Member-only story
Why Not Use Reunions To Make Sure We’re Changing
and that we’re changing the way we want to change…
I was 18 when I had my first reunion. It was with people from highschool, and we had only been away from each other for a couple of months. I and many others had just started university, while others had moved on to do something else.
This reunion made an impact on me because, for the whole evening, I was very aware I didn’t want to be there. Naturally, I am still in touch with a couple of people who also attended, including one of my best friends, and it’s not like everybody else was bad per se either. The realisation was that the vast majority of those people weren’t my people.
The only thing that brought us together was the fact that we had gone to a certain school at a certain time. We had chosen the school as much as we had chosen where we had been born, and that was hardly enough to build true connections on.
Some of us had changed a lot in the couple months since we had finished secondary school. We had grown in different ways, became better versions of ourselves in different ways. Some, instead, had withered considerably, having also taken separate paths that led to the same bottom. And then a minority had somehow worked the dubious miracle of staying the same.