feliciakw: (Default)
feliciakw ([personal profile] feliciakw) wrote2010-05-29 01:45 pm
Entry tags:

School memory

This just came to my mind, and I want to write it while I'm thinking about.



I was a straight A student all through school.

I didn't get my first pair of glasses until 7th grade.

When I was in 6th grade, we started changing classes between two teachers. In one of the classrooms, the students sat at tables, two to a table. I sat in the back of the room, where I could not see the chalkboard well enough to read it.

I shared the table with a boy, JM. I don't remember JM being particularly popular or well-liked or smart. I remember him as being maybe a little dirtier than the other kids in the class, poorer, maybe. Or just not as careful about himself as some. I don't know. I might not even be remembering him correctly, but that's what I remember.

I don't remember JM being particularly popular or well-liked or smart, but I liked him okay. We weren't playmates or anything. We didn't really talk outside of sharing a table in class. But he read the blackboard to me because I couldn't see it clearly enough to read it myself.

[identity profile] feliciakw.livejournal.com 2010-05-30 04:37 am (UTC)(link)
When I was in school, being a "popular kid" meant that someone was liked or admired by a lot of people. They were high profile, usually on a sports team or cheerleading/drill team. A lot (though not all) of the "popular kids" were really smart. They were very active in school activities. They won homecoming queen and prom queen and class officer positions. They were just . . . popular.

I was never one of the "popular kids." I was smart, and I was in some school activities, but I wan't in demand for parties, no one asked me to prom or other school dances, etc.

[identity profile] leelust.livejournal.com 2010-06-01 12:19 am (UTC)(link)
*hugs* I get that. I don't get why kids in sport are popular? Maybe it's just me but here we often thought that sport kids are stupid :) They can talk only about sport, they're boring.