The mom of one of my high school buddies passed away this week. Her funeral is tomorrow. She may be the last of that generation among my friends.
There were several unusual features about my high school experience. I attended Catholic schools and the various parishes fed into the same high school. The schools at those parishes ended at different grades. Some schools, like the one I went to, stopped after 6th grade. Others went to 8th grade. Consequently, I started attending "Central" in 7th grade while others joined in 8th grade and 9th grade.
That created interesting dynamics as cliques or tribes or posses absorbed additional people, expanded and divided.
I didn't have a single "best friend" 7th-through-12th grade. It changed as circumstances changed.
However, my friend whose mother's funeral is tomorrow was generally in my top-three from 9th until 12th grade and even into college.
The Information Superhighway before the Internet
Kids will be stunned to learn that the information superhighway existed in the 1970s before the internet was invented. We called it "The Library".
If, by chance, you were on good terms with the librarian, then you had a very-high bandwidth portal to that highway.
My friend's mother was the librarian at our high school.
Another quirk about my high school is that it embraced the idea that kids naturally sought the knowledge they need, just like kids always choose the most nourishing foods and most wholesome activities. We were expected to do our own class scheduling (preparing us for college, don't you know) and to master academic material and take tests at our own rate.
Somehow, I did not have a single English/Language/Compostion class during my high school career. I did, however, probably, set a record for the number of hours I spent in the library reading the McGraw-Hill Encyclopedias of Science and Technology (go ahead, ask me about boron nitride or T-T-T curves or the Kreb's cycle). I should not have been allowed to graduate but I think the academic advisors were embarrassed by my falling through the cracks and they were willfully blind to my deficiencies.
Even after graduating from high school, the librarian continued to influence my life. I was scheduled to graduate from Michigan State with a BS in Engineering in March of 1981. It was during the low-point in the business cycle (Jimmy Carter's malaise). More of my class got jobs in Texas than in Michigan.
However, about two months before I graduated, the librarian called my mom and told her to tell me "Call this number and say 'I have skills in Computer Aided Engineering'." The librarian's husband had connections.
I made that call and got that job and was able to stay close to family (which was a very high priority for me).
And so, tomorrow, I will go to the visitation and then the funeral Mass. I will not say very much. My role will be similar to a neutron absorbing rod in a nuclear pile or sound absorbing panels in a room. I will be "background" just like when I was when I was one of those nameless, faceless bodies who was in the library as reliably as the furniture.




























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