RDP Thursday: ZENITH
When I was in high school, I was kind of a wreck.
I wore the wrong clothes, listened to the wrong music, I was a creepy geek who had long wild hair, wore black eyeshadow before it was a ” thing “. I played guitar in a rock band and believe it or not I was on the Honor Roll and my best subjects were Biology, Russian History and Creative Writing.
But like I said, I was freak.
At least that’s what I heard from my nearest and dearest and the obnoxious wonks I went to school with.
Out of nowhere this girl who sat behind me in math used to tell me I should cut my hair- it was long and curly and wavy ( a la’ Ann Margaret who was my HERO ). Sometimes my snotty seatmate would even make snarky comments about my dark makeup too.
” Maybe ” my friend Leni from Library sciences said ” she’s hot for you. ”
” Maybe ” I remember saying ” you shouldn’t do drugs before school. ”
I actually did cut my hair, no kidding I did it because some of the guys I played music with cared so much about their hair ( we were headed for the big hair bands at that time in the early 80’s ) that I felt like I was over the entire long hair experience. Everyone had long curly hair now.
And I did not want to be part of the herd.
A good ten years after I graduated from high school I was coaching my son’s soccer team ( yep, I played soccer too ) and at our first practice I met the parents.
You know where this is going right?
There she was, with her son ( who was a cute kid and turned out to be heck of a goalie )- my seatmate who rode my back about my ‘rats nest’ hair and black eyeshadow and nagged me at least once a week- why did I wear a leather jacket in the summer-
she stopped when I turned around and she saw my face- and her face turned red under her long curly spiral permed hair and dark eyeshadow. I wondered if she was sweating inside of her leather jacket, because it was a hot and bright August afternoon.
Speaking from experience she was.
You would have been my hero, Anita.
Anita, like all the really hip people you were in with the out crowd.
I wish I had known that at the time!
A great story Anita 🙂
Thank you!