Me, too, that's how I knew! ROFLMAO!Still am, that’s why I have to take so much laxative![]()
Me, too, that's how I knew! ROFLMAO!Still am, that’s why I have to take so much laxative![]()
Ditto. I was super popular in Jr. High & High School. That made it all so much more fun.I was in with the "in" crowd. I know what the "In" crowd knows! hahaha!
Wow, they let girls be class president at your school?! No way would the BMOC have allowed that at my school!Class president for three years. I liked pretty much everyone and guess they picked up on it.
I never understood clique mentality and still don’t and I’ve discovered that I feel better being the lone wolf.I feel the same way ....never mattered to me in high school or since.
I guess being a fair skinned red head, you burned in California.I prefer to focus on the positive... so we will skip over Freshman and Sophomore year to my junior year when I moved from LA to Saratoga Springs NY. I fit in much better on the East Coast (think red head/fair skin--no tanning-- in S. California in the early 70's... not a happy combo). Loved New England, was in the school play, went to the prom, was in the honor society and involved with the Foreign Exchange Club. Went to Montreal with a class trip, learned how to ice skate (not well) and thoroughly *loved* the country as compared to big city life! Not one of the popular kids but not a total loser either.
...and here he is...I was in with the "in" crowd. I know what the "In" crowd knows! hahaha!
I was not super popular exactly , but I was definitely known by most of the kids and I had a big gang of friends.... I was a renegade tho'...Ditto. I was super popular in Jr. High & High School. That made it all so much more fun.![]()
Pappy--I want to thank all the band players everywhere. You guys made our football games the best part of the games on Friday nights. I loved the band sitting in the end zone playing the school cheer and even though I didn't get to watch the halftime routine, my parents always said the bands were awesome. So, thanks for all that you did to get us up and going. Don't ever think that you weren't an important part of the games.Marching band was my thing. I was always telling jokes and horsing around.
During classes, I had a difficult sitting still and listening to the teachers. Okay, I admit, I was girl crazy in my teens. Hormones oozing out of me. Always like the girls in the lower classes.
We had our own little group I hung out with and once we got our cars, all hell broke loose. I had a great time in school, although I hated the real things I should have paid attention to.
Finished up my schooling in the Army.
I was part of the marching part band. Being in the bands was fun. We played at all the games.Pappy--I want to thank all the band players everywhere. You guys made our football games the best part of the games on Friday nights. I loved the band sitting in the end zone playing the school cheer and even though I didn't get to watch the halftime routine, my parents always said the bands were awesome. So, thanks for all that you did to get us up and going. Don't ever think that you weren't an important part of the games.
400 in one class?I had friends from many groups of kids. My school was huge and we had over 400 kids in my class, so it was easy to be friends with many, since we came from everywhere and belonged to clubs, band, and did sports together. We even had returning war vets in my class since my freshman year began in 1946.
400 in one class?...wow!! how did that work, how were classrooms big enough to take 400... did you have one teacher at a time ?
Very good assessment of some of the various cliques in high school. Funny thing, so many adults today still haven't grown out of that. We have these same dynamics in politics and religion. The left, viewed by the right, must surely hate and want to destroy America. The right, viewed by the left must surely hate and want to destroy America. This religion has "the truth" and wants to set the rest of the world straight. The result, each group fights the other so much so, that in many forums that I have been involved with, those two subject areas are not allowed. Many never left high school and carry that clique mindset with them for the rest of their lives.The cliques in my high school were the Jocks, Freaks, Nerds, and Greasers. Jocks were the popular golden boys who were defined by athletic prowess, and were given frequent award ceremonies by the indulgent and praising school system. Their female analogues were the cheerleaders, who would date them and someday produce physically attractive children with them. Freaks were at the cutting edge of youth culture, dressed in trendy antisocial fashion, knew every word to 60's songs, were the cool people, and played air guitars but not actual instruments as that required discipline. Greasers obsessed over cars, usually owned a junk car, and were in remedial programs. Nerds like me were the serious academic students who were college-bound, in band, and were unpopular with an abysmal social status value. That was OK though, as we gravitated towards our own, and misery loved company...![]()