The onset of May means many
things. Among them: 2nd Quarter property taxes are due; spring
weather, which has had many false starts locally this year, should finally
stick; and graduation season has arrived. The last of those three comes
particularly to mind since I need to find a college graduation present for
someone before Saturday. When I first heard the date it seemed to me that May 6
was early for that ceremony, but memory deceived me. A glance at my
browning-with-age degree, which regrettably is not really made of sheepskin (trivia: lignin in wood pulp causes the brown aging
effect), shows that even in ancient times the schedule was about the same.
Except for the date, I
remember both my high school and college graduations quite well along with the
few days before and after. In both cases the prevailing sensation was
anticlimax. I remember walking back to my dorm after my very last class at GWU
while thinking to myself, “I should be feeling more than this.” It just felt
like any other stroll that I had taken on that sidewalk 1000 times before.
Anticlimax was perhaps more understandable four years earlier. While I looked
forward to moving on from a rural prep school with 100 students to an urban
campus with thousands, it was still fundamentally just a prospect of more
school. So it proved to be. The biggest difference was the city. Had I chosen a
less urban campus I might have noticed little change at all. The end of college
was a different matter altogether, but that didn’t sink in right away. It did a
few months later.
Graduation Blues is a
well-known phenomenon. For more than a dozen years the graduate’s life had been
demarcated by school. Progress was clearly defined by grade and by grades.
Suddenly, that’s over. There is no progress other than what one defines for
oneself. Personal anomie is a common initial response. While there are good
reasons for some folks to go on to graduate school for various academic, scientific, and
technical career paths, more than a few post-grads opt for more school not for
any of those good reasons but just to delay facing its end. Whenever it comes,
the transition from academia to career is seldom easy. There are rare cases of
instant success – the current version of Cinderella – as some princely
corporation offers a high-paying position directly out of college because, so
to speak, the shoe fits, but the key word is “rare.” The typical experience is
struggle – often a lifelong struggle – that at least at some point is likely to
involve serving coffee and/or wielding a shovel. Upward mobility is a possible
but not guaranteed long-term outcome.
Then there is the sensation
of backsliding. Independence at college is more often illusory than real. There
are still people today who work their own ways through college, but most youths
rely heavily on parents, scholarships, and loans. Nonetheless, independence
feels real as one lives away from home “as an adult.” That, too, ends suddenly.
Typically, the graduate is back living with parents in a way no different than
when a teenager. Nor is there any certain upcoming date as to when that might
change. Besides, the grad probably owes a teensy amount of money in student
loans, and the lender will be sending its first love notes requesting payment.
It’s no wonder graduates get the blues or even full-blown depression.
I’d like to offer Pollyanna
“here’s how to turn it all around” advice, but I really don’t have any. Graduation
Blues are just a normal phase that some people get past quickly and others
slowly. We do get past them though. Most of us eventually get our footing and
get the hang of life beyond school. This does have its pleasures, not the least
of which is real independence. Not much will be free, but we can be free
nonetheless. That counts for more than a 4.0 average ever did.
Alice Cooper – School’s
Out
I just want to say one word to you. One word? Yes, are you listening? Plastics.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I didn't feel much graduating from high school and less from college because it was so big and less intimate. Met a good friend in college and we're still friends. He eventually moved to Austin to continue his education, and still there. But I wouldn't want to trade any of the experiences for anything in the world. I think more than anything it was the timeframe. Hard to beat the late 60s.
I attended college from September 1970 to May 1974 which culturally was still “the 60s.” Whether by sheer coincidence or otherwise, “the 60s” ended seemingly abruptly with Nixon’s resignation in August ‘74, at which time former hippies traded in LSD and headbands for cocaine and disco shoes. (“The 70s” in turn slopped over a couple years into the 80s.) The 60s and 70s were rough on draftees and many other folks, but they were great years to be in college – and great years to be a young graduate.
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