacher’s memory bank of students. Often there “a” Johnny that really sticks out in a teacher’s memory, but even that face is a photo in time and does not resemble the adult Johnny who grew up. I was in a checkout line at a local grocery market two years ago. The tall man pushing a cart in front me turned, took a hard look at my face, and said, “I know you. You were…” In that instance, I was vulnerable to our shared past. I wondered, “Who is this and what did I do that was memorable for him?” You never know when former teachers and students will cross paths.

School Faces Once Etched Are Forever Memories

The academic year ended at our local school yesterday.  I watched the row of buses leave the parking lot for students’ final trip home.  Teachers lined the sidewalks and waved.  High school students honked their horns leaving the parking lot and the 23-24 school year behind.  Taken as a whole, it was a celebration of success.  Children were graduated and promoted.  Teachers taught and children learned a year’s curriculum.  Tests had been taken, teams had played, music and theater had been performed, and the community had smiled.  Gradually, the sound of cheering, the echo of horns, and the waving arms stopped and there was the quiet of a June afternoon.  Viewed from the perspective of time, it was the moment when memories begin to overtake the present.

The local Class of 24 numbered 40-plus graduates.  During the month of May their photos and post-graduation plans were displayed on the school’s Facebook page.  Smiling faces with pennants of colleges, universities, tech schools, and armed force insignia foretold the next stories in these young lives.  With 100% assurance, I know that each graduate can name the face of every grad in their Class.  They have known each other as classmates for thirteen or more years.  They learned and grew up together.  That was their story until graduation when the road they shared forked, and they all went their ways.

Frozen in time.

Once graduates wander down the post-school paths they choose, they move farther and farther away from the day when they and their classmates shared a common story.  Slowly, faces and names become images in yearbooks, online photo collections, and frames on bookshelves.  They get a glance now and again awaiting reunions and other gatherings.  And, awaiting a moment when memories flicker and old images become important once again.

Picture taking was and is a ritual of school life.  Every year schools take class pictures.  All students, grouped by graduating class cohort, school activity, and individually, have their photos taken.  Most students smile, even those who didn’t smile often in school approximate a grin for the yearbook.  Photos of an entire grade miniaturize faces making it difficult to discern individuals.  Individual portraits highlight the face and name. 

For me, it is in the class photo of Mrs. Meyer’s home room where all 33 children are shown together in rows. Some are sitting legs crossed on the floor, some on chairs, and the tallest are standing.  This is where I see the classmates I knew well.  Combined with two other sixth grade home rooms, we were the Grant Wood Elementary Class of 1960.  On the date of that class photo, we became locked in time, locked in the image of our smile, the way we combed our hair, and how we cocked our heads trying to look good.  I look at the picture of Mrs. Meyer’s home room and 64 years later I know the name of each boy and girl, and I remember who they were in 1960 as clearly as I know anything today.

The same is true of class pictures from the McKinley Junior High Class of 1963 and the Washington High School Class of 1966.  Each school we attended was larger in enrollment and scope of program, but the significance of faces and names and stories remained constant.  Until June 1966.  That was when our roads forked, and we truly became memories and pictures frozen in time.

So, what happened? 

People and friends, they and me, suddenly disappeared from each other’s lives.

Life overwhelms our attention when we are younger adults.  Work, recreation, and a love life are center stage.  We focus on what is directly in front of us each day with little time or option to look backward or too far forward.  Often, we work for pay checks that last only until the next, scrimp to afford vacation and recreation, and if we have children, our life requires 25 hours each day.  We stay in touch with school friends if we live in proximity, work in similar jobs, and our children attend the same school.  But the roads most of my school friends and I took were none of these.  In our 20s and 30s and 40s we chased our individual American dreams of family and/or career into communities far and wide.  Joe was a physician in Atlanta, Bev was a teacher in Ohio, Marianne was a flight attendant, Jack was an institutional exec in New York, Bill was lawyer in San Francisco, and John, we weren’t sure where John was.  Yet, whenever I thought of the Class of 60 or 63 or 66, it was the pictured face and story of a younger life that attached to that picture.  John was still the epitome of a younger Mickey Mantle – blond and rugged, athletic, and confident.  Bev was still the girl in a knee-length dress, Bobby socks, and her hair tied with a ribbon that I thought of as my girlfriend at Grant Wood.  Marianne, aka Mert, was and always will be an Annette Funicello look alike. 

Facebook and the Internet update stories but not memories.

Facebook and its ilk brought us both the wonder of connection and the depravity of bad actors.  I like the wonder.  By “friending” old friends we now share images and stories of who we are today.  My white hair, wrinkles, and jowls do not resemble the face behind the boy in dark glasses in Mrs. Meyer’s home room picture.  However, as much as I do not recognize myself, I immediately recognize John, Jack and Bev and many of the old classmates that use Facebook.  If we saw each other on the street or in a market today, I am confident I would know their 70+ year old faces.  But I could not know the story of their lives in between, and that is okay with me.

Today I appreciate giving and receiving Facebook posts with my old friends on our birthdays.   We recognize that we are still alive, we celebrate another year of living, and, in a small way, we acknowledge that we have a history.  Our history is bifurcated – who we were in the 50s and 60s and who we are today.  We do not have enough years or energy to catch up on the details in between and those details don’t matter much anyway.

This morning another Joe from the Class of 66 posted about his golf game.  Several times each summer we each post about the courses we have played, that rare day when our score and age match, and the joy we have in just being able to play.  But when his face appears I immediately replace it with his yearbook photo or images of him playing basketball or baseball – he is forever young.

Old friends’ faces do not die, they just fade away.

As I paraphrase Douglas MacArthur’s statement about old generals.  In both cases, I think we got it right.  As long as I live, memories of my school friends will be alive.  They are indelibly etched in time.  I suppose my aging frailties may fray my mental capacity.  I do find it comforting that as the aged lose contact with the present, their memories of years ago remain.  Thanks, old friends, for being my old friends.