GRADUATIONS

It’s the time of year when we once again have survived graduations.  Yes, survived.  Those of us who graduated survived.  And those of us who watched also survived.

A series of pictures recently came up in my memories in OneDrive. It is amazing now with technology that our memories are timed. These were photos taken  the day of my college graduation. The university had two ceremonies – one in the morning for the entire university and then one from the College in the afternoon. The afternoon ceremony is where you were given your actual diploma. In the morning pictures, I am radiant.

I thought at that time of my life that I was never going to get married and if I did, there would be no reception. People on both sides of my family did not marry or if they did, it was more of a matter of fact, justice of the peace situation. Therefore, graduation was going to be my day. Also, I had come by it hard. Due to unfortunate events, I had flunked out of school my sophomore year. I was put on probation which had only ended halfway through my senior year. Life had changed for me. I had become and continue to be manic about getting excellent grades. My father had also made me slightly paranoid. Decades ago when I graduated, technology was not a thing. Papers were typed painfully on a typewriter with carbon paper and copies. Copy machines were not ubiquitous. I always made an uncorrected carbon of all my work. I was a terrible typist and had been sent to school with typewriter erasers, erasable paper and white out. My father also insisted that I get a receipt from the department office anytime I handed a paper in that was not given directly to the professor. This was not welcomed by the office staff. I have memories of running up flights of stairs in Gilman Hall as the clock was tolling the hour to get a paper in on time. Students were not allowed to use the elevator. So, I was usually sweaty and semi hysterical by the time I reached the department.

I wanted nothing to go wrong my last semester. I even took an extra course to ensure that I had enough   credits to graduate even if by some weird quirk of fate, I happened to fail a course. I had two courses with a married couple. They were from Norway and returned home immediately after the semester ended. They were the last papers of my then college career and I did not make carbons nor did I get my usual receipt.

I had become very poor during my senior year. My father had lost his job during my junior year and I could no longer depend are my family for any kind of living expenses. I had run out of work study plus we had made a decision that I would concentrate totally on school my last semester. I had been working for 20 to 30 hours a week during the last part of my junior year and first semester senior year. I lived on a diet of eggs, grapefruit, rice, perch and smelts. I swore to myself that I would never eat a perch or smelt again and I have not. However, I knew if I was home I would be able to once again eat real food. There was a break between the end of term and senior week. This was the week with all the parties and celebrations. I left campus after turning in my papers and went home and took a temporary job. I needed money.

The university, of course, had my home phone number and address. The Dean was also very familiar with me due to my probationary status. I used to be able to look from my living room across the street into the building where the Dean was housed. At times, it seemed too close for comfort. It was a type of university housing although it was not on campus. My roommate had stayed behind on the break between classes and graduation ceremonies. We had a university extension. This was also back in the day when to have your own telephone was huge. Before we had the university extension, we would have to find a phone booth and make a collect call to reach home. We could receive calls on the university extension. All this is to explain the unnecessary horror of what happened on graduation day.

I was back on campus for a few days. I attended the balls and parties. My parents arrived the night before and we all went to the cocktail reception for graduates, sponsored by the university.

Graduation day was hot and sunny. I remember thinking that Nikki Z was the only smart one amongst us. I wore a striped sun dress (that’s what they were called then) and platform sandals under my cap and gown. Nikki wore shorts! She was the only one who didn’t have to actively fight wilting.

After lunch, we were lining up for the afternoon procession. Someone, I don’t remember who, tapped me on the shoulder and told me that I would not be graduating but could stay in the line and would receive a blank diploma. I did not have enough credits to graduate. My professors had absconded to Norway without turning in my grades. We later found out that they were only accessible by dog sled. Again, this was back in the days before cell phones. Indeed, international calls were still an expensive and lengthy process. I couldn’t cry at that time. I cannot even identify the feelings I had -shock, anger, disbelief, faintness, disappointment. I was told that they had been unable to contact me prior to this moment. My glow disappeared and was replaced by a pale, drawn angry face.

My college boyfriend had somehow worked his way so that he was beside me on the line. He had already graduated. He knew something was wrong when he saw my face and I was able to whisper part of the story to him. As always, he was and is incredible. I do not know how he did it but he was able to crouch at the end of my row. Meanwhile, my parents could not imagine why I looked so angry and  stiff as I received what they thought was my diploma.

I ran to them once the ceremony was over. I started to cry hysterically. Well, this was the way I was brought up. My mother slapped me across the face, told me to pull myself together and slapped a pair of sunglasses on me and told me to stop crying. Of course according to them it was all my fault. I did not have the receipt. How, looking back why would I have had it when I was in line from graduation? I did not have the carbons.

We were able to find out after that disastrous day that they had allegedly tried to reach me. This could not possibly be true. I was easily findable. We worked out a deal where I was able to recreate one of the papers and have it graded on a pass fail basis by another professor whom I had never met it was unbeknownst to me. My diploma was mailed to me.

I had actually been seeing a therapist prior to my graduation because I was so concerned about it. Hopkins gave you so many free counseling sessions and I’d saved mine up till the end. It definitely says something about the school that they realized decades ago that mental health was an important issue. At the time, I just thought it indicated how twisted the institution was. Many of us have had a type of PTSD  from our experiences there. I called my counselor to tell her what had happened. I wanted to take action against the school and I wanted her to attest to what had been done to me. She was in agreement with me. However, my parents were not. I was surprised when I posted the morning picture on Facebook with a brief snippet of my story that so many of my close friends never knew. My parents saw it as shameful. The shame should not have been on my part but on the university. I now know that my parents actions were predicated on their lives. It was also the era where deference was given to those in authority and girls and their concerns were minimized. I do not know if anything would have changed if I had retained a lawyer. I know I was not the only person that had this experience.

I did go on to get married, not once but twice! I did have a reception for the first one much to the surprise and dismay of my family. I have always done things that were not done. It wasn’t the last time that I got smacked across the face and had sunglasses slapped on me so that no one could see me cry. I do cry and sometimes I even let people see me do it.

Seven years ago, my husband was looking through things in the room I used as my office and discovered a mailing tube. He opened it and there was my diploma. He insisted on getting it framed. It hangs in my office right now. Survival!

Graduation

I attended my niece’s graduation via YouTube this weekend. It’s an upside of COVID. I was able to see her face more clearly than her parents. This is only the second undergraduate graduation I have attended since my own, decades ago. I attended my bonus son’s about 10 years ago or so. It was different because first of all, he was a boy and secondly, we had to deal with the issue of his mother. We never know what she’s going to do. It didn’t impact me on a visceral level. My niece’s graduation hit me in a whole different way.

I have seen her grow up since she was two and a half. Therefore, I had a much longer association with her. I have delighted in seeing her grow and excel. She is truly a remarkable young woman. Quite frankly, I am in awe of her and her accomplishments. However, it brought memories of my college graduation brutally back.

I had had a very hard time at my university. I really didn’t fit in, nor did I want to. I had academic challenges based on significant personal events. I had actually been forced to withdraw due to academic performance but was able to reenroll on a probationary basis. This has made me the maniac I am today about grades. I worked furiously. At that time in my life, I did not see marriage or definitely a wedding as having any place in my future. Therefore, I viewed my graduation as my day. This was going to be the hugest moment in my life. Because of everything that had happened to me academically, I always made carbon copies of my papers and I also demanded receipts for them when I turned them in. My last two papers were with a husband and wife team of professors. It was the last two and I neglected my usual practices. I could see the Dean’s office from my window. This becomes important to little bit later. The university had two ceremonies – one in the morning for everyone and then one in the afternoon for each college where the actual diploma would be received. The morning was glorious. I felt a real sense of accomplishment. I had overcome my obstacles.

Morning

In the afternoon, whilst getting into line, I received a tap on the shoulder and was informed that I had not met the requirements for graduation and would walk the ceremony and receive a blank. This was inconceivable to me. Decades later, as I write this, I am on the verge of tears. I have a radiant, joyful smile. I am known for it. My boyfriend saw at once that something was wrong. He crept over to my seat and found out what was happening. He sat at the end of my row. My parents in the audience could not understand why they could not see my smile.

When they reached me at the end of the ceremony and asked what the problem was, I became hysterical. My mother slapped me across the face, told me not to cry in front of people and placed her huge sunglasses over my eyes. My day was totally destroyed. Actually, I had been in therapy(the school gave you 10 free sessions a semester and I had hoarded mine) because I was so consumed with graduating. I discovered once we arrived home that the Dean allegedly had been trying to reach me. This was completely untrue. I also discovered that my two professors had not turned my grades in before they left the country. I cannot make this up. They had returned to Norway and were only accessible by dogsled. I had to recreate both final papers and have them graded by someone else. Memory shields me but I believe the only thing that could be done was to give me a pass and not a grade. I received my diploma in the mail later that summer. My parents being my parents, did not wish to make a fuss and would not consider suing the school. I have survived and overcome except that I am manically obsessed with A’s. Watching the graduation on Saturday brought it all back to me. I wept for my niece and I wept for me. It’s hard to believe that it has stayed with me for so long. It took me forever to be able to stand on campus without shaking or having stress reactions. I can attend reunions now without a lot of pain. I am proud of myself for my resiliency.

Afternoon

Graduation also carries with it the weight of great expectations as well as new possibilities. This can be weighty. At school, the job is simply to get the grades and coincidentally the knowledge. Then life happens and there’s supposed to be a job, no, a career. This is an unknown unless there is a particular affinity for a field such as medicine or law. My degree was in social and behavioral sciences with a concentration in urban anthropology of the Third World. My particular area of concentration was the synchretization of African religious beliefs in the New World. You might say it was my own fault. Surprisingly, in recent years these topics have come to the fore. I always was trendy and before my time. I did learn things I could use. I learned about how people communicated and acted in groups. I learned how to assimilate a vast amount of material in a short amount of time. This has consistently helped me throughout my working life. I also became part of an old boys network. It is old boys because at the time I was there, it was mostly boys. So, that was another unexpected benefit. I do very well in a male environment. I am more comfortable working in a room with all men than I am with women. It has taken me a long time to realize these strengths. I do wonder if my life would have been different had I been able to have that moment of radiant joy.

These thoughts have been on my mind since this weekend and I had begun writing. However, Tuesday changed them in a whole other way. To say I am grief stricken is an understatement. I do not know the words for how I feel. I only know that 19 little children are dead. 19 children have been shot to death at their school. They will never have graduation. The survivors will always have an incomprehensible loss. Their lives will be filled with ghosts. All their possibilities changed in a matter of moments. They will bear the weight forever.

My niece, the graduate, is a teacher. Her life has also inexplicably changed. These murders coming so closely on the heels of her graduation must surely impact her future. We can only imagine and then prefer not to imagine. Her moment of radiant joy will resonate for a long, long time.