Thursday, June 7, 2007

cap and gown

At first, I couldn’t figure out why the coffee shop was so crowded. Most mornings, it’s empty except for the regulars, usually four or five of them, tipping back in their chairs, sleeping, bent over crossword puzzles or discussing, depending on the season, baseball or politics. The people this morning were different, talking quietly among themselves, the men in jackets and ties, the women in pale dresses and heels and, in one case, a straw hat tied with a black ribbon. Then I noticed a woman standing by the counter wearing something black and billowy and realized it was graduation day.

I skipped my own graduation, though it’s hard to remember exactly why. It had something to do with feeling that graduating wasn’t anything that particularly needed to be celebrated. It had something to do with not wanting to do what everyone else was doing . It probably had something to do with my parents who, even today, more thirty years after their divorce, can’t be in the same room – or even the same zip code – without something very, very bad happening . But mostly it was because I just didn’t want to think about it.

I don’t remember where I was on graduation day – in another city, buying new clothes for my summer job? driving cross-country with my boyfriend? – but I know where I wasn’t. I wasn’t listening to someone say “commencement is not only an end, but also a beginning.” I wasn’t standing in line. I wasn’t waiting for my name to be called. I wasn’t walking across the stage, shaking the dean’s hand and taking a rolled up piece of paper that was supposed to be my diploma, but really wasn’t, since the real diploma would arrive several weeks later in the mail.

On my way to work, I drove by the line of people waiting to get into campus. They stood clumped in small groups, each with one member in a gown, either black or black with striped sleeves or black with a brightly-colored hood. Were they happy? Proud? Scared? Packing books into boxes, I had looked around my almost-empty dorm room and wondered if I had ever really lived there. The room looked exactly the way it had when I arrived in September. Next September, someone else would live there. I knew that despite all the promises to keep in touch I would never see most of my friends again. That things would never be the same. That I would never be the same. I hated the thought of graduation for the same reason I hate birthdays and break ups and farewell dinners. I’m just not that good at goodbyes.

16 comments:

Katie said...

I thouht long and hard about going to my graduation ceremony this sumer. In the end I decided I would. Partly because I'm remaining in teh city I went to university in and I haven't got to drag my parents half way across the country to do so.
I also then worked out, I want congratulating for doing this. yes I'm not the first in my family to gain a degree, but it didn't mean I didn't have to work damn hard to get my degree. I won't be saying goodbye to any friends really, I'm staying in teh same city, all my friends are either younger than me, or doing a masters. For me gaining my degree is simply a step along the road in fulfilling my ambitions.

S said...

I do believe we are alike, you and I. Down to the long-divorced parents who often don't do well in the same room.

I liked this post very much. We've just watched the same kind of graduation frenzy take over my town.

I observed the whole thing with bemusement.

Sara said...

Graduation's a month behind us here. I went to my college graduation - but honestly don't remember it very well. It was that dull. I do remember that even though I went to a small school and had lots of friends, I didn't know anyone for many many seats to my left, right, front and back.

I doubt we'll attend the next one.

Bon said...

i went, for my mother. it meant something to her, and my father - of a similar long-divorced incompatible set - wasn't anywhere within 5,000 miles, so the awkwardness of having them both there wasn't an issue.

i was so hungover from a four-day debaucheryfest that i slept through the ceremon, grateful for the cap shielding me from the lights.

and now, when i go back to that little university town, the whole place looks to me like that dorm room did to you. was it real?

i don't know.

S. said...

I also hate those kind of finally final goodbyes, in fact am wrecked by them, but my HS and college graduations were important to me because of that. I needed the ritual to contain my sadness--which is in step with our differences on religion.

That said, some graduations are more worthwhile than others. A.'s masters ceremony was a miserable, indoor stadium affair that she would have skipped joyfully if her parents' disappointment weren't a counterforce.

And I skipped walking for my own masters b/c I still thought I'd be getting my PhD and considered the event irrelevant and the accomplishment nil. And I still see my MA that way, as a consolation prize for peole who flub the diss. (I think this shows how deeply I was indoctrinated by the academic cult.)

My verification word was jujmatch. I think this is crying out for a definition.

Lori said...

I think my feelings now, are similar to yours. But for me, my resistance to ceremony has come out of life experience and a greater understanding that every beginning marks an ending, and vice versa.

When I was young, I enjoyed the celebration that accompanied happy endings and new beginnings. Now, it is far more bittersweet.

niobe said...

jujmatch? Umm...one of JDate's competitors?

Aurelia said...

I skipped mine...totally pointless to me. I had already left and gotten a job, and really didn't feel like going all the way back, just for that, y'know?

Anonymous said...

I dont know, I see what you mean about somewhat pointless, but to me, it represents completion...and I value finishing something all the way, especially something that required four years of my life to complete. And, I am the first in my family to obtain a degree, so I will take part in the ceremony proudly, even if it seems like only a blip in the grander scheme of things. I second Katie W.'s point of view on the entire thing.
Must we be so detached and cynical?
Just asking...

S. said...

Sure, I'll take that one--JewsUnitingforJusticeMatch for the righteous, or JewUnderJewMatch for the lewd?

Julia said...

The best part of my graduation? Thesis burning we did on the balcony of my dorm the night before. That was for close friends. The graduation? More for parents who worked hard to make it possible.

Doughnut said...

I can relate to your post niobe. I hate goodbyes and wish the word never existed. I would sooner tell someone I will see you later. Goodbye is too final in my mind and I can be rational thinking that endings make new beginnings...I like to believe life is an ongoing transformation that builds on what is and has been...ratht then a new beginning. Not sure what that says about me. I just know I don't like endings and that includes goodbyes.

Anonymous said...

I did not go to my graduation -- I finished in December and graduation was in October, by when I had moved to a different country. As the educational system in Germany is much more "unordered", most of my friends graduated at different times, so it would not even have been a goodbye. Whether I'm good at them is an entirely different question...

jo(e) said...

I too hate goodbyes.

niobe said...

I'm surprised (though perhaps I shouldn't be) by how many of us seem to have parents who went through bitter divorces...

Antropóloga said...

The day of my graduation from college was the worst day of my life, second only to the day my child was born.

I am now considering that sentence. I guess that means I haven't had any terribly bad days in my life, since graduation mostly sucked because it was raining and I couldn't find my friends, and my baby was born healthy and I didn't have any delivery complications.