High school reunions

I have never been to any of my class reunions... I had a few good friends I still know how to contact, and we could get together if we'd ever want to... don't need a reunion for that. To me, it would be nothing more than trying to pretend I like people I never liked and finding conversation topics with people I never said more than a dozen words to (if that) in high school. Feels like a time waster to me.
 
I was never able to go to any h.s. reunions because of being in the military and either on duty or stationed too far away. I have been to my college reunion by myself and enjoyed it. I plan on going to my 50th. I have had a lot of my former classmates asking me to be sure to show up. I keep wondering why.
 
Lived too far away to go to any until we moved back to our home town and went to the 35th because I was invited, even though I left that school in the middle of my senior year. Mostly it was classmates trying to one-up each other, reciting their accomplishments and crowing about their wonderful children and grandchildren. It was interesting to see that so many who were among the in crowd in school were just ordinary at the reunion. The football/basketball heroes were mostly overweight and so were the cheerleaders!

DH was an unofficial local historian and was asked to guide a tour for the 45th reunion so we went to that one. The 10 years between the 35th and 45 seemed to have mellowed most of my classmates, and they were more friendly and less self-absorbed :)

The school I actually graduated from had a 50th that DH and I went to, and we both had a good time. It was a much smaller school, and we all had known each other since early childhood. It was in a different state but only the state line (a river) separated the two towns, and all of my dad's family lived on that side of the river so I'd spent a good bit of my childhood there what with dance class, Catechism classes and just stuff that brings people together in small towns. We lived there, too, until moving to Hawaii. When we came back stateside after the war, my parents bought a house on the other side of the state line.

It didn't seem that anyone at that reunion was there to impress anyone else; we were all just glad to see each other and reconnect with those who'd moved away after college.

Now I live 1200 miles away, keep in touch occasionally with classmates from both schools, but mostly only see their obituaries in the local newspaper:(
 
Maybe, I'm just a crotchety old SOB, but I found re-aquainting with old classmates and friends is great for about 20 minutes. Then you realize that a brief time together doesn't measure up to the lifetime you've been apart.
YES! This ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ I've absolutely found the same. "The honeymoon phase" of reconnecting with people who've been strangers for 40 or more years wears off seriously quickly. @fuzzybuddy
 
Maybe, I'm just a crotchety old SOB, but I found re-aquainting with old classmates and friends is great for about 20 minutes. Then you realize that a brief time together doesn't measure up to the lifetime you've been apart.

Sad, but true ..... No matter how hard you try to find 'something' to connect with them, it just isn't there anymore.

And I don't know how many of my old classmates up north get together these days ... not sure how many are alive.
 
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My high school was too big, and I was too disinterested to know who was the class president, or those who organized proms and homecoming, or whatever that crowd was called. If I had been part of that group, I might what to go to a reunion.
 
Are they held in the actual high school or somewhere else and how does it work? Do people just go and walk around mingling and talking to people to see if they know anyone?
Please tell me they don't make you wear a name badge
All I know about reunions is what I see in movies and TV shows, and it's just what you described. I think they are bigger deals in small towns, where people know everyone in town. That was my experience when I moved from Chicago to Montana. When they had frequent reunions in my small Montana town, it was not unusual for former students not in the specific class for which the reunion was being held to show up just to see friends for the grade above or below.
 
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