The delightful spice of reconnecting

after seasoning for 50 years!

I had the distinct, enjoyable, and recent honor of speaking to my high school classmates at our 50th anniversary reunion.

I pretended that it was the commencement speech that no one had asked me to deliver so long ago. Just kidding! I hadn’t yet acquired any kind of real smarts back then: that came later as I enrolled in the Herd School of Hard Knocks.

(You either pay for your education—or you pay for your learning!)

But it sure was a delight to reconnect with all those old people, who sorta reminded me of kids I used to know!

Turns out we have even more in common than we knew back then, as we are now seasoned with the spice of robust life experiences. I cherish all these, my old friends!

Commencements revisited

50 years a graduate

Fifty years ago today, I graduated from high school. Photographic proof: My sideburns and me accepting our diploma from the school board president.

Northampton Area High School does a classy thing each year when it invites alumni who had graduated 50 years previously to attend the current class’s Commencement exercises.

More than 100 of my classmates returned to a reception in our honor, and mingled with vaguely familiar people who reminded us of old friends we used to know! (What a half-century can do to a person!)

Under perfect weather for an evening outdoors, we were privileged to sit behind the graduating class in the very same stadium in which we had last assembled. Each of us was respectfully introduced by name, before ceremonies moved forward with the speeches and business at hand. And at sunset, we stood and sang the Alma Mater with our younger mates, with lyrics that—remarkably!—came back to mind.

Speaking of privilege, the historic day’s other momentous event must be called out. 80 years ago, and 30 years prior to our own day in the sun, boys about the same age that we were then died in the D-Day Operation of June 6, 1944, in the largest amphibious invasion in military history. The sacrifices of our parents’ generation for ours, and for those of today, cannot be overappreciated. We stand on the crucial—and at times sacrificial and heroic—work of those who have preceded us. May it ever be so with each generation’s contributions to the future good of society. Here’s to the Class of 2024!

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